Liverpool survived a late scare to remain on course for an historic quadruple as they reached the FA Cup final with victory over Manchester City at Wembley.
If last Sunday's Premier League meeting between the clubs
was a classic, this semi-final was effectively decided in a one-sided first 45
minutes, in which a mixture of ruthless finishing and Manchester City mistakes
saw Liverpool take a 3-0 lead.
An under-strength City were unable to recover as Liverpool,
having won the Carabao Cup, are now in the FA Cup final too — as well as the
last four of the Champions League, while sitting second in the Premier League.
Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola, who was unable to
start Kevin de Bruyne and had Kyle Walker out injured, preferred Zack Steffen
to Ederson in goal, a move that back-fired spectacularly.
Ibrahima Konate had already headed Liverpool in front after
nine minutes when Steffen, trying to repeat the feats of Ederson in the league
game between these two clubs, miscontrolled in his six-yard area, allowing
Sadio Mane to pounce.
Mane beat Steffen with a crisp volley at the end of a superb
Liverpool build-up to put Jurgen Klopp's side in complete command at the break
but Jack Grealish pulled one back early in the second half and keeper Alisson
twice saved crucially from Gabriel Jesus as this semi-final sprang to life.
Bernardo Silva pulled another back for City at the start of
a tense period of stoppage time but Liverpool survived to face either Chelsea
or Crystal Palace, who meet at Wembley on Sunday, in the final on 14 May.
Liverpool on course for history
Liverpool's win keeps them in contention to make history -
as no team in English football has won the league title, the two main domestic
cup competitions and become champions of Europe in the same season.
This was a win built on the foundation of a first half in
which their intensity and ruthlessness proved too much for City, whose revamped
side looked off the pace and unable to cope with the power of Klopp's side.
Konate's power in the air saw him score his third header in
his past three starts and Mane's alertness was never going to allow Steffen to
get away with his hesitation as he attempted to keep possession in the six-yard
area.
Ederson had the calmness and expertise to escape almost on
his goal-line as Diogo Jota bore down on him during last Sunday's 2-2 draw at
Etihad Stadium but Steffen showed no such expertise or composure, and paid a
heavy price as he was caught.
Mane led the Liverpool charge while Thiago was imperious in
midfield, his clever pass allowing Mane to volley past Steffen at his near post
in the closing moments of the first half for what eventually proved to be the
winner.
Klopp was elated with his team's performance at the
conclusion, although he will have concerns about how they allowed City back
into the game through Grealish's goal, conceded two clear chances to Jesus then
had to survive the anxiety of four minutes of stoppage time after Silva struck.
In the final reckoning, however, Liverpool deserved to reach
the final and will present a formidable barrier to either Chelsea or Crystal
Palace once the winner of the second semi-final is decided.
Man City too late to the party
This was not a good day for Manchester City. It started with
a section of their support chanting through the minute's silence to commemorate
the anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster in 1989, with City issuing a
formal apology to Liverpool after the match had started.
In the football context, Guardiola and City were left to
regret injuries, a team selection that did not work out and a horribly laboured
first 45 minutes that left them with too much to do, despite the brief hope
offered by Silva's second goal.
City missed the invention of De Bruyne, only fit enough for
the bench after suffering an injury in the stormy Champions Leaque
quarter-final against Atletico Madrid, and the experience of defender Walker,
who was ruled out completely.
And Guardiola's loyalty to Steffen as his FA Cup keeper was
not rewarded as the American made that crucial error that allowed Liverpool to
build on their fast start.
Guardiola will be disappointed but this is a quality side
who will now refocus and set sights on the Premier League, where they lead
Liverpool by one point, and the Champions League semi-final against Real
Madrid.
He will hope to have De Bruyne and Walker back fully fit
soon because, despite this loss, there is still so much at stake for Guardiola
and Manchester City as they remain in a position to achieve stellar things this
season.