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The night started with their team bus being smashed up by beer cans and bottles. It ended with their Champions League ambitions in pieces, too.
Manchester City’s players learnt on Wednesday just why a trip to Anfield can be one of the most uncomfortable experiences in European soccer.
On an evening that will go down in the club’s long and storied lore, Liverpool reduced the best team in England to a rattled wreck by beating City 3-0 in the first leg of their Champions League quarterfinal match, thanks to three goals in a devastating opening 31 minutes.
Was it the fact that his players came under attack before kickoff, with Liverpool fans chucking objects at City's team bus as it traveled along Anfield Road — the street running alongside the stadium — before turning into the ground?
Was it his tactical decision to drop winger Raheem Sterling and play an extra central midfielder in Ilkay Gundogan, a move that completely backfired?
Or was it the fact that Liverpool can so often be just too hot to handle going forward?
It might have been a mixture of the three. And it leaves City's dream of a treble — it has already won the League Cup and could clinch the Premier League on Saturday in record time — in tatters.
As important as Liverpool’s attacking brilliance in the first half was the team’s defensive resilience in the second half.
City finished the game without having a shot on target — “I don’t know how we did that,” Liverpool manager Juergen Klopp said — and its star players muted. David Silva was subdued, Kevin De Bruyne played too deep, Gabriel Jesus barely got a touch.
An away goal would have changed the complexion of the match, especially given that Salah hobbled off injured and could yet be a doubt for next week's second leg at Etihad Stadium.
But, with centre back Dejan Lovren and right back Trent Alexander-Arnold excelling, Liverpool held firm and knows scoring one goal in the return leg at Etihad Stadium on Tuesday leaves City requiring an improbable five.
Liverpool last reached the semifinals in 2008, when it lost to Chelsea. Hold out next week and the Reds will feel they are back where they belong.
Like Real Madrid, which won 3-0 at Juventus on Tuesday, Barca look assured of a place in the semifinals. And Liverpool are halfway there as well.