
BBC Sport has been reflecting on the forthcoming Netflix documentary which details Liverpool's unlikely comeback in the 2005 Champions League final.
The key figures from the time feature, with ex-defender Jamie Carragher detailing the role of manager Rafa Benitez.
As he reflects on Benitez's time in charge, Carragher says the manager's training methods were "a bit weird".
"There's no ball and there'd just be cones all around the pitch," says the former England defender, 48.
"Rafa would say, 'right the ball's at cone A, the ball's at cone D, the ball's at cone F' and then we'd all have to run to where we should be."
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Benitez acknowledges he likes to go into detail in his coaching.
"I like to analyse things," he says. "Just one centimetre higher or lower – that is the difference between success sometimes and defeat."
And that attention to detail paid off during the penalty shootout in Istanbul.
Jerzy Dudek says Benitez had kept extensive notes on where Milan's players liked to put their spot-kicks.
"We had a code," says the former Poland goalkeeper. "The goal was divided into six squares. He shared this information: 'Andriy Shevchenko likes one and four.'"
Dudek saved two penalties, including the decisive one from Shevchenko.
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