Liverpool 1 - 1 Newcastle United
Liverpool 1-1 Newcastle

| Scoring Summary | |
| Liverpool | Newcastle United |
| Michael Owen (67) | Shola Ameobi (25) |
| Match Stats | ||
| Liverpool | Newcastle United | |
| Shots (on Goal) | 8(4) | 6(5) |
| Fouls | 11 | 17 |
| Corner Kicks | 8 | 1 |
| Offsides | 4 | 0 |
| Time of Possession | 63% | 37% |
| Yellow Cards | 1 | 1 |
| Red Cards | 0 | 0 |
| Saves | 5 | 7 |
| Match Information |
|
Stadium:
Anfield, England
Attendance: 44,172 Match Time: 10:00 ET Official(s): M Riley (Referee) |
| Teams | |
| Liverpool | Newcastle United |
| 1 Jerzy Dudek | 1 Shay Given |
| 23 Jamie Carragher | 19 Titus Bramble |
| 4 Sami Hyypia | 2 Andy Griffin |
| 3 Steve Finnan | 18 Aaron Hughes |
| 7 Harry Kewell | 5 Andrew O'Brien |
| 13 Danny Murphy | 29 Lee Bowyer |
| 16 Dietmar Hamann | 17 Darren Ambrose |
| 17 Steven Gerrard | 11 Gary Speed |
| 18 John Arne Riise | 8 Kieron Courtney Dyer |
| 10 Michael Owen | 23 Shola Ameobi |
| 8 Emile Heskey | 9 Alan Shearer |
| Substitutes | |
| 40 Paul Harrison | Steve Harper 12 |
| 2 Stephane Henchoz | Steven Caldwell 30 |
| 28 Bruno Cheyrou | Laurent Robert 32 |
| 5 Milan Baros | Miguel Hugo Viana 45 |
| 24 Florent Sinama-Pongolle | Craig Bellamy 10 |
| Substitutions | |
| Craig Bellamy for Shola Ameobi (40) | |
| Steven Caldwell for Andy Griffin (79) | |
| Laurent Robert for Darren Ambrose (82) | |
| Yellow Cards | |
| Harry Kewell (63) | Darren Ambrose (63) |
| · Club Rosters: Liverpool | Newcastle United | |
Updated: May 15, 2004, 12:29 PM ET
Michael Owen's 19th goal of the season sent Liverpool fans home happy while Newcastle's Toon Army were left to celebrate qualification for the UEFA Cup after a 1-1 draw at Anfield.They had produced a resolute display to make up for their exit from this season's UEFA Cup semi-finals and then the midweek capitulation at Southampton that allowed Liverpool to grab the final Champions League spot.
• Robson hails 'weary' Magpies
Newcastle led early on through a Shola Ameobi strike, but Owen's clinical finish with 24 minutes left everything on a knife-edge.
But just when the critics believed Newcastle's courage and desire had escaped them, they flung a defensive wall around their goal and grabbed something from a season that had promised so much and threatened to end leaving them empty-handed.
Liverpool produced the decent performance that boss Gerard Houllier wanted and can go away for the summer dreaming of playing among Europe's elite again.
They will leave behind them a club in ferment over its future - be it with Steve Morgan or the Thai Prime Minister's cash.
But that is for the future. For Liverpool this was a sunshine celebration of achieving Champions League qualification.
Houllier, after his passionate defence of his record following shareholder Steve Morgan's midweek attack, fielded the side that won so well at Birmingham last weekend.
And he was able to give the last game of the season an emotional twist by using academy youngster Paul Harrison as his second choice keeper because Patrice Luzi injured an ankle in training on Friday.
The youngster got a fine welcome from the Kop, aware that the teenager's father died at Hillsborough 15 years ago.
It was some turnaround for Harrison, who a few months back had been told he was to be released only for Liverpool to have a change of heart and give him another one-year contract.
Liverpool started with composure and neat passing but the nearest they got early on was when Owen just failed to get onto the end of an Emile Heskey flick-on.
But Newcastle started to flow through midfield with Gary Speed and Lee Bowyer instrumental in some promising moves. But Jerzy Dudek was still not really tested, and it was Shay Given who had to make the first genuine save of the game when he fielder a 25-yard rising drive from Dietmar Hamann.
Liverpool's early attacks were sporadic and lacking any real cutting edge, and it was Newcastle who found themselves ahead on 25 minutes.
Bowyer advanced through the middle and Liverpool were not helped by Hamann and Sami Hyypia both slipping over, leaving space for Ameobi to exploit as he peeled off into space on the left to take Bowyer's pass and glide home an angled shot inside the far post.
Bowyer and Speed started to dominate midfield and although they lost Ameobi with an ankle injury on 40 minutes - Craig Bellamy making his comeback after another spell out with a hamstring problem - Newcastle got to the break feeling increasingly confident they would achieve their goal.
Liverpool's own urgency improved in the second period. Heskey missed a sitter created by Gerrard, who then stabbed wide before setting up Owen for a close-range effort.
But Newcastle should have made it two on 54 minutes when Bowyer's long ball to beyond the far post was headed back by Alan Shearer for Darren Ambrose, but Hyypia managed to hook it off the line as he ran towards his own goal.
The atmosphere was becoming much sharper as Liverpool battled back for an equaliser. It almost spilled over when Kewell twisted in the box and went down under a challenge from Ambrose, which referee Mike Riley decided was not a penalty.
As the two players scrambled to their feet, words and pushes were exchanged and the official had to pull the pair apart and dish out a warning.
But then Liverpool then did get the goal their second-half vibrancy deserved, and it was a peach.
In the 66th minute Gerrard angled a ball into the box from the right that deceived Titus Bramble and fell perfectly for Owen to run onto and with one movement send it skimming away from Given's despairing dive.
Newcastle hung on, grabbed the point they needed and both sides were able to go on parades around the pitch, throwing shirts to fans and everybody was happy.
Sir Bobby Robson hailed the endurance and spirit of his Newcastle team after they had grabbed a place in next season's UEFA Cup.
The United boss said: 'We knew we had to get something from this match to do the job ourselves, even if we are thankful for some help from Manchester United, who won at Aston Villa.
'We have had to play four games in 10 days - nobody else has had to do that - and we were on our knees at the end. I do not think we could have played much longer.
'We had weary legs. It has been a tough time and we're bushed, for sure. And we have done it despite losing so many players lately through injury.
'In the end it was a dramatic day and we were able to give something back to our wonderful support. We are grateful to them because those travelling fans have only seen us win twice away this season. That is inexplicable. It has been painful to watch.'
The Magpies chief added: 'If we had picked up a few more wins away we would have had this place, and probably fourth spot, tied up a long time ago. But we have drawn our last two away games at Southampton and here, and in the end those two points have got us into this position and back into Europe.'
Robson took time out to praise Liverpool skipper Steven Gerrard, who produced an outstanding performance.
Robson said: 'I wish Gerrard had gone off at half-time - he was really trying to kill us. It was his wonderful pass that set up Michael Owen's goal. I hope he scores a few like that for England this summer and that he plays like he did today for his country in Portugal.'
Liverpool boss Gerard Houllier also hailed his skipper, saying: 'He was awesome. He did everything out there. We put him out on the right in the second half and he turned in a fantastic display.
'He has upped his level of performance this season and is now approaching world class. He is the captain and leads by example.
'As for the match, it was a funny game. We did not really know what to do in the first half, we played ok and they took their chance. But in the second period we were much better, more creative and our movement was better.'
The Frenchman added: 'I felt a bit sorry for Bobby. He has lost so many players all at once and it has been difficult for him. I recall something similar happening to us during the season and we also struggled for results with so many out. I know how it feels and have sympathy for him.'
Saturday, May 15, 2004
| Arsenal | 2 | |
| Leicester City | 1 | FT |
| Aston Villa | 0 | |
| Manchester United | 2 | FT |
| Blackburn Rovers | 1 | |
| Birmingham | 1 | FT |
| Bolton Wanderers | 0 | |
| Fulham | 2 | FT |
| Charlton Athletic | 2 | |
| Southampton | 1 | FT |
| Chelsea | 1 | |
| Leeds United | 0 | FT |
| Liverpool | 1 | |
| Newcastle United | 1 | FT |
| Manchester City | 5 | |
| Everton | 1 | FT |
| Portsmouth | 5 | |
| Middlesbrough | 1 | FT |
| Wolverhampton Wanderers | 0 | |
| Tottenham Hotspur | 2 | FT |
