As one dream died in a blaze of glory, another lived on as Liverpool battled
on towards their cup treble dream.
Liverpool are in their second domestic cup final of the season, and a hairs
breath from a European final too, while brave, defiant Wycombe had their hearts
broken, if not their spirits.
It took two goals in the final 12 minutes at Villa Park, from first Emile
Heskey and then Robbie Fowler, for Liverpool to finally get their noses in front
against the gamest of opponents from the depths of the Second Division.
Wycombe just refused to let their dream slip away, and an 88th minute strike
from Keith Ryan - in front of the thousands of delirious Wanderers fans - set up
a dramatic finish.
Wycombe threw every man forward and had Liverpool desperately on the ropes at
the end.
But the fantasy was not to be. And to be fair the right side are now due to
face Arsenal in Cardiff.
Wycombe's only on-target shot was that Ryan effort, while Liverpool dug deep
into seemingly bottomless reserves of strength to claw their way to the
Millennium Stadium.
Nobody will forget little Wycombe. They gave everything and were never for one
moment embarrassed by the occasion.
The greatest respect was shown by Gerard Houllier at the end. He marched into
the mud-bath of a pitch to seek out Lawrie Sanchez to shake his hand. The
Frenchman knew only too well just how far Wycombe had pushed his men.
Wycombe's boys were taking a fully deserved standing ovation as Liverpool left
the pitch to the side who had been so valiant and got within touching distance
of becoming the first side from the third level of English soccer to reach the
FA Cup final.
The fantasy of the cup, and his quarter-final winner at Leicester, still did
not get goal hero Roy Essandoh into the starting line-up, as Wycombe set about
Liverpool with an assured confidence.
Liverpool, who had brought in Christian Ziege for his first start in six game
sand just days after he had criticised Gerard Houllier's team selections, looked
at times like they were playing on auto pilot.
But that just was not good enough for such a match against such a team, whose
whole style is based on effort, sweat and determination.
Nick Barmby, Gary McAllister and Robbie Fowler - none of whom started in
Barcelona on Thursday in the UEFA Cup semi-final first leg - also got into
Liverpool's starting line-up.
Steven Gerrard and Emile Heskey were rested on the bench, with Tuesday's
Premiership trip to Ipswich no doubt in mind.
And maybe that was the problem, if not an excuse. Liverpool have so much on
their plate they cannot concentrate all their efforts on one aim.
For Wycombe it really was the day of dreams and emotions. Boss Lawrie Sanchez
and midfielder Steve Brown had their sons as mascots for the day and the
Wanderers had their massed ranks on the Holte End behind them at the start. A
joyous, flag-waving army, willing their heroes on.
Liverpool faced the ultimate hiding to nothing, surely a team worth over
£100million could not fail to a team worth £1million.
But Wycombe had every intention of defying history to achieve that! They were
all about tackling, covering and the quick and accurate delivery of balls
forward.
Ryan's 25 yard lob that could have embarrassed Sander Westerveld drifted wide,
but Wycombe keeper Martin Taylor three times early on had to save smartly from
crosses from the right as the combined threat of Fowler, Michael Owen and Barmby
threatened with every forward move.
But Wycombe were showing no stage fright. They were soon into their rhythm and
showing the organisation, particularly in defence, that had got them to this
unlikely stage.
Owen enraged Wycombe by going down far too easily in the box, Chris Vinnicombe
having barely touched the England striker after 23 minutes.
Owen was surrounded by three defenders and had to wrestle his way clear as
referee Paul Durkin waved play on.
Liverpool were losing out in the tackling stakes, nobody got a second to dwell
on the ball. But that attitude cost Brown a 27th minute booking for catching
Sami Hyypia late.
But any free-kick that Liverpool conceded was fraught with problems, and one
curled in by Michael Simpson saw Paul McCarthy's backward flick held by
Westerveld. Not much doubt where Sanchez got that set play from, a carbon copy
of his FA Cup final winner against the Anfield men back in 1988.
Liverpool chances were few, but Owen should have scored on 32 minutes when
Barmby played him clear in the box.
But Taylor's outstanding plunge at his feet saved the day.
Liverpool's play lacked the pace and urgency needed to combat Wycombe's dogged
covering and work rate, and poor passing did not help them and Wanderers grew in
confidence.
Andy Rammell underlined the dangers for a casual Liverpool when he almost got
a touch to a 41st minute left wing ball from Vinnicombe, and the problems were
all too obvious for Liverpool as they struggled to impose themselves on the
game.
Liverpool's best chance fell to Ziege seconds before the break when his
overhead shot from Hyypia's header flashed inches wide of Taylor's left hand
post.
Barmby, who had taken a painful ankle knock in the first half, lasted just six
minutes of the second period before he was forced off and replaced by Gerrard.
Liverpool attempted to quicken the tempo, but still the final pass was not
good enough and the likes of Jamie Bates, in particular, were quick to pick off
possession when slackness, and there was plenty of that, crept into Liverpool's
play.
It was all pretty uncompromising too. Jason Cousins was booked on 55 minutes
for a tackle from behind on an increasingly frustrated Owen, and before the
re-start Essandoh finally got into the action in place of Rammell.
Liverpool's bench were becoming increasingly angry with the treatment being
metered out to Owen, who was spending more and more time flat on his face!
Time was passing, Wycombe were still in it, and the last thing Liverpool
wanted was extra-time.
And Houllier opted for another striker, Heskey coming on in place of Ziege
after 61 minutes.
But Wycombe continued to present a desire and belligerence, to underline they
were not going to give up their once in a lifetime chance of glory. Liverpool
were going to have to take it from them.
Liverpool slowly increased pressure. Heskey's fine header from Jamie
Carragher's cross was saved superbly to his right by Taylor, and seconds later
Gerrard put Owen clear only for the keeper to make another brave stop.
Finally, after 78 minutes, Liverpool got their breakthrough. Gerrard's ball in
from the right was powered past Taylor by Heskey with a cracking header.
It had taken a long time, but Liverpool had managed to find something of
quality.
While Wycombe deserve all the praise, it was a lead that was hard to argue
with.
Danny Murphy came on for a bedraggled Owen on 80 minutes as Sanchez threw on
Guy Whittingham and Dave Carroll for Brown and Ben Townsend.
But before those changes could have any effect, Fowler clinched Liverpool's
final place with a brilliant, curling free-kick from 20 yards that soared into
the top corner.
But still Wycombe would not give in. Two minutes from time, with Wycombe
throwing men forward from all angles, Ryan got onto a knock down from Taylor's
long kick to scoop the ball over the helpless Westerveld to set up a dramatic
finale.
Four minutes of injury time did nothing for the Liverpool team's heart rates
as Wycombe fought for their dream.
Gerrard missed a glorious chance in the dying seconds when put through by
Murphy, but that was the last kick of a dramatic game, and Liverpool could
breath a sign of relief.
Teams
Wycombe: Taylor, Cousins, Vinnicombe, McCarthy, Bates, Ryan,
Townsend (Carroll 81), Simpson, Brown (Whittingham 81),
Rammell (Essandoh 56), Bulman.
Subs Not Used: Lee, Osborne.
Booked: Brown, Cousins.
Goals: Ryan 88.
Liverpool: Westerveld, Babbel, Carragher, Henchoz, Hyypia,
Hamann, Barmby (Gerrard 51), McAllister, Ziege (Heskey 61),
Fowler, Owen (Murphy 81).
Subs Not Used: Berger, Arphexad.
Goals: Heskey 78, Fowler 83.
Att: 40,037
Ref: P Durkin (Dorset).