Liverpool are in the driving seat against Roma, but momentum does funny things

Roma's Argentinian defender Federico Fazio vies with Liverpool's Senegalese midfielder Sadio Mane during the semifinal first leg. (AFP)
Updated 02 May 2018
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Liverpool are in the driving seat against Roma, but momentum does funny things

  • Reds are 5-2 up from the first leg
  • But Roma overturned a three-goal deficit in the last round

LONDON: It was so nearly perfect. If the first leg of Liverpool’s Champions League semifinal against Roma had ended after 80 minutes, it would have been hailed as one of the great performances at that stage of the competition, a tie settled when it still had two hours to run.
But it did not, Roma scored twice and so Liverpool return to the site of their 1977 and 1984 European Cup successes with trepidation.
Of course it was still a very fine performance from Liverpool, but the sense of a game slipping from the grasp can play tricks on the mind.
Roma came back from a three-goal first-leg deficit to win in the last round — and this time they have two away goals as security, rather than only one. They are yet to concede a goal at home in five Champions League matches this season, shutting out sides of the quality of Atletico, Chelsea and Barcelona. And in that final 10 minutes at Anfield there was just a whiff of panic from Liverpool. That should give Roma hope.
But realistically not too much of it. Only three times in the Champions League era has a side overturned a three-goal first-leg deficit, and even if teams seem unable to defend anymore and leads are more precarious than they have perhaps ever been, that does not mean Roma can do to Liverpool what they did to Barcelona. Quite apart from anything else, for all Roma’s defensive record, it seems all but inconceivable that they will be able to prevent Liverpool from scoring.
While the Barcelona game will encourage Roma, the situation is very different. For one thing, Roma had played well in Barcelona and had been unfortunate to lose 4-1; in Liverpool, they were very lucky to lose only 5-2. But the key issue is about style of play. Liverpool are relentless and they are quick. They may have been startled by Roma’s press in the early minutes at Anfield, but they responded by pressing back, much harder and much faster, whereas Barca’s response when pressed was to seem a little put out that anybody should try to win a game by running.
There is a decadence to the modern Barca that made them vulnerable. The image of Luis Suarez and Lionel Messi casually wandering back as an unchallenged Daniele De Rossi measured the pass over the top that led to the opening goal of Roma’s comeback should haunt the club. Liverpool will not allow the midfielder that amount of time.
But the bigger problem facing Eusebio Di Francesco is how he can chase a three-goal win when Liverpool are so good on the break and, more specifically, when their three forwards are all quicker than any Roma defender. There will, presumably, be a shift back from 3-4-2-1 to 4-3-3 — and Roma did threaten Liverpool wide after adopting their more familiar formation late on at Anfield — and that will deny Mohammed Salah and Sadio Mane some of the space they enjoyed on the flanks in the first leg, but that does not alter the fundamental issue of pace.
If Roma press high they become vulnerable to any ball played in behind them. If they do not, they risk the midfield becoming stretched.
Everything is set up for Liverpool to make their eighth European Cup/Champions League final, but momentum can do curious things.

KEY CLASH: Diego Perotti vs Trent Alexander-Arnold

There is a possibility that Diego Perotti will not play, but assuming he does recover from the calf problem that kept him out of Roma’s 4-1 win over Chievo at the weekend, the Argentinian will have a vital role. Left out of the starting line-up at Anfield because of the switch to a back three, Perotti caused problems as soon as he came on, offering a width Roma had lacked as soon as the Liverpool surge had forced the Roma wing-backs on the defensive. To an extent the battle on the flanks will become a game of chicken: If Perotti can check the forward surges of Alexander-Arnold — himself the victim of a dead leg that led to him being taken off midway through the second half of Liverpool’s 0-0 draw against Stoke on Saturday — that will help stifle Salah by denying him support on the overlap.


Italian gymnastics ex-coach stands trial for bullying

Updated 10 February 2026
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Italian gymnastics ex-coach stands trial for bullying

ROME: The former coach of Italy’s rhythmic gymnastics team goes on trial Tuesday accused of bullying athletes, fueling questions over the treatment of young athletes as the country hosts the Winter Olympics.
Emanuela Maccarani, a former national team gymnast herself, faces charges of abuse of minors at a court in Monza near Milan, which is hosting part of the Games.
The trial was sparked by explosive claims three years ago by two promising Italian gymnasts, Nina Corradini and double world champion Anna Basta, who claimed they quit the sport while still teenagers as a result of psychological abuse by Maccarani.
Corradini and Basta are civil parties along with two other gymnasts, Beatrice Tornatore and Francesca Mayer, and Change The Game, an Italian association campaigning against emotional, physical and sexual abuse and violence in sports.
Maccarani has denied the charges. Five gymnasts who trained with her submitted statements in her defense at a preliminary hearing in September.
Change The Game founder Daniela Simonetti told AFP the trial throws into “question methods that often cause pain, devastation, and significant consequences for boys and girls in general.”
“This trial is linked to a way of thinking, a way of understanding sport, a way of managing young athletes.
“The expectation is that there will be a real debate around this, whether these methods are right or wrong,” she said.
Episodes of alleged abuse in the discipline have come under growing scrutiny, particularly following a sexual abuse scandal in the late 2010s, which saw former Team USA doctor Larry Nassar convicted of molesting girls.

Vulnerable

The Olympics Committee has given more attention to mental health in recent years in a bid to protect athlete wellbeing.
While the discipline is not featured at the Winter Games, the world’s top gymnasts are preparing for the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles.
Coach Maccarani, 59, led Italy to the top of a sport traditionally dominated by countries from the former Soviet bloc.
But during her near three-decade reign at the Italian team’s National Training Center in Desio, not far from Monza, days began with gymnasts being weighed in front of one another.
Often a long way from their families and barely out of childhood, they were vulnerable.
Some took laxatives and weighed themselves obsessively. One world champion reported being berated for eating a pear.
The affair appeared to be over in September 2023 when Maccarani was given a simple warning by the disciplinary tribunal of the country’s gymnastics federation (FGI) and handed back the reins of the national team, nicknamed the “Butterflies.”
But in March last year the FGI, under new president Andrea Facci, sacked Maccarani.
The FGI’s official explanation to AFP at the time of her dismissal was that the organization wanted to “open a new cycle in preparation for the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.”
Corradini, whose testimony led the Monza prosecutor’s office to open an investigation, told AFP last year she was happy for “the young athletes who will now join the national team and who will surely have a different experience.”