The midfielder says the squad exchanged a number of cross words at half-time following a poor first-half showing in their League Cup semi-final clash with Stoke City
Liverpool players confronted each other in the dressing room at half-time of their League Cup semi-final clash with Stoke City, Adam Lallana has revealed.
Despite trailing Stoke City 1-0 in normal time with the score locked at 1-1 on aggregate, Liverpool went on to win the clash 6-5 on penalties, with Joe Allen netting the decisive spot-kick.
And England midfielder Lallana admits his side underperformed in the opening 45 minutes, with several players subsequently clashing at the interval.
"In the first half we were poor and there were a few strong words at half-time. Not just from the manager but from ourselves. We knew it," he said.
"We told each other we had to be more composed on the ball, to want the ball and play out from the back, rather than hitting it long, which we did a few too many times.
"I thought we settled down in the second half.
"It was always going to be a scrappy game and a battle, particularly the longer it went on. We held our nerve in the penalties, which was the most important thing."
It was not the first time this season Anfield hosted a dressing room face-off, with visitors Manchester United players audibly upset with one another during the interval of their eventual 1-0 win.
Whilst the exchange was not as extreme as United’s, Lallana says the players were honest in their conviction and needed to speak directly in order to inspire a better performance.
"It wasn’t over the top, like it was with United. We could hear them kicking off from our dressing room," he added.
"We tried to have a bit more structure, but all knew we hadn’t been good enough. It was all about getting through and we are at Wembley now.
"We have got a chance to win a trophy, which is brilliant.
"I won the Johnstone’s Paint Trophy with Southampton at Wembley and you might laugh but I am proud of that.
Whilst the exchange was not as extreme as United’s, Lallana says the players were honest in their conviction and needed to speak directly in order to inspire a better performance.
"It wasn’t over the top, like it was with United. We could hear them kicking off from our dressing room," he added.
"We tried to have a bit more structure, but all knew we hadn’t been good enough. It was all about getting through and we are at Wembley now.
"We have got a chance to win a trophy, which is brilliant.
"I won the Johnstone’s Paint Trophy with Southampton at Wembley and you might laugh but I am proud of that.
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