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Soccer

Liverpool's secret weapon? Sturridge taking his chance after injury hell

Over the past few months, Daniel Sturridge has taken every opportunity that’s fallen his way. He did it in preseason, turning heads while his more popular teammates recovered from the World Cup, and he did it Tuesday with a rare appearance in the Champions League.

It was his first Champions League start in 2,379 days, and he made it count with a fine header against Paris Saint-Germain. He wasn’t the most active player on the pitch, but he didn’t have to be. Sturridge found himself in dangerous positions, stretched the lines, and kept PSG’s defenders on their toes. He was the reference point for Liverpool’s attack.

Jurgen Klopp defined a role for Sturridge in the summer when it was largely assumed the 28-year-old would leave the club for good. The manager resisted several calls to sell the striker, instead calling him an “outstanding” player who simply needs to stay fit.

It was a curious pet project to undertake. For a manager who demands pressing and maximum physical exertion, Klopp took a flexible and compassionate approach to Sturridge, allowing him to carry out his own specially-tailored training regimen. Klopp didn’t expect him to be the most physical or athletic player, nor would it be possible after so many years on the treatment table. Sturridge suffered virtually every injury a player can possibly have, missing a reported 567 days of action since January 2013.

“Does he have to play 50-something games? No,” Klopp said in July, according to BBC Sport’s Simon Stone. “But hopefully he will play a few really good ones. That is the plan.”

Sturridge ended up scoring six goals in nine preseason appearances, and Klopp’s bet was further vindicated Tuesday. Sturridge was forced into the lineup following an eye injury to Roberto Firmino and constantly tested PSG’s backline. He could’ve scored a second goal with a little more match sharpness, but his effort was enough to earn a standing ovation from Anfield in the 70th minute.

PAUL ELLIS / AFP / Getty

Although he seems like an odd fit – more of a poacher in an otherwise fast-paced, fluid system – Sturridge could become an important Plan B for Liverpool this season. He can offer a more direct route to goal when matches become chess games and force defenders to stay back. There’s no way Sturridge will unseat Roberto Firmino in the club’s starting XI, but that doesn’t mean he can’t have an impact. Sturridge can get on the end of crosses, just as he did Tuesday when Andy Robertson delivered one of his many delectable balls.

“Daniel played a super game,” Klopp told BT Sport’s Des Kelly. “I told him before the game I have never seen him as fit as he is in the moment. He used that fitness. He was all over the park. He helped left and right, he was in the box when he was needed.”

There have been times when Liverpool struggled to break down banks of four, and when that happens again, Sturridge has the skills to find a way through. He doesn’t have to press and drop deep – even though that’s something he’s happy to do – but arrive in the penalty area when it counts. There’s value in his simplicity.

Sturridge shouldn’t feel too perturbed about the diminished role. If anything, it’s provided the parameters to ensure he stays in shape. Considering the Reds are a threat in multiple competitions, Klopp has an obligation to rotate his players, and Sturridge is an important reinforcement to have. Klopp doesn’t really want anyone making upwards of 50 appearances this season, and a player like Sturridge will mitigate the workload.

He could’ve spent the final 12 months of his Liverpool contract on loan, out of mind and out of the limelight, but Klopp made sure Sturridge wouldn’t again slip into obscurity. So far, he’s responded in kind.

Soccer

Monaco target knockout stage, Jardim stresses Atletico consistency

Monaco – Monaco coach Leonardo Jardim admitted his current line up was not as fearsome as it once was, but that his players were hyped up with Atletico Madrid arriving for Tuesday’s Champions League clash.

In the 2016-2017 season Monaco beat Manchester City and Borussia Dortmund before losing to Juventus in the semi-finals, with club owner Dmitry Rybolovlev then selling a raft of stars headed by Kylian Mbappe to Paris Saint-Germain.

Portuguese handler Jardim was swift to recognise at a pre-match press conference that while his side had sold, Atletico had kept hold of stars such as French striker Antoine Griezmann.

“Our opponent has a depth of both talent and experience, but here there are new faces, anyone who follows football knows this,” said Jardim.

“You might easily imagine new players need time to settle, but my players have the ambition to become a great side and to do that quickly,” he said.

“For Tuesday against Atletico, if we keep this attitude and be more technically sound, the goal will be to win. To start the competition with a win and do everything to qualify.”

Monaco however have won just one game so far this season and have just five points from five Ligue 1 outings.

Monaco will now be hoping that their big guns – captain Radamel Falcao and fellow attackers Stevan Jovetic, Rony Lopes and Aleksandr Golovin – can return from injury in time for Atletico.

One of Monaco’s recent recruits the 21-year-old German defender Benjamin Henrichs agreed with his new coach.

“Atletico have some good players, great individuals in terms of attacking prowess. I saw them play, we are going to have to defend compactly,” he said.

“Playing in the Champions League might be an honour in itself, but we are here to get to the next round.”

Sat alongside him at the press conference Jardim nodded approval.

“We have to accept who we are, who they are and do our best, no moaning, just stay positive and ambitious.”

Soccer

Champions League return offers Salah stage to dispel 2nd-season struggles

Liverpool – Mohamed Salah outshone Neymar and Kylian Mbappe on the Champions League stage last season, but as Paris Saint-Germain’s star duo head to Anfield on Tuesday seeking to make amends, the Egyptian is struggling to match the heights of his debut campaign at Liverpool.

Salah’s failure to hit top form dates back to his last Champions League appearance four months ago.

Back in May, Salah was on the crest of a wave as his 44-goal campaign had carried Liverpool to the Champions League final and ensured qualification for this season’s competition.

However, he lasted just 30 minutes in Kiev after injuring his shoulder when wrestled to the ground by Real Madrid captain Sergio Ramos and the Spanish giants went on to lift the trophy in a 3-1 win.

That started a difficult few months for Salah as he was also robbed of being 100-percent fit for Egypt’s first World Cup in 28 years.

Without their talisman, the Pharaohs were beaten by Uruguay in their opening game and his goals against Russia and Saudi Arabia couldn’t prevent Egypt returning home without a single point.

Salah has also gone to war with the Egyptian federation over the use of his image and the decision to host their base camp in Chechnya.

Egypt’s star player was put in the awkward position of having to pose for photos with Chechen president Ramzan Kadyrov, who has been accused of human rights abuses.

That hangover has been felt on the field with Salah scoring just twice in Liverpool’s opening five games of the campaign and missing chances he ruthlessly put away last season.

No one-man team

So far Salah’s slackness hasn’t cost Jurgen Klopp’s men. A summer of shrewd investment to build on the already substantial progress made under the German is already bearing fruit with five straight wins.

“Of course, it’s important that we don’t have only one goalscorer,” Klopp said after an impressive 2-1 win over Tottenham on Saturday, that should have been a far more comprehensive victory if the visitors had taken their chances.

“It’s still early. Five games, fantastic we’ve won all of them, we have improved.”

The 39 million euros ($45 million) Liverpool paid for Salah from Roma was brilliant business not just based on Salah’s production, but the hyper inflation that took place in the market just weeks later when PSG smashed the world transfer record by splurging 222 million euros on Neymar.

A further 180 million was then splashed on beating Europe’s big guns to the signature of Mbappe, who confirmed his status as the rising star of world football in winning the World Cup for France.

Both Neymar and Mbappe will see themselves as heirs to the throne of Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo as the world’s best player.

But it is Salah who is on the shortlist for FIFA’s Best Player award alongside Ronaldo and Croatian midfielder Luka Modric of Real Madrid, after PSG failed to get beyond the last 16 of the Champions League last season.

The limited spotlight offered by Ligue 1 means Europe’s premier club competition is where Neymar and Mbappe need to shine to be in the running for individual awards.

However, a blockbuster clash on a Champions League night at fortress Anfield is also the perfect stage for Salah to demonstrate to the world he is no one-season wonder.

Soccer

Champions League draw: Heavyweight matchups across the board

The opening stage of the 2018-19 Champions League season is set, and there is more than one quartet that could be dubbed the Group of Death.

At the bottom of the draw, Juventus’ Cristiano Ronaldo and Manchester United’s Paul Pogba will return to their former clubs in a group completed by rejuvenated Spanish giants Valencia and Swiss minnows Young Boys.

Last term’s runners-up Liverpool were already dealt difficult assignments in Paris Saint-Germain and Napoli, and were then paired with Red Star Belgrade to round off Group C. The Serbians promise a fiery atmosphere on home soil, and also displayed their spirit in a come-from-behind away-goal victory at Red Bull Salzburg on Wednesday to reach the tournament proper.

Internazionale, possibly the toughest opponent in the final pot, were picked alongside Barcelona, Tottenham Hotspur, and PSV Eindhoven, promising a tantalizing run of 12 matches in Group B.

The first tussles of the group stage will be held on Sept. 18. The other half of opening-round fixtures will be played a day later.

Group A

Pot Team Country
1 Atletico Madrid Spain
2 Borussia Dortmund Germany
3 AS Monaco France
4 Club Brugge Belgium

Group B

Pot Team Country
1 Barcelona Spain
2 Tottenham Hotspur England
3 PSV Eindhoven Netherlands
4 Internazionale Italy

Group C

Pot Team Country
1 Paris Saint-Germain France
2 Napoli Italy
3 Liverpool England
4 Red Star Belgrade Serbia

Group D

Pot Team Country
1 Lokomotiv Moscow Russia
2 FC Porto Portugal
3 FC Schalke Germany
4 Galatasaray Turkey

Group E

Pot Team Country
1 Bayern Munich Germany
2 Benfica Portugal
3 Ajax Netherlands
4 AEK Athens Greece

Group F

Pot Team Country
1 Manchester City England
2 Shakhtar Donetsk Ukraine
3 Olympique Lyonnais France
4 Hoffenheim Germany

Group G

Pot Team Country
1 Real Madrid Spain
2 AS Roma Italy
3 CSKA Moscow Russia
4 Viktoria Plzen Czech Republic

Group H

Pot Team Country
1 Juventus Italy
2 Manchester United England
3 Valencia Spain
4 Young Boys Switzerland

(Photos courtesy: Getty Images)

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