The road to Dublin begins on Thursday evening for Liverpool, who travel to the Raiffeisen Arena to tackle Austrian outfit LASK Linz in their opening Europa League Group E encounter.
The Reds were demoted to the second tier of European football on account of their fifth-placed Premier League finish last term, while the hosts overcame Zrinjski Mostar 3-2 in qualifying to prolong their continental journey.
Match preview
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The Red Bull Salzburg juggernaut remains the dominant force in the Austrian football landscape, leaving Sturm Graz and LASK to engage in a two-horse battle for the 'best of the rest' label, and Liverpool's upcoming opponents ultimately fell short in their quest for a runners-up finish.
With Sturm Graz advancing to Champions League qualifying, the third-placed Linz crop entered the preliminary rounds of the Europa League at the final hurdle, where Bosnian minnows Zrinjski were bested 3-2 by Thomas Sageder's troops, who propelled the Black-Whites into the group stages for only the third time.
Only recently making waves in European football, Sturm Graz's Europa League debut in 2019-20 ended in a last-16 loss to Manchester United, while they failed to make it beyond the group stage a year later, before a shot at Europa Conference League glory in 2021-22 culminated in another early knockout exit to Slavia Prague.
However, on current form, the one-time Austrian champions may fancy their chances of pipping fellow Group E foes Toulouse and Union SG to one of the top two spots in the section - with second place guaranteeing a spot in the knockout round playoffs - as LASK enter Thursday's opener unbeaten in seven competitive games.
On Saturday, Sageder's men made it three league wins on the trot with a 3-1 triumph away to Austria Klagenfurt, while they have also prevailed in each of their last four contests at the Raiffeisen Arena, scoring two goals on each occasion and shipping just one in the process.
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The hosts' exploits in front of the home crowd are nothing to be sniffed at, but the calibre of opposition will increase significantly when an in-form Liverpool come to town, having seen their six-year streak of successive Champions League qualifications come to a disappointing end in 2022-23.
It was fitting that serial Europa League winner Unai Emery would be the one to consign the Reds to his favoured competition for the first time since the 2015-16 season, as a 1-1 draw with the Spaniard's Aston Villa side killed off any wafer-thin hopes Jurgen Klopp's side had of sneaking into the top four.
The six-time Champions League winners regularly stepped out to the Europa League anthem between 2010 and 2016 and even reached the final in the latter year, only to fall to Sevilla's superiority, but Klopp's men are already the bookies' favourite to hoist the trophy aloft at the Aviva Stadium.
Liverpool extended their winning streak to four matches at the weekend by coming from behind to prevail for the third time this season, sinking Wolverhampton Wanderers 3-1 courtesy of Cody Gakpo, Andy Robertson and a Hugo Bueno own goal, thereby cementing a third-place ranking in the Premier League table at this embryonic stage.
Having bit back against Gary O'Neil's Wolves, Liverpool are now without defeat in 16 competitive fixtures on the trot amid their bid to seal an immediate return to the Champions League, which they could either achieve with a top-four finish or by going all the way in the Europa League, adding another continental honour to their cabinet in the process.
LASK and Liverpool have never squared off on the competitive stage before, but the hosts have only ever avoided defeat in one of their previous four meetings with English sides, holding Tottenham Hotspur to an enthralling 3-3 home draw in the 2020-21 group phase.
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Team News
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A surfeit of injured LASK Linz players have not been included in Sageder's squad for the Europa League group stage, including Tobias Anselm, Yannis Letard and Adil Taoui, all three of whom are out with ACL problems.
Winger Lenny Pintor is also absent with a muscular problem, and on the back of a 17-goal season during the 2022-23 campaign, Japanese winger Keito Nakamura left to join the Reims revolution in France.
Roma loanee Ebrima Darboe - a 2021-22 Europa Conference League winner - was the hosts' marquee summer signing, but he has only played one game for the LASK reserve side owing to a lack of fitness and should not be thrown in from the start here.
As for Liverpool, captain Virgil van Dijk is now available for selection once more following a two-game domestic ban, but his lieutenant - Trent Alexander-Arnold - is still dealing with a hamstring problem and will not be ready in time for the trip to Austria.
Alexander-Arnold should begin working with the ball at his feet at some point this week, but Joe Gomez will likely hold the fort for now, while luckless midfielder Thiago Alcantara suffered a setback in his recovery from a hip problem before the international break and is set to miss out too.
A multitude of changes should be afoot for Klopp, who will consider a first start for summer signing Ryan Gravenberch, while the talented Ben Doak should be offered some minutes in attack as the Reds boss manages Mohamed Salah's fitness.
LASK Linz possible starting lineup:
Lawal; Luckeneder, Ziereis, Andrade; Flecker, Jovicic, Horvath, Bello; Ljubicic, Zulj, Havel
Liverpool possible starting lineup:
Kelleher; Gomez, Quansah, Van Dijk, Tsimikas; Elliott, Endo, Gravenberch; Doak, Jota, Diaz
We say: LASK Linz 1-3 Liverpool
LASK normally need no lessons in putting the ball in the back of the net at home and should play with the handbrake off against Liverpool, whose defending has often left a lot to be desired this season.
A second-string Reds XI are unlikely to be at their free-flowing best, but the cavalry is ready to be called upon if things to awry, and Klopp's red-hot attackers should propel the visitors to a convincing opening victory.
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