Dominik Szoboszlai’s disguised, low free-kick exploited Marseille’s jump-only wall to ignite a 3-0 Liverpool victory that keeps the Reds perfect in the 2025-26 Champions League and sends a tactical warning to every remaining opponent.
Why the Game Was Stuck—and How Szoboszlai Unlocked It
Goalless after 45 minutes at a raucous Stade Vélodrome, Marseille’s mid-block 4-2-3-1 had successfully funneled Liverpool wide and forced hurried crosses. Liverpool dominated possession (68 percent) yet managed only two shots on target before stoppage time. The foul on Ryan Gravenberch 20 meters out felt like the last realistic chance to avoid a flat first half.
Marseille stationed four men in the wall but elected against the modern “lying-man” tactic to block the low lane. Szoboszlai, who had studied Rulli’s pre-kick set-position from earlier clips, asked referee Ivan Kružliak for the whistle the moment the wall twitched. His right-footed drive skimmed the turf, split the defenders’ feet by centimeters, and kissed the inside of the left post—0-1 and psychological carnage.
The Numbers Behind a Rare Low Free-Kick Goal
- Opta credits only three under-the-wall direct free-kick goals in the Champions League since 2016-17; Szoboszlai’s is the earliest in any match within that sample.
- Expected Goal (xG) on the strike: 0.07, underlining how execution, not probability, beat Rulli.
- Liverpool have now scored in 17 consecutive Champions League matches, their longest run since 2007-09.
Tactical Fallout: Marseille’s Gamble Backfires
Manager Roberto De Zerbi admitted post-match he instructed the wall to jump because analytics staff flagged Szoboszlai’s career split: 78 percent of set-piece attempts go over or central versus 22 percent low. Liverpool’s staff countered by drilling the Hungarian to disguise his approach, making the low option indistinguishable until plant-foot angle. The goal forced Marseille into a risk-heavy press, creating the transition windows for Liverpool’s second and third strikes.
Goalkeeper View: Rulli’s Split-Second Dilemma
Geronimo Rulli set up expecting height, planting his right foot to launch laterally. Slow-motion shows Szoboszlai’s ball already halfway under the wall before Rulli’s weight shifts downward. Historically, the Argentine has stopped just 25 percent of low free kicks on target since 2020—second-worst among UCL keepers with 10-plus faced.
What the Win Means for the Table
Liverpool move to 12 points from four matches, five clear of second-place Porto and eight ahead of Marseille. A draw in either of their final two fixtures books top spot and a seeded route in Monday’s Round-of-16 draw. More importantly, the Reds can rotate in Matchdays 5-6, protecting a squad already logging 46 competitive games before New Year’s.
Up Next: Liverpool’s Path and Marseille’s Gauntlet
- Liverpool visit Porto on 11 February; a point guarantees first place.
- Marseille travel to Sturm Graz next, needing six points and a swing of at least eight goals to have any knockout hope.
Three Talking Points Fans Are Already Arguing About
- Lie-Down Revival? Expect every Champions League wall to copycat the horizontal defender after Wednesday’s embarrassment.
- Rotation Risk: Should Arne Slot rest Salah versus Porto or chase an unbeaten group stage?
- Szoboszlai’s Ceiling: Two goals and four assists in his last six games—could 2026 be his Ballon d’Or push year?
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