Liverpool failed in their attempt to equal a club record 14-match unbeaten run in Europe with a 1-0 defeat against Braga in their last-16 first leg UEFA Europa League tie in Portugal.
Kenny Dalglish's side were so devoid of movement at times they appeared to be taking inspiration from the huge chunks of rock still visible at one end of the unique ground. They lacked pace and creativity without injured captain Steven Gerrard and the ineligible livewire forward Luis Suarez, who was instrumental in terrorising Manchester United in Sunday's 3-1 victory.
"The way we started the game, the first 35 minutes, we were terrible," said Dalglish. "To the boys' credit, they picked themselves up a bit in the second half. I think at 1-0 you have got a chance."
Even a European debut for £35million record signing Andy Carroll after half-time could not turn things around after Brazilian Alan had converted a 17th-minute penalty. The omens were there from the start with a side featuring three defensive midfielders - albeit with Jay Spearing patrolling the right side of a 4-2-3-1 - which still never looked comfortable or particularly solid.
They spent much of the opening quarter of an hour chasing possession, although the hosts never came close to threatening Pepe Reina's goal. They were just getting into their stride, however, and in the 17th minute when Mossoro raced onto a through-ball to the right of the penalty area he was brought down by Sotirios Kyrgiakos' mis-timed tackle.
The spot-kick was expertly slotted away by the Brazilian, who must have one of the least exotically-sounding names of all his countrymen. Raul Meireles was given a hard time by Braga fans on his return to his homeland, having moved to Anfield from nearby Porto. He had a rare shooting opportunity from a 25-yard free-kick but drilled his effort into the wall.
Pressure was growing on Liverpool though, and centre-back Kaka almost lived up to the reputation of his more illustrious namesake when he attempted a cheeky shot from a narrow angle after taking a corner but drilled the ball into the side-netting. Left-back Silvio went even closer with a thunderous 35-yard volley which beat Reina but rattled back off the crossbar.
The visitors were crying out for some creativity and pace to be injected and to that end all seven substitutes were sent out to warm up during the interval. Ten minutes after the restart Carroll was sent on for Christian Poulsen, with Spearing dropping back into central midfield and Meireles moving to the right.
His early involvement saw him head over Meireles' corner, although he was adjudged to have committed a foul in the act, and then had a shot deflected for a corner. Carroll's arrival certainly livened things up, with Braga unable to handle his aerial power; Liverpool's problem was they were not providing him with decent enough crosses to threaten the hosts' goal.
When Meireles did whip one in from the right it was Dirk Kuyt who controlled it and volleyed over the crossbar. The closing stages became increasingly scrappy as the Reds pushed for an equaliser. Carroll continued to win headers with confident regularity but they were mostly in non-threatening positions from Reina's long punts upfield, with absolutely no service coming from either flank, with Joe Cole cutting a particularly inconsequential figure.
