Pantomime villain Diego Simeone leading Atletico Madrid in the Champions League by hook or by crook

Ruthless Diego Simeone is a pantomime villain – his intention was to lead Atletico Madrid into the Champions League last eight by hook or by crook

Up and down his arms went, the speed decreasing with every wave. They had only been playing 10 minutes at Anfield but Diego Simeone was animatedly making his point.

When Simeone was whipping Atletico Madrid’s fans into a frenzy at the Wanda Metropolitano on February 18, you could see him hollering “vamos!” repeatedly but the mantra for this absorbing evening on Merseyside was clear: Mas Despacio!

The literal translation is ‘more slowly’ and Simeone was making no apology for taking the fizz out of proceedings. Dressed from head to toe in black and sporting heavy stubble, Simeone is a pantomime villain; he looks like a lead from a South American gangster movie – and is just as ruthless.

Diego Simeone was the animated figure who coordinated Atletico Madrid’s win over Liverpool

Two extra-time goals from Marcos Llorente sent the La Liga club through to the quarter-finals

Two extra-time goals from Marcos Llorente sent the La Liga club through to the quarter-finals

The manager celebrated Atletico's third goal in style as his side won 4-2 on aggregate

The manager celebrated Atletico’s third goal in style as his side won 4-2 on aggregate

By hook or by crook, Simeone’s intention was to lead Atletico into the last eight. He is not a manager who comes to win friends and admirers, he turns up intent on getting results and arguably puts more energy into games now than during his playing days when he knew how to be unscrupulous.

Such were the concerns about Atletico’s ability to deploy the dark arts, Liverpool’s squad had held several meetings in the build up to this fixture with theme revolving around not falling into any of the traps that would be set for them.

Simeone’s teams are able to make these encounters examinations of the mind and temperament, as much as skill, and from those early moments – when the Argentine was squawking at goalkeeper Jan Oblak to take his time – Liverpool knew what they had to do.

The peak of the challenge, arguably, came in the 21st minute. Trent Alexander, Liverpool’s marauding full-back, thundered into a challenge that left Joao Felix, Atletico’s outstanding young forward, crumpled on the floor.

Referee Danny Makkelie (L) was frequently approached by Atletico players at Anfield

Referee Danny Makkelie (L) was frequently approached by Atletico players at Anfield

Simone also put pressure on the official by brandishing imaginary cards on a regular basis

Simone also put pressure on the official by brandishing imaginary cards on a regular basis

Immediately Danny Makkelie, the Dutch referee, found himself surrounded by five black shirts, all of them furiously demanding that Alexander-Arnold receive some punishment. They were joined by their goalkeeper Jan Oblak and, for good measure, Simeone brandished an imaginary card.

Liverpool had not faced a team of this nature at Anfield for years. Sure, they know how to break things up and make the match as messy as possible but to concentrate on that solely would do a disservice to many of the fine players Simeone has at his disposal.

Take their defence, the foundation on which everything was built. Last summer they lost the magnificent Diego Godin to Inter Milan and sold Lucas Hernandez to Bayern Munich but Stefan Savic and Felipe have become an equally indefatigable partnership in front of Oblak.

Savic, of the two, made for particularly fascinating viewing. He had a season at Manchester City when they won their first title of the modern era in 2012 but his contribution was minimal and he was soon sold to Fiorentina. What Pep Guardiola would give now for a defender of this class.

Stefan Savic (L), formerly of Manchester City, has been turned into a world class defender

Stefan Savic (L), formerly of Manchester City, has been turned into a world class defender

Thomas Partey (right) was outstanding for the LaLiga giants at Anfield on Wednesday

Thomas Partey (right) was outstanding for the LaLiga giants at Anfield on Wednesday

He and Felipe spent the majority of the night putting themselves in the way, as Liverpool prodded and probed and kept asking questions. They were colossal, human magnets who drew the ball towards them and then smuggled it away. Equally outstanding was the Ghanaian Thomas Partey.

Simeone knew that defensive excellence would be required and that is what he got before making the final, match-defining change with the introduction of Marcos Llorente at the beginning of extra time.

His manager never celebrated when Llorente scored the game-changing away goal but when he scored the second, Simeone hurtled down the touchline towards the Anfield Road, smiling for the first time. There is a reason they pay him a king’s ransom. It’s because he makes the difference on nights such as this.



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