Liverpool are returning home from Qatar with a trophy in tow.
The Reds needed extra time to topple Brazilian side Flamengo in Saturday’s Club World Cup final, with a 99th-minute goal from Roberto Firmino holding up as the lone tally at the Khalifa International Stadium.
The 28-year-old was the hero for the second time this week, as his late strike was also the difference in the team’s semifinal win over Monterrey.
Liverpool, who lost in the 2005 Club World Cup final, are now just the second Premier League side to capture the title after Manchester United accomplished the feat in 2008.
Jurgen Klopp’s team, comfortably the more threatening side over the 120 minutes on Saturday, looked primed to win the match in normal time after being awarded a penalty in the 91st minute for a foul on Sadio Mane.
However, upon review, VAR overturned the call. The referee decided the incident didn’t take place inside the area, and that veteran defender Rafinha didn’t commit a foul regardless.
That didn’t matter, though, as in extra time Liverpool continued to look more likely to break the deadlock.
That’s exactly what happened when a lovely ball from Jordan Henderson found Mane in space, who quickly spun and played Firmino in on goal. The Brazilian calmly cut back, leaving both a defender and the goalkeeper in his wake before slamming the ball into the net.
B?BBY FIRMINO! #ClubWC pic.twitter.com/JMkmSIibS6
— ????s?u (@sportsfan_pl) December 21, 2019
Liverpool’s triumph means the European champions have now won the last seven editions of the Club World Cup. A non-European side hasn’t hoisted the trophy since 2012, when Brazilian outfit Corinthians beat Chelsea.
Every week, I write this column over the course of Tuesday and Wednesday. Except this week, when instead of spending all day Wednesday in front of a computer, I spent it with my wife, kids and 23 other members of my extended family celebrating Christmas and Hanukkah.
The decade is over. Here, theScore runs through the best XI of the 2010s and even provides a second lineup to cover those inconvenient Europa League dates.
The lineup
Numerous formations were en vogue over the course of the decade. Many managers were fond of the 4-2-3-1 and Antonio Conte enjoyed great success on a back-three foundation. But the 4-3-3, largely popularized by Pep Guardiola’s Barcelona, remains a go-to setup for many trophy-hoarding bosses.
GK- Manuel Neuer
Schalke, Bayern Munich
Neuer was a seminal figure in football’s reinvention of the goalkeeper. He’s been surpassed by ball-playing shot-stoppers such as Alisson and Ederson over the past couple of years, but he was undoubtedly the most complete netminder between 2010 and 2019. His anticipation was neatly complemented by the ball control he polished under Guardiola at Bayern Munich.
RB – Dani Alves
Paul Gilham / Getty Images Sport / Getty
Barcelona, Juventus, Paris Saint-Germain, Sao Paulo
A couple of months after his 36th birthday, Alves didn’t have a club. The end of his career seemed close following his release from Paris Saint-Germain. But the veteran was phenomenal as Brazil captured the 2019 Copa America crown, winning the tournament’s best player award in the process. One of the finest right-backs in the sport’s history has still got it.
CB – Gerard Pique
Barcelona
Pique’s awareness, strength and ease in possession set him apart from his peers. Over the decade, the proud Catalonian corralled seven of his eight La Liga titles and two of his three Champions League crowns, despite rarely having a settled or natural central defensive partner at Barcelona. For Spain, he collected a winners medal at both the 2010 World Cup and Euro 2012.
CB – Sergio Ramos
Real Madrid
The most carded player in La Liga history also happens to be one of Europe’s most crucial footballers, scoring for Real Madrid in six finals across his career and notching 43 goals in Spain’s top flight since the start of the decade. Oh, and we should probably mention Ramos is an imperious and influential presence in the backline, and his country’s captain.
LB – Marcelo
Helios de la Rubia / Real Madrid / Getty
Real Madrid
There was a reluctance to field Marcelo. Bosses like Carlo Ancelotti and Jose Mourinho would leave him out of matches, not trusting the Brazilian’s anarchic streak. But eventually, his work down the flank as both an attacker – his runs and technique are phenomenal – and defender – he routinely saves Real Madrid with last-ditch tackles – made him irreplaceable.
DM – Sergio Busquets
Barcelona
Anchoring the midfield is Busquets, a player who’s lost a few steps in recent years but is still leaned on to be the nucleus of Barcelona. He’s different from the elite defensive midfielders that came before him due to his tendency to take risks and instigate attacks by swiftly lifting the tempo. His composed yet gallant work often relieves pressure for his teammates.
CM – Andres Iniesta
Barcelona, Vissel Kobe
Iniesta left Barcelona in 2018 to play in Japan, but he did enough in the preceding years to affirm his status as the decade’s greatest midfielder, and perhaps the greatest ever. His understanding of time is impeccable – he’s a master of la pausa, when a player pauses in possession to briefly assess his options – and he’s blessed with unfathomable intelligence.
CM – David Silva
Shaun Botterill / Getty Images Sport / Getty
Valencia, Manchester City
Other Premier League stars have shone brighter than Silva here and there, but the Manchester City midfielder was English football’s most consistent player in the 2010s. He’s widely regarded as the best player in his club’s history, as his bewitching use of the ball and underrated industriousness have been central to City’s rich domestic success over the past 10 years.
FW – Lionel Messi
Barcelona
Does this need any justification? He’s the most natural footballer we’ve ever seen, has sparkled in various attacking roles, and seems to break records with each passing week. Barcelona seemed to be in disarray for large chunks of last term, but Messi almost single-handedly won another La Liga title for the club. He won his sixth Ballon d’Or award (a record, of course) in December.
FW – Robert Lewandowski
Lech Poznan, Borussia Dortmund, Bayern Munich
He’s got good feet for a big lad. In an era when gangly frontmen were largely sacrificed as teams opted for lone strikers or three-pronged attacks, Lewandowski stood above everybody else. The Pole has taken just nine-and-a-half seasons to move into third in the Bundesliga’s all-time goals list and isn’t slowing down. This term, he’s netted 19 times in 17 league outings.
FW – Cristiano Ronaldo
Power Sport Images / Getty Images Sport / Getty
Real Madrid, Juventus
Like with Messi’s inclusion, this requires very little explanation. The best can reinvent themselves to add longevity to their careers or adapt to tactical shifts in the game, and Ronaldo, in his transition from explosive winger to irrepressible frontman, did it better than anybody else. He won four Champions Leagues, three league titles and, of course, Euro 2016 in the 2010s.
The reserves
Three No. 10s that aren’t No. 10s plugged into a 4-4-2.
The assembly of this throwback shape was relatively straight-forward. Jan Oblak and David De Gea were the strongest candidates to usurp Gianluigi Buffon, while Toni Kroos’ endurance was enough to pip the half-decade dominance of fellow midfielders Yaya Toure, Xavi, and N’Golo Kante. Sergio Aguero and Luis Suarez easily kept Neymar at bay.
Regardless of current state and outlook, each NFL team has at least one player who needs to make a statement to close the regular season. As teams finish their Week 16 games and begin to look ahead to next week, our NFL Nation reporters identify one such player with something to prove in Week 17.
AFC EAST
Kevin Johnson, CB. With the fifth seed locked up, the Bills likely will rest or sit several of their starters during their Week 17 game against the Jets, one of whom should be Pro Bowl cornerback Tre’Davious White. If White sits or sees reduced snaps, it opens the door for Johnson to show Buffalo’s front office that he’s worth re-signing this offseason. Johnson is on a one-year deal and split time with Levi Wallace opposite White. The Bills have little depth at the position, and the former first-round pick can strengthen his case with a solid performance in the regular-season finale. — Marcel Louis-Jacques
Ryan Fitzpatrick, QB. The Dolphins seem to have found the perfect bridge quarterback to take them into the next era, and the role should be his in 2020 if he wants it. On Sunday, Fitzpatrick became the first Dolphins quarterback to throw for 400-plus yards and four touchdowns in a game since Dan Marino retired. He has overcome many offensive obstacles to put up a respectable season. He’s the quintessential leader for a rebuilding team, and if he’s willing to come back for Year 16, he would be a great fit with whomever the Dolphins select in Round 1 of the 2020 draft. A good Week 17 outing in New England would further support that. — Cameron Wolfe