Salah strike takes Liverpool into last 16 at Napoli’s expense

Egyptian wriggled beyond two Napoli challenges before finishing from a narrow angle 11 minutes before half-time

Soccer Football - Champions League - Group Stage - Group C - Liverpool v Napoli - Anfield, Liverpool, Britain - December 11, 2018  Liverpool's Mohamed Salah scores their first goal   REUTERS/Jon Super
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Mohamed Salah’s stunning solo effort saw Liverpool edge out Napoli for a place in the Uefa Champions League last 16 thanks to a 1-0 win at Anfield on Tuesday.

Salah wriggled beyond two Napoli challenges before finishing from a narrow angle 11 minutes before the break on a night when only Liverpool's profligacy in front of goal prevented a more comfortable margin of victory.

And they were nearly made to pay in stoppage time when Alisson Becker produced a crucial save to deny Arkadiusz Milik a dramatic equaliser that would have taken Napoli through.

However, despite losing all three of their away games in Group C, three home wins at fortress Anfield were enough to see Liverpool through to the knockout stage on goals scored over the Italians in second place behind Paris Saint-Germain, who won 4-1 away to Red Star Belgrade to secure top spot.

Salah signalled his return to top form by scoring a hat-trick in a 4-0 win at Bournemouth on Saturday that sent Liverpool to the top of the English Premier League, and his 13th goal of the season saw luck shine on last season’s Champions League finalists.

The Egyptian fluffed his first chance of the night when he miscontrolled Andrew Robertson’s excellent cross with just David Ospina to beat.

Napoli were left aggrieved 15 minutes in when Virgil van Dijk was only shown a yellow card for a dangerous lunge on Dries Mertens.

Van Dijk did play the ball first, but his follow through took out the Belgian international and could easily have been punished with a red card by Slovenian referee Damir Skomina.

Napoli had not been beaten in Europe this season before travelling to north-west England, and showed the danger they posed when Marek Hamsik fired inches over from Mertens's cross.

However, Liverpool began to take control as the first half went on.

Sadio Mane had the ball in the net, but was rightly ruled offside before Salah broke the deadlock.

Salah outmuscled Mario Rui and skipped past Kalidou Koulibaly before squeezing the ball underneath Ospina from a narrow angle.

Had Liverpool conceded, they would have had to win by two goals thanks to their 1-0 defeat in Naples, and the hosts failed to cash in on their dominance of the early stages of the second half to avoid a nervy ending.

Salah pulled his shot in to the side-netting with a far better angle from the one he scored, while James Milner and Van Dijk sent long-range efforts flying just wide of the target.

But Liverpool couldn’t build on their advantage as Ospina made acrobatic saves to keep out Salah and Mane once more.

And they should have been made to pay on two occasions, firstly as Jose Maria Callejon spooned over a glorious chance at the back post 12 minutes from time.

Mane missed another two sitters in front of the Kop, to Jurgen Klopp’s amazement.

But Liverpool lived to fight another day thanks to Alisson, who repaid some of his £67 million (Dh307.7m) then-world record fee for a goalkeeper in July, by spreading himself bravely to block from Milik and keep his 12th clean sheet of the season.