Anderlecht 0 Liverpool 1

Cissé stunner keeps Liverpool up with pace

Should Liverpool extend that run to 11 at Anfield in 12 days, and Real Betis lose to Chelsea the same night, or fail to win at Anfield on November 23, Liverpool's much-anticipated visit to Stamford Bridge on 6 December will be rendered academic.

"It was a difficult game because we created a lot of opportunities, but we never scored the second goal so they continued going forward," said Rafael Benitez, the Liverpool manager.

Cissé has appeared the last resort when Benitez has been selecting a centre-forward, but he drew deserved praise from his manager last night. "He has done a good job for us," Benitez said. "For a striker it is really important to score goals and now I will have more options."

One of those is Harry Kewell who came on, to a lukewarm reception from the otherwise vociferous travelling support, for the last 16 minutes. It was the Australian's first appearance since limping out of last year's final.

Like Arsenal in Prague the previous night, Liverpool appear able to leave their domestic inconsistencies behind them on the European stage. This particularly applies to Cissé, who has now scored seven times in continental competition this season.

That record, and Saturday's Premiership winner against Blackburn, earned him the centre-forward slot with Fernando Morientes and Peter Crouch left on the bench. With Steven Gerrard injured, Luis Garcia was asked to operate in the hole off Cissé and Mohamed Sissoko on the right flank of a four-man midfield.

But it was Anderlecht who made the initial running. In the second minute Christian Wilhelmsson, who troubled Liverpool all night, glided through their midfield and defence before releasing Bart Goor. It should have been Anderlecht's first goal of the competition but the veteran's shot struck Jose Reina's outstretched leg. Though Reina was drawn into action a few minutes later, holding Anthony Vanden Borre's fierce long-range drive, Anderlecht would not get a better opportunity.

Liverpool, though, were able to make chances at will for an hour. Which was fortunate because they spurned them just as readily. Garcia was the prime culprit. First he sidefooted over from 10 yards from John Arne Riise's slide-rule cross, then he pulled his shot wide after Cissé had unsettled the home defence. The Spaniard was still missing chances target deep in injury time.

This perhaps explained why Riise, the next time he skinned Vanden Borre, decided to cut in and shoot instead of cross. It proved a valid decision. He brought a fine save from Silvio Proto and, from the subsequent corner, Dietmar Hamann picked out Cissé, who thumped in a volley.

Liverpool failed to build on the advantage. Their best opportunity to do so fell to Djimi Traoré following another Hamann corner, but Proto smothered his shot. Anderlecht might have levelled when Mpo Mpenza nodded Wilhelmsson's cross into Goor's path. This time the big Belgian thrashed the ball over.

The interval came and went and so did the chances. Riise volleyed wide after Jamie Carragher released him over the top; Vanden Borre drew a smart low save from Reina.

As the home pressure mounted Xabi Alonso was booked for sliding through the back of Wilhelmsson. Liverpool were happier with the Swiss referee's next intervention. A Wilhelmsson cross hit Carragher's arm as he sought to block. Massimo Busacca, well-placed, waved the appeals away.

"Maybe he did not move his hand to the ball but he stopped it going somewhere," said Frank Vercauteren, the Anderlecht coach, adding, "the referee was not Champions' League quality."

Neither, though was Anderlecht's finishing, with another Vanden Borre miss confirming their third successive 1-0 defeat in this campaign.

Anderlecht (4-4-2): Proto; Vanden Borre, De Man, Tihinen (L Traoré, 49), Deschacht (Akin Serhat, 74); Wilhelmsson, Vanderhaeghe (Baseggio, 61), Zetterberg, Goor; Mpenza, Jestrovic. Substitutes not used: Zitka (gk), Zewlakow, Baseggio, Pujol, Hasi.

Liverpool (4-4-1-1): Reina; Josemi, Hyypia, Carragher, D Traoré; Sissoko (Zenden, 80), Alonso, Hamann, Riise (Warnock, 87); Garcia; Cissé (Kewell, 74). Substitutes not used: Carson (gk), Finnan, Crouch, Morientes.

Referee: M Busacca (Switzerland).

Independent Comment
blog comments powered by Disqus
Caption competition
Caption competition
News in pictures
World news in pictures
Sport blogs

On The Road at the Giro d’Italia: It sounds sadistic, but the team live for the mountain stages

Three weeks ago as I drove off the Eurostar, I remember thinking what a very long time it was until ...

by Martin Ayres

iBet: Rose has the ammunition for Wentworth

McDowell did brilliantly to land the World Match Play title in Bulgaria last week, but it’s a format...

by Gareth Purnell

Brits on fire in the wet at Le Mans!

Wow - what a weekend for British Motorcycle racing!

by Luke Wilkins

       

Day In a Page

James Pembroke: The man who's eaten everywhere

The man who's eaten everywhere

Few people know more about restaurants than James Pembroke, who only spent five mealtimes at home during his entire childhood.
A Berliner in 1963 – but did John F Kennedy once admire Adolf Hitler?

A Berliner in 1963 – but did John F Kennedy once admire Adolf Hitler?

The young JFK praised 'superior' Nordic races during visits to Germany
Banned Iranian director Mohammad Rasoulof to attend Cannes Film Festival 2013, his first public appearance since prison

Banned Iranian director to attend Cannes Film Festival

Mohammad Rasoulof to make his first public appearance since being imprisoned three years ago
Seeing the larger picture: Inspiring images of space

Seeing the larger picture: Inspiring images of space

An exhibition explores images how photography has shaped astronomy
Eat Spam and carry on: Wartime pamphlets could teach us a thing or two about healthy, thrifty eating

Eat Spam and carry on

Wartime pamphlets could teach us a thing or two about healthy, thrifty eating
The 10 Best salt and pepper sets

The 10 Best salt and pepper sets

Whether they're for everyday use or to make your dining table look just right, it's worth getting a stylish shaker...
Giro d'Italia: The Stelvio Pass - cycling's killer climb

The Stelvio Pass - cycling's killer climb

As the Giro d'Italia tackles the brutal climb, Simon Usborne takes on the snow and switchbacks – and soon realises what the fuss is about
National archives: Edward VIII’s phone calls - and how MI5 bugged them

Edward VIII’s phone calls - and how MI5 bugged them

Newly unearthed papers reveal a shocking extra dimension to the constitutional crisis over monarch’s abdication
Sent down at the Old Bailey: A tour of the world's most famous court

Sent down at the Old Bailey

A tour of the world's most famous court
Hollywood's random acts of red-carpet kindness

Hollywood's random acts of red-carpet kindness

The Hangover actor Zach Galifianakis’s date for his movie premieres isn’t arm candy  – it’s his 87-year-old friend who he saved from homelessness
British football scores an own goal

British football scores an own goal

Many managers barely survive a year in post. Martin Baker talks to experts who make a case for clubs using forensic business skills to find the best staff
James Lawton: Sergio Garcia cracks as major fault line opens up again

James Lawton

Sergio Garcia cracks as major fault line opens up again
Dylan Hartley: Northampton have spent the season proving all our critics wrong

Dylan Hartley talks tough

Northampton have spent the season proving all our critics wrong
Watch out Watford: Here comes the secretive Bilderberg Group

Watch out Watford: Here comes the secretive Bilderberg Group

A meeting of global power brokers in a Hertfordshire hotel is exciting conspiracy theorists, but what are they really about?