Liverpool booked their first Champions League semifinal in 10 years as Pep Guardiola's selection gamble backfired with Manchester City going down to their third defeat in six days.
Second-half goals by Mohamed Salah and Roberto Firmino cancelled out Gabriel Jesus's second-minute opener to seal a comfortable 5-1 aggregate victory for the five-time European champions. But the final score does little to reflect a tumultuous quarterfinal second leg at the Etihad, with City subjecting Liverpool to a first-half onslaught that should have been rewarded with a second goal when Leroy Sane's goal was wrongly ruled out for offside on 43 minutes, just moments after a Bernardo Silva shot hit the post.
The decision of Spanish referee Antonio Mateu Lahoz to rule out Sane's goal prompted a furious reaction by City manager Guardiola, who was sent to the stands for his protests. It was a bad moment on a bad night for Guardiola, who had surprised many by naming top scorer Sergio Aguero on the bench for a game City needed to score at least three goals to save the tie. By the time Aguero entered the fray on 66 minutes, the tie was as good as over following Salah's equaliser nine minutes earlier.
But Liverpool's victory has left City with a sense of deflation just weeks after being billed as the greatest team in Premier League history. The quadruple has become a double, which is still some achievement, but City have once again fallen short in the Champions League despite having Guardiola in charge.
Liverpool, meanwhile, march on as they attempt to win a sixth European Cup next month.
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