Alisson creates EPL history

May 17, 2021
Liverpool’s goalkeeper Alisson (black top) celebrates with teammates after scoring his side’s second goal during the English Premier League match between West Bromwich Albion and Liverpool at the Hawthorns stadium in West Bromwich, England, yesterday. Liverpool won 2-1.
Liverpool’s goalkeeper Alisson (black top) celebrates with teammates after scoring his side’s second goal during the English Premier League match between West Bromwich Albion and Liverpool at the Hawthorns stadium in West Bromwich, England, yesterday. Liverpool won 2-1.

Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson made the 80-metre journey into West Bromwich Albion's penalty area, more in hope than any expectation of scoring the stoppage-time goal that would keep alive his team's chances of qualifying for the Champions League.

After all, he'd never scored a goal in his career. No Liverpool 'keeper had in the club's 129-year history.

One textbook header from a corner changed all that.

In one of the most sensational moments of this or any Premier League season, Alisson -- with his gloves on and unmissable in his black shirt and shorts -- found space in the middle of the area to glance a header into the bottom corner from a perfect delivery by Trent Alexander-Arnold and secure Liverpool a dramatic 2-1 win yesterday.

It came in the fifth minute of added-on time and was delivered with the technique of an established striker.

Alisson got up off the ground and was immediately mobbed by his teammates. Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp was speechless in his technical area.

A goalkeeper had scored for just the sixth time in Premier League history -- none of the previous five had been a winner.

And Liverpool, against all the odds, could dream once again of the Champions League with one week left of the season.

"You can't explain a lot of things in life," the Brazil international said. "For me, the only reason for those types of things is God -- he put his hand on my head today and I'm feeling really blessed."

Alisson dedicated the goal to his father, Jose Agostinho Becker, who drowned in February after going for a swim on his property in the southern city of Lavras do Sul in Brazil.

Now, wins over Burnley and Crystal Palace will likely seal Liverpool a place in the top four and a return to the Champions League for one of European football's grandest clubs.

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