After 20 years off the major European football stage Liverpool FC under new Spanish manager Rafael Benitez faced utter humiliation at half-time in the 2005 Champions League final in Istanbul. Three goals down to the brutally efficient & talented AC Milan the inexperienced new Liverpool
- an uneasy mix of local heroes young Spaniards & soon-to-be-outcasts
- was staring down the barrel of a possible record European Cup final defeat in front of 40 000 of its own fans & a global TV audience of hundreds of millions. That is until six extraordinary minutes of second-half carnage allied to Red courage & resolve changed the very course of European football history & mapped a new direction for the future of a club with a magnificent European past. The Miracle of Istanbul" offers an insight into the many foreign highs & domestic lows of the amazing 2004-05 Liverpool season as well as mapping out key connections between the great Liverpool European legacy of the 1970s & 80s & the new Benitez era
- via a detour of the ultimately doomed Gerard Houllier period of initial Continental Liverpool management. It also looks at some of the key players of the recent successful European campaign
- Gerrard Hamman Carragher & the erratic Jerzy Dudek among them
- & at the music & football cultures in the city that have uniquely shaped what is still known locally as the Liverpool Way. The book compares the new Liverpool manager with his key rivals: his Iberian cousin Jose Mourhino at Chelsea & the fiercely competitive David Moyes at neighbours Everton. But it ends
- as it must
- on that glorious night of 25 May in Istanbul with fans recollections & memories. It also asks: exactly what does the 2005 European triumph mean for the city of Liverpool & for the future direction of Liverpool football club under its modest but impressive new Spanish leadership?"