What did Mohamed Salah say about Al-Qaim's two chances against Inter Milan... and why did he criticize Liverpool's performance

Liverpool star and English Premier League top scorer, Mohamed Salah, criticized his team's performance against Inter Milan, in the second leg of the 16th round of the European Football Championship, which the Reds lost with a clean goal.

He said, "It seems that we overconfidence a little before the match, considering the victory in the first leg with two clean goals."

“We have to start better than we did in the rematch.

It looks like we were a bit overconfident, but it's good to learn from what happened in that encounter."

The Egyptian star, Mohamed Salah, commented on his wasting two chances against his Liverpool team, which he lost to Inter Milan 0-1 yesterday evening, Tuesday, in the second leg of the 16th round of the European Champions League.

Although the Reds lost at Anfield, they managed to qualify for the quarter-finals after winning the first leg 2-0 at San Siro.

During yesterday's match, Mohamed Salah missed two chances to score, as his ball hit the post twice.

"It was a difficult match, they were very good in the first leg, we suffered at the beginning, the most important thing is that we qualified, we hope to be better in the next match," Mohamed Salah told the "Liverpool Echo" network.

He continued: “My ball hit the post twice, it’s okay!

Maybe in the next match I will score three goals!

I don't care about that much as long as the most important thing is that the team qualified, we lost the game and maybe that will push us, maybe in our minds we had an overconfidence."

And he added: “This is a good game to learn from, it is always important to win but sometimes you miss chances, it can happen, the good thing is that it is not in the league and we qualified!”

Salah concluded his statements by saying: "Everyone wants to win the Champions League and the English Premier League, we will fight for both, we will see."

Follow our latest local and sports news and the latest political and economic developments via Google news