Liverpool 0-1 Southampton

Liverpool stunned as Southampton take the Long road to Wembley

Southampton reached their first major final since 2003 to leave Liverpool’s season in danger of unravelling.

Saints snatched an injury-time winner through Shane Long to win 1-0 at Anfield and prevail 2-0 on aggregate in their two-legged EFL Cup semi-final, as their hosts failed to score against them for the third time this season.

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Liverpool, eight-time winners of the competition and appearing in the last four on a record 17th occasion, were again lacking sharpness up front.

Having lost to Swansea at the weekend to dent their top-four hopes, this was another blow and with a potentially tricky FA Cup tie at home to Wolves to negotiate before Tuesday’s visit of Premier League leaders Chelsea, things will not get any easier for Jurgen Klopp’s side.

Since the turn of the year they have won just once, against Sky Bet League Two side Plymouth, and the goals have dried up with just seven in as many games.

Klopp led Liverpool to the final of this competition and the Europa League last season, but his golden touch deserted him this time around as Southampton booked their first major final appearance since the FA Cup defeat to Arsenal at the Millennium Stadium 14 years ago and their first showpiece Wembley visit since 1979.

They did get there in 2010 to win the Johnstone’s Paint Trophy as a League One side but next month’s final has far more cachet.

As in the first leg, Southampton should have been home and dry in the opening 45 minutes as they created – and wasted – the best two chances of the half.

Nathan Redmond was the creator of both in a 10-minute spell just before half-time when he gave right-back Trent Alexander-Arnold and Joel Matip, making his first start for six weeks, a torrid time.

Unfortunately for Southampton, Dusan Tadic and Steven Davis were not at the same level, although the former at least did force Loris Karius into a good save as he scurried off his line.

By contrast no Liverpool player tested the 22-year-old Jack Stephens, who was making only his sixth senior appearance and tasked with filling the giant Virgil van Dijk-sized hole in the centre of defence.

Southampton goalkeeper Fraser Forster comfortably saved from Daniel Sturridge and Roberto Firmino, with Oriel Romeu, a key member of the black-shirted wall the hosts came up again, blocking a Philippe Coutinho volley.

Forster made a hash of saving Emre Can’s long-range effort just after the break but somehow recovered to claw the ball off the line, while Sturridge hooked over from close range with the goalkeeper beaten and then stabbed Jordan Henderson’s cross wide at full stretch as Liverpool ramped up the pressure.

Still Saints, superbly organised by manager Claude Puel, held on as Coutinho flashed a shot wide with 13 minutes to go, and from a Liverpool corner in added time Southampton countered and Long fired home

ARIS