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10 min: The corner leads to nothing … although Brown takes an elbow in the ear from his own man Koch, and will require some treatment.
9 min: Gakpo slips a pass for Isak down the inside-right. Isak powers a low shot towards the bottom-right corner, forcing Zetterer to turn around the post. Szoboszlai to take the corner.
8 min: … and then up the other end, Szoboszlai wedges Isak free down the inside right! Isak tries to deftly dink over Zetterer, but the keeper spreads and blocks. The early signs suggest goalfest.
7 min: Jones goes in for a 50-50 in the centre circle, but only succeeds in deflecting the ball down the Eintracht inside-right channel, releasing Bahoya on goal! Mamardashvili parries a low drive. Then the flag goes up for offside. Had Bahoya scored, VAR might have had something to say about that offside decision, seeing the ball came off Jones earlier in the move.
6 min: … so having said that, they address it with some sterile domination in the midfield. Instantly calmer. Jones then advances down the left and curls infield, but Isak can’t get on the end of the high cross. Zetterer in the Eintracht goal claims.
5 min: Frimpong knocks Bahoya to the ground, just to the left of the Liverpool D. He’s fortunate the referee looks kindly on the challenge and waves play on. That should have been a free kick in a dangerous position. Liverpool already look what they are: a team devoid of confidence.
3 min: Knauff barrels down the right again, forcing Konate to come across and do some sterling work. The ball eventually goes out for a goal kick, but the hosts have wasted no time in flinging the gauntlet down.
1 min: Konate heads the corner clear easily. What a start that would have been, especially in the context of how Manchester United did a number on Liverpool within 60 seconds last weekend.
20 secs: … and so Knauff immediately races down the right and wins a corner off Van Dijk!
To the strains of a ballad set to the tune of Auld Lang Syne, the hosts get the ball rolling. Eintracht have left out their leading scorers, Jonathan Burkardt and Can Uzun, for Dino Toppmöller’s aforementioned pacy duo of Jean-Matteo Bahoya and Ansgar Knauff. Let’s see how that pans out, then.
The teams are out! Eintracht wear black tops with white pinstripe, a special kit for Europe, while Liverpool are in their storied red. A big black-and-white-striped tifo flutters across one end of the Waldstadion, which is a cauldron of glorious noise. We’ll be off once Zadok the Priest gets his usual aural working-over.
A tifo and a sea of scarves welcome the Eintracht Frankfurt and Liverpool players on to the pitch. Photograph: Kai Pfaffenbach/ReutersShare
Updated at 15.05 EDT
Eintracht coach Dino Toppmöller talks to TNT Sports. “The stadium is packed … everyone is looking forward to this game … the champions of England … a big club … the whole group of Liverpool is full of amazing players … we have to be very good in collective defending … transitions … a big challenge … we feel ready … we need to be good in counter-attacks so we put [Jean-Matteo] Bahoya and [Ansgar] Knauff up front because they have incredible speed.”
Eintracht Frankfurt have had mixed success against British clubs. They were knocked out of last year’s Europa League by Spurs in the quarter-finals, but beat West Ham in the semis three seasons previously en route to winning the trophy. (Oliver Glasner the mastermind behind that triumph. Whatever happened to him?) Eintracht’s forays into Scotland have also produced varied results: a 12-4 aggregate win over Rangers in the 1960 European Cup semis, that 7-3 loss to Real Madrid at Hampden Park in the subsequent final, and an astonishing capitulation in Ayrshire four years later. That’s detailed in this old Joy of Six. Go on, there’s just enough time between now and kick-off. We’ll see you back here in a few minutes.
Back to that run of five consecutive defeats in 1953. There are some similarities to Liverpool’s current sticky patch: the concession of last-minute winners (Palace’s Eddie Nketiah and Chelsea’s Estêvão now, Peter Broadbent for Wolves back then); unlucky woodwork-based shenanigans (Cody Gakpo hitting the frame three times against United, Tottenham’s Charlie Withers heading against his own post); the opposition scoring worldies (Moisés Caicedo’s long-range ping into the top left, Alf Ramsey netting from 45 yards at White Hart Lane). All of which is a long-winded way of pointing out that when things aren’t going well, it never rains but it pours.
Arne Slot talks to TNT Sports. “We were here in time to have proper sleep [after last night’s plane delay] … not ideal but not something to complain about … every time I select a team it is always difficult because I have so many good players … I liked the way [the subs against United] added to to the game in the second half … created a lot of chances … also Ryan [Gravenberch] is out so we have to restructure our midfield … so we decided to start like this … I have players to start and to impact the game coming off the bench … we need to create chances … we are hoping and expecting Jeremie [Frimpong] to create something for [Alexander Isak and Hugo Ekitike] … [Cody] Gakpo to do the same on the left … with Florian Wirtz’s creativity in and around our two number nines … where we usually play with one six, now we play with Curtis [Jones] and Dom [Szoboszlai] … if you are in a situation like we are, nine out of ten is not enough, you have to be ten out of ten.”
Arne Slot finally ditches the starting XI sent out to face both Chelsea and Manchester United in Liverpool’s two previous matches. He’s made five changes after the 2-1 defeat to United at Anfield on Sunday. Mohamed Salah dropping to the bench is one piece of big news; the return to the starting line-up of Florian Wirtz is another. Hugo Ekitike, Curtis Jones and Jeremie Frimpong, all of whom, along with Wirtz, added energy to Liverpool’s play when coming on against United, are also back in, as is Andy Robertson; Milos Kerkez, Conor Bradley and the out-of-sorts Alexis Mac Allister drop to the bench alongside Salah, while Ryan Gravenberch is at home having picked up an ankle problem against United.
ShareThe teams: Salah benched
Eintracht Frankfurt: Zetterer, Kristensen, Amenda, Koch, Theate, Gotze, Larsson, Knauff, Doan, Brown, Bahoya.
Subs: Grahl, Santos, Chaibi, Burkardt, Skhiri, Wahi, Dahoud, Chandler, Buta, Batshuayi, Collins, Uzun.
Liverpool: Mamardashvili, Szoboszlai, Konate, van Dijk, Robertson, Frimpong, Wirtz, Jones, Gakpo, Ekitike, Isak.
Subs: Woodman, Gomez, Endo, Kerkez, Mac Allister, Salah, Bradley, Chiesa, Ngumoha, Misciur.
Referee: Francois Letexier (France).
Updated at 14.04 EDT
Preamble
After losing four matches in a row, Liverpool aren’t quite heading towards uncharted waters. But the map they’re referring to is old, yellow and fraying at the sides. Here’s a sequence Don Welsh’s side put together in the autumn of 1953 …
Bolton Wanderers 2-0 Liverpool
Newcastle United 4-0 Liverpool
Liverpool 1-5 Preston North End
Wolverhampton Wanderers 2-1 Liverpool
Tottenham Hotspur 2-1 Liverpool
… and that’s the last time the Redmen (still wearing white shorts back then, mind) lost five on the bounce. They ended up being relegated from the old First Division in last place.
Now, nobody’s seriously suggesting Liverpool are going down this season. But that sequence is a 72-year-old bit of history Arne Slot won’t fancy repeating. Plus his side need to get their Premier League and Champions League campaigns back on track quicksmart … though exactly what to expect tonight is anyone’s guess: Eintracht Frankfurt’s first two matches in this year’s competition both ended 5-1 – a home win over Galatasaray and an away defeat at Atletico Madrid – while Liverpool have beaten the team Eintracht lost to, and lost to the one Eintracht beat. So the rules of the playground are of no use whatsoever here. The unpredictable fun begins at 8pm UK time. It’s on!