Anfield Index
·10 de março de 2026
Liverpool’s European Setback: Reds Suffer from Galatasaray Defeat

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Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·10 de março de 2026

By Steven Smith
After a difficult domestic period and a long trip to Turkey, Liverpool entered the first leg of this Champions League last-16 tie hoping to produce a controlled and mature European performance. Instead, the Reds produced another display lacking urgency, creativity and defensive certainty as Galatasaray took a deserved early advantage and protected it throughout the night.
In a hostile atmosphere and with the home supporters in full voice from the opening whistle, Liverpool struggled to impose itself and were punished early for their lack of defensive focus.
Liverpool XI
• GK – Giorgi Mamardashvili
• RB – Joe Gomez
• CB – Ibrahima Konaté
• CB – Virgil van Dijk (c)
• LB – Milos Kerkez
• CM – Alexis Mac Allister
• CM – Ryan Gravenberch
• CM – Dominik Szoboszlai
• LW – Florian Wirtz
• CF – Hugo Ekitike
• RW – Mohamed Salah
Jeremie Frimpong → Mohamed Salah (60’)
Andy Robertson → Milos Kerkez (60’)
Cody Gakpo → Florian Wirtz (73’)
Galatasaray 1–0 Liverpool – Mario Lemina (Victor Osimhen) – 7’
• Possession – Galatasaray 46% | Liverpool 54%
• XG – Galatasaray 1.45 | Liverpool 1.30
• Total Shots – Galatasaray 15 | Liverpool 15
• Fouls – Galatasaray 11 | Liverpool 18
• Corners – Galatasaray 7 | Liverpool 4
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After the kick-off, the away side immediately showed greater intensity and purpose. Liverpool attempted to settle into possession, but the early rhythm of the match belonged entirely to Galatasaray once the goal was scored.
Just seven minutes into the contest the breakthrough arrived. A delivery into the Liverpool area caused hesitation in the defensive line and Victor Osimhen reacted quickest to keep the ball alive. His involvement allowed Mario Lemina the opportunity to strike, and the midfielder finished clinically to give the Turkish side an early lead.
The goal electrified the stadium and further unsettled Liverpool. Galatasaray pressed aggressively and repeatedly targeted the Liverpool penalty area with crosses and set pieces. Giorgi Mamardashvili was quickly called into action to keep the scoreline respectable, producing several important interventions as the Reds struggled to clear their lines.
Liverpool’s response was slow and predictable. While they enjoyed marginally more possession, the ball moved too cautiously through midfield and the forward line rarely found space behind the Turkish defence. Hugo Ekitike battled tirelessly in isolation, while Mohamed Salah and Florian Wirtz found themselves crowded out by a compact defensive shape.
By half-time, the visitors had failed to create the momentum required to silence the home crowd.
The restart brought the same pattern of play. Liverpool circulated possession but without the speed or imagination required to break through Galatasaray’s disciplined structure.
Arne Slot attempted to inject fresh energy on the hour mark by introducing Jeremie Frimpong and Andy Robertson for Mohamed Salah and Milos Kerkez. The changes offered slightly more width and urgency, yet the overall rhythm of Liverpool’s attack remained frustratingly predictable.
Galatasaray continued to threaten whenever they broke forward. Osimhen’s physical presence constantly stretched Liverpool’s back line and the hosts looked capable of increasing their advantage on several occasions. Mamardashvili again proved vital, producing saves that ensured the deficit remained just a single goal.
Cody Gakpo replaced Florian Wirtz late in the game and managed to test the goalkeeper with a powerful strike from distance, but Liverpool never truly looked like a side capable of forcing an equaliser.
The Liverpool manager plays such a boring and lacklustre style of football that it is often painful to watch. Liverpool deserved nothing from this game after a bright four or five minutes in the opening exchanges. Galatasaray were consistently the more dangerous side and, truthfully, they could easily have increased their advantage.
Games like this only consolidate the growing belief that change may soon be required.
Liverpool finished with slightly more possession and the same number of shots, yet the overall performance lacked belief, urgency and identity. The Reds remain alive in the tie, but only because their goalkeeper ensured the damage was limited.
The second leg at Anfield will now decide Liverpool’s European future.
Galatasaray 1 – 1 Liverpool









































