One night in Belgrade

By Nikola Pozder / Roar Rookie

Milan Pavkov became an overnight superstar when he found the back of Alisson Becker’s net not once, but twice on Wednesday morning AEDT to register Red Star Belgrade’s first ever victory in the Champions League against the mighty Liverpool FC.

After conceding ten goals in their previous two games, it was more a question of ‘how many today’ would Red Star lose by in this David versus Goliath clash.

But the Merseyside boys didn’t know where they were coming; a footballing cauldron, filled arguably with the best fans in the world, the ‘Delije’ or ‘Heroes’ as they’re known.

Much was spoken about the daunting ‘tunnel’ at the Serbian ‘Marakana’ which stretches more than 100 metres. The gritty, graffitied, run down tunnel would send chills down the toughest spines.

Lined with special forces police, the Liverpool players new they were in for something different.

As the players emerged from what would’ve seemed a never-ending walk through the tunnel, in unison, more than 50,000 fans produced a stunning choreography across the whole stadium, exploding with noise.

Liverpool’s coach Jurgen Klopp. (AP Photo/Tim Ireland)

With Red Star’s first step into the Reds’ half the fans pushed them forward, all as one busting the same song.

When Pavkov rose highest to thunder his header in to the back of the net on 22 minutes, the stadium erupted, shaking to it’s foundations.

Within seven minutes, Pavkov, wrote his name in Red Star Folklore. Receiving the ball from former Chelsea winger Marko Marin, he turned Georgino Wijnaldum before smashing his effort beyond a hapless Alisson to leave the home fans in utter disbelief.

The Former European and World champions had last season’s Champions League finalists on their knees to the disbelief of everyone around the globe.

A team from little Serbia had stunned a giant of modern world football, 2-0 in the heart of Belgrade.

At a time when football is changing, ‘European Super Leagues’ are the talk of the town, Red Star put one up for all the ‘little’ guys out there.

Alisson Becker cost Liverpool £56m more than what Pavkov cost Red Star, the Reds’ team value is £821.70m as opposed to the Serbians £39.51m.

The players and their fans have given the rest of the world hope that football hasn’t fallen into the hands of the powerful and that teams like Red Star, Dinamo Zagreb, Steaua Bucharest and so on still have an opportunity to do something amongst these giants.

The Crowd Says:

2018-11-10T03:13:09+00:00

Daniel Greenland

Roar Guru


Awesome display from Red Star who used their home advantage to the full. Liverpool looked disjointed for the first time this season. Klopp's style of play is strenuous but that is why he has bolstered his squad to deal with hostile European nights like this. Concerning for the Reds, but hats off to Belgrade.

2018-11-09T21:33:59+00:00

Mister Football

Roar Guru


There was a time when we could see the alumni of Red Star playing right here in Australia.

2018-11-09T20:54:43+00:00

Nick

Guest


What a shame most younger football followers know very little of Red Star Belgrade or Crvena Zvezda in known in Serbian. RSB have millions of supporters not just in Serbia but in the former Yugoslav republics and Western Europe, Australia, USA and Canada (all expats) The win was a fantastic result for a club that was pretty much bankrupt only 5 years ago with massive debts Looking forward to the remaining 2 games even if RSB lose they are still winners

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