Joe Lovejoy of The Sunday Times
Win Sky+HD for a year and a trip to Barcelona
ISTANBUL reprised? Hardly. This was a pale imitation of the 2005 European Cup Final, and this time Liverpool, after falling behind, could find no way back.
England may have provided three of the four semi-finalists, but the spoils and the glory belongs to Italy. Playing in their third final in the past five years, Milan were nowhere near their best, but won with goals of contrasting construction by Filippo Inzaghi.
The first was something of a fluke, the striker deflecting in a 25-yard free-kick from Andrea Pirlo. The second was worthy of the occasion, Inzaghi fastening on to a through ball from Kaka and rounding Pepe Reina for a high class finish.
Liverpool pulled one back through Dirk Kuyt but, coming after Peter Crouch, on as substitute but, coming in the 89th minute, it was too late to affect the outcome.
Liverpool had much the better of the first half, only to fall behind in the 45th minute. In truth, however, neither team played well and, unlike 2005, a disappointing final will not linger long in the memory. Milan left their best football in the semi-finals, where they played so much better than this to outclass Manchester United.
Twenty minutes before the kick-off, the public address announcer played “You’ll Never Walk Alone” and invited the scouse choir to crank up the volume. They were not found wanting. After the underwhelming atmosphere at the FA Cup Final last Saturday, it was good to be among genuine football fans who care. There were corporate suits in attendance but, unlike at Wembley, they were very much in the minority.
One similarity was the interminable preliminaries, which went on so long they threatened to delay the kick-off. Athens put on a good show, but there is a danger of the organizers of these events losing sight of the fact that the game is the thing.
When it finally began, Liverpool had Gerrard stationed just off Dirk Kuyt, to the exclusion of Peter Crouch, with Jermaine Pennant in on the right wing. Milan preferred the more experienced Inzaghi to Alberto Gilardino up front.
The Anfield jury is still out on Pennant, but if his selection was not a particularly popular one it seemed to be inspired, for the first half, at least, when he was the final’s most creative influence.
Liverpool were much the better, more cohesive team for all but the last of those 45 minutes. After a cagey start, Marek Jankulovski’s poor control let in Pennant, who held off Paolo Maldini to get in a low shot, right to left, which Dida could only push out. There was further encouragement when Javier Mascherano laid down a marker by winning his first tussle for midfield possession with the rottweiler that is Gennaro Gattuso.
Kaka tried his luck from distance, but Reina was equal to the task as the Kop’s favourite Euro anthem, “We Won It Five Times”, saluted a promising start.
Midway through the first half, Pennant set up Gerrard with a good, low cross from the right but, from a position reminiscent of his heroics in Istanbul, the Liverpool captain miscued an awkward shot over the bar. Xabi Alonso was closer with a 25-yarder flashed just wide of Dida’s right-hand post.
Massimo Oddo, overlapping down the right, had occasional success against John Arne Riise, but Milan, despite enjoying the lion’s share of possession, struggled to impose their passing game on disciplined, assertive opponents, and another prompt from Pennant set up Riise for one of those siege gun blasts of his. Setting his sights, the Norwegian was just too high.
Clearly worried, the Milan supporters exhorted the Rossoneri to raise their game, but the force was with Liverpool and Gattuso, frustration personified, had his name taken for a foul on Alonso.
Milan’s first chance was delayed until the 45th minute, but it was enough to floor Liverpool going into half-time. Alonso impeded Kaka on the edge of the D and when Pirlo stepped forward to take the free-kick Reina had the shot covered until it deflected off Inzaghi, cruelly wrong-footing and beating the goalkeeper.
Liverpool had made all the running, but suddenly they were behind. How would they respond? For inspiration, they had only to look back to the corresponding final two years ago, when Milan were 3-0 up and coasting at the interval, only to lose. Time to conjure up the spirit of Istanbul. If only… Harry Kewell replaced Bolo Zenden, but the goal had lifted Milan and Mascherano and Carragher were booked in successive minutes as Liverpool briefly came under pressure for the first time.
They ought to have equalized after 62 minutes when a mistake by Gattuso let in Gerrard, whose shot, left to right, was disappointingly weak and comfortably saved.
Milan had the better of the classic game of two halves, and the contest was effectively over after 82 minutes, when Kaka played in Inzaghi, who finished with cool aplomb. Kuyt’s late strike was no consolation and Liverpool ended the evening in tears.
Explore your passion for food with the delights of Thai, Indian & Chinese cooking
In our new series, Tony Hawks takes a dry, wry look at modern life - junk mail, interminable meetings and snooty sales assistants
Read the training tips and advice that helped our London Triathletes
Read our exclusive 100 Years of Fleming and Bond interactive timeline, packed with original Times articles and reviews
The latest travel news plus the best hotels and gadgets for business travellers

Find tickets for:
Shortcuts to help you find sections and articles
2007
£30,000
2006
£14,337
2008
£39,937
Great car insurance deals online
c.£75,000
GlosFirstmeansbusiness
Gloucestershire
£32,795 - £41,545
Universitry of Southampton
Southampton
£
£32,795 - £41,545
Universitry of Southampton
Southampton
Competitive Package
Npower
West Midlands
1 & 2 Bed apartments
From £249,995
Great Investment, River Views
Great Dubai Investment Opportunities
from £89,950
low-cost ownership homes in London
Las Vegas SALE!
£POA
With Ramblers Worldwide Holidays!
£POA
List your property with two leading travel websites
£POA
Great travel insurance deals online
Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times and The Sunday Times. Globrix Property Search - find property for sale and rent in the UK. Milkround Job Search - for graduate careers in the UK. Visit our classified services and find jobs, used cars, property or holidays. Use our dating service, read our births, marriages and deaths announcements, or place your advertisement.
Copyright 2008 Times Newspapers Ltd.
This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69.
Not sure if the Italians really are coming, or if they are going - I doubt that the points-docking that Milan got away with has truly cured the game (business?) in Italy from the stain of corruption, and they have serious issues to address with regard to hooliganism and crowd violence. As far as the CL final was concerned, Milan were there to be killed off on the night, and Liverpool should be kicking themselves at the squandered opportunity. Pennant easily had the speed to beat Jankulovski and Seedorf on the right but never had the courage of his convictions and too often turned back to seek a safer option. Although he contributed well on the whole, some of his corner deliveries were dreadful, as were some of the crosses. Zenden was worse, just one example being the hopeless attempt at a shot which turned into a fortuitous pass to Alonso, who fluffed his own shot. I know it is easy for us "armchair viewers" to snipe after the event, but the game was theirs to win.
Michael, Geneva,
As ACMilan's website says, the Italian team "won against the injustice" of last year's penalization.
Milan struggled in the first part of the football season but then found the strength to overcome problems lying outside the field by doing what it knows best: winning on the European stage.
The final wasn't ACMilan's finest football but, as our spanish friends love to remind people, what mattered was to bring the cup back in Milan.
The two goals by Pippo Inzaghi are what he does best whilst living on the perilous edge of the offside line ...and by the way ,last night he scored his 58th goal in European football, not bad for an "avarage" forward as some alleged "expert" has called him.
Fred, Milan, Italy
As ACMilan's website says, the Italian team "won against the injustice" of last year's penalization.
Milan struggled in the first part of the football season but then found the strength to overcome problems lying outside the field by doing what it knows best: winning on the European stage.
The final wasn't ACMilan's finest football but, as our spanish friends love to remind people, what mattered was to bring the cup back in Milan.
The two goals by Pippo Inzaghi are what he does best whilst living on the perilous edge of the offside line ...and by the way ,last night he scored his 58th goal in European football, not bad for an "avarage" forward as some alleged "expert" has called him.
Fred, Milan, Italy
Once again we saw the most boring and slowest playing from Europe, it's the italian of course. I think their first duty when the game starts is getting the refereers bored, so they shall not penalize his foults. Speaking serously I did not see any worth from Milan team except the goals. Shall Gary Lineker change his famous definition of football?: A game played by two teams of eleven players where Italians always win.
Alejandro, Madrid,
The main blunder, i feel, was the Mascherano substitution. Javier had controlled Kaká up to that point, but taking him out allowed the Brazilian to be free. It was a gamble, the one Benitez took, to let Kaká free for the chance of a goial with Crouch, and when all was said and done, it proved to be a mistake.
Hermann, New York, USA
Let's face it, football coaching and management are still in the dark ages when it comes to producing creative, attacking play at the highest levels. This European Cup Final and Saturday's FA Cup final are eloquent proof of my contention.
Look at the goals last night. Only one came from open play and, as Carl has correctly pointed out (below), this goal was a weak effort that could easily have been stopped by a recovery run from any one of three Liverpool defenders. The other two goals were accidents, both created by lucky/unlucky rebounds.
Modern top level coaching and management relies on set plays - free kicks, corners, throw-ins et al - and random lucky/unlucky rebounds to generate goals.
The one-two combination pass (which led to Drogba's goal in the Cup Final) and the through ball pass are two proven ways of creating goals from open play. Both were noticable by their absence last night - save for Kaka's through ball for Milan's second goal. Think on, Liverpool.
Terry Daly, London,
The first Inzaghi goal was NOT handball, nor was it a fluke. It's a regular routine, and he scored in a similar way in Serie A a while back. He runs across the free kick to get either the deflection, as last night, or unsight the keeper and pounce for the rebound.
Anyone who has looked at the wrongly called match fixing scandal would know Milan were harshly punished, exclusion from the Champions League would have been very extreme.
Milan may not have been the overall dominant team last night, but did enough to win and was the best team in the competition. A deserved victory.
Jay Andolini, St Albans, UK
I can't see the tale of 2 halves cliche being revelant here. Italian team who should not have been in the tournament as a result of a match fixing scandal went ahead through a blatant handball goal, (presumably the ref wasn't a beneficiary) and scored a second as a result of this fraudulent goal leading to a Maccherano substitution, which allowed Kaka the space to manufacture the thoughball.
Rafa Benitez was culpable in his team selection, particularly the hapless Zenden, (who will be playing for next year & will he have a shot at the Champions League), & playing one up front. I think we have to revise the general perception that he is a tactical genius when he basically lost this final through his negativity, even if his team deserved more.
gary, boca raton , florida
I am not able to replay the match but would like to know which defender on the Liverpool side was seen waving his hand as if calling and offside call, rather than chasing down the slow rolling ball headed toward the goal. Even after the goalkeeper missed the ball, it was travelling so slowly that a defender with his head in the match could have still kept it from crossing the line!!
All players, in all sports, should stop trying to officiate and just play the damned game!!!
Carl Lutes, Louisville, KY
The Italians are coming ....
Nader Moussa, Cairo, Egypt
it was a really poor final..the best games..were the two between Manchester and Milan..really good games and good scores..
Liverpool remember me..the italian catenaccio..without Gerard..there is nothing rilevant..
lorenzo van perg, cartaxo, portugal