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Can Liverpool perform miracle against Real at Bernabeu?

Needing to conjure up a slice of Ber­nabeu magic to prolong their europe­an journey, Liverpool make the journey to the Spanish capital to face Real Madrid in the second leg of their Champions League last-16 tie tonight.

• Cody Gakpo – Liverpool

Carlo Ancelotti’s continental veterans fought back from 2-0 down to record a phenomenal 5-2 win in the first leg at Anfield three weeks ago, and only the most calamitous of calamitous collapses would see the tickets to the quar­ter-finals change hands.

Even when Darwin Nunez and Mohamed Salah – the latter of whom received quite the help­ing hand, or knee, from Thibaut Courtois – sent the Anfield crowd into raptures, not a shred of apprehension could be seen on the stone-faced Carlo Ancelotti, whose side’s early mishaps just made their seven-goal victory all the more astonishing.

Rivalling Courtois for blunder of the night with a pass straight to the leg of Vinicius Junior, Alisson Becker conceded twice to the Brazilian starlet in the remaining minutes of the first half, before Eder Militao’s header and Karim Benzema’s brace put the cherry on a famous Merseyside mauling.

Seemingly exhausting all of their match-winning energy at An­field, the reigning La Liga champi­ons failed to prevail in their three subsequent domestic showdowns – including a 1-0 loss to Barcelona in the first leg of their Copa Del

 Rey semi-final – but they reverted to type with a comfortable 3-1 win over Espanyol at the weekend.

With Benzema kept in bubble wrap, Vinicius and Militao were on target once again alongside Marco Asensio as Los Blancos remain nine points worse off than runaway lead­ers, Barcelona, but a 300th Cham­pions League match now steals the spotlight amid their top-flight misfortunes.

From the last 27 times that Real have won the first leg of a Champions League tie away from home, they have progressed from 26 of them – only going down to Erik ten Hag’s 2018-19 Ajax luminaries in that time – but they will not be taking any leaves out of the Dutchman’s book here follow­ing Manchester United’s Anfield humiliation.

A timely repeat of their 7-0 demolition of Manchester United at the Bernabeu would no doubt go down as the greatest Champi­ons League result on record, but a week is a long time in football, as evidenced by Liverpool’s flat performance in their shock defeat to Bournemouth on Saturday lunchtime.

Failing to heed the warning signs on the break and conceding the opening goal to Philip Billing as a result, Liverpool were handed a rare gilt-edged chance to level from 12 yards – their first penalty in the Premier League since April 2022 – but the normally reliable Salah sent a wild spot kick into the stands.

Defeat on the South Coast allowed Tottenham Hotspur to steer further clear in the race for fourth place in the Premier League table, so prioritising an astounding Cham­pions League comeback would be the first step towards salvation on Wednesday, and Klopp refused to wave the white flag after laying wit­ness to the first-leg drubbing.

Of course, Liverpool are not novices when it comes to spectacu­lar European comebacks – coming from 3-0 down to defeat Barcelona 4-3 on aggregate in 2018-19 – but the absence of the Anfield faithful and a certain Divock Origi to meet quickly-taken corners is far from ideal.

Furthermore, Klopp’s men only have two away wins to shout about from their eight contests on the road in 2023, and they are winless in seven games with Real Madrid since storming to victory in the quar­ter-finals of the 2008-09 edition. The scoreline in the second leg of that battle of the behemoths? 4-0.

Also tonight, Napoli with a 2-0 first leg advantage, host Eintracht Frankfurt to a thrilling game. —SportsMole

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