Official Liverpool FC Supporters Thread III

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akescpt

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SinghDude

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London - When Jürgen Klopp emerges each morning from the front door of his home on the tree-lined street in Formby dubbed locally as ‘Millionaires Row,’ the first person he is likely to see from work is his next door neighbour, Adam Lallana.

Lallana says the relationship is as it should be between manager and player, reiterating what others have said about Klopp: that he is a friend but certainly not a best friend.



If there is one person who symbolises Klopp's Liverpool, though, it is Lallana. In the same way Pep Guardiola's management at Manchester City has helped inspire Raheem Sterling to reach the level of performance that convinced City to take him from Liverpool two summers ago, Lallana's transformation under Klopp's guidance has been remarkable.

Lallana had a role in three of Liverpool's five goals against Hull City on Saturday and again, when asked about the midfielder's emergence as a key figure, Klopp tried his best to shine a light on those who are not talked about quite as much by nestling reminders in his response. “Look how Hendo played…” he said, “…a lot of people were pretty sure he cannot play a holding [role].”

If there is one undisputed truth about Klopp it is that he does not like to praise individuals while others are in the mood to do so, even if it reflects well on his coaching. His method is from the old school of picking them up when they’re down while keeping them hungry for more when they’re up.

Klopp will appear on the Sky Sports Monday Night Football show with Jamie Carragher before Burnley's game with Watford on Tuesday evening and it is imaginable that his lips will become pursed and his facial expressions generally pained if faced with such questions, as they frequently do during press conferences before the smiles take over when he feels comfortable enough that the answer given has taken the conversation in the direction he wants.

Listen to Klopp regularly enough and you appreciate quickly that team-ethic comes before anything else.

It is a significant fact, indeed, that of the six players chosen by Klopp in midfield and attack against Hull - and in every other league match this season - only Sadio Mané is being used in what he considers his natural position.

While Liverpool's players have spoken privately that this is fostering a spirit of selflessness inside Melwood's dressing rooms, Klopp deserves credit for spotting what others haven’t and making it work for him.

Though Lallana has been able to express himself creatively within the framework of the 4-3-3 set-up that Klopp has used at Liverpool, he is being placed towards the right of the centre (rather than the left wing as he was before) because Klopp believes he has the diligence and intelligence to help Liverpool achieve positive results while playing there.

The same reasoning explains why James Milner is being used at left back while Roberto Firmino rather than Daniel Sturridge is considered as the first choice striker.

It was put to Klopp that despite the first half pulverisation of Hull, which also included goals from Mané and Milner, he was not entirely satisfied. David Meyler's consolation reminded Klopp that his team is yet to keep a clean sheet. Philippe Coutinho and then another Milner penalty kick made sure the scoreline reflected the proceedings.

Klopp's read from scripture that reminds anyone getting too excited about Liverpool's form that a football season is a marathon rather than a sprint.

“We are far away from Christmas now and after Christmas there's January, February, March, April, May and then it stops, right?

“So it's a long, long, long race and I never saw in any race that if you have to run 20km that after 5km you are like this [hands in the air celebrating].

“It makes no sense and I’m happy with the performance and I know about the need to carry on and keep on going. I’m fine, I’m really fine but I know there's a lot of work to do still.”
 

The Voice

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He's one of the best modern managers. We (Gooners) were really bleak when we didn't get him. Then again, we never even tried to, cause AW is going to be there until 2057 apparently.
 

hawker

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He's one of the best modern managers. We (Gooners) were really bleak when we didn't get him. Then again, we never even tried to, cause AW is going to be there until 2057 apparently.

Wenger gets too much hate for what he does. Changing managers all the time is really not a good idea, especially when you have a decent one.
 

The Voice

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Wenger gets too much hate for what he does. Changing managers all the time is really not a good idea, especially when you have a decent one.
I'll admit it: there are Gooners who absolutely despise him. I love the man and all he's done for Arsenal. Yes, there were times when I was prepared to go help him pack, but then realised that he's all we have for the foreseeable future. I support the team, not necessarily the manager - long after he's gone, AFC will still be there.

We only need to look at Saturday's game to understand just how fickle football is: we were celebrating AW's 20th year in charge of Arsenal. That's unheard of in the modern game. But we were facing a team with its 12th manager since Arsene took over at Highbury. Klopp isn't a job-hopper by today's standards. He sees a project he believes in and sticks with it. Arsene is the same, which is why many saw Klopp as his natural successor. There just aren't that many of that calibre of management anymore, so not sure what we're going to do when AW finally says "merd" and leaves. Better the devil you know, and all that.
 

curbs2012

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I'll admit it: there are Gooners who absolutely despise him. I love the man and all he's done for Arsenal. Yes, there were times when I was prepared to go help him pack, but then realised that he's all we have for the foreseeable future. I support the team, not necessarily the manager - long after he's gone, AFC will still be there.

We only need to look at Saturday's game to understand just how fickle football is: we were celebrating AW's 20th year in charge of Arsenal. That's unheard of in the modern game. But we were facing a team with its 12th manager since Arsene took over at Highbury. Klopp isn't a job-hopper by today's standards. He sees a project he believes in and sticks with it. Arsene is the same, which is why many saw Klopp as his natural successor. There just aren't that many of that calibre of management anymore, so not sure what we're going to do when AW finally says "merd" and leaves. Better the devil you know, and all that.

AW does deserve loads of credit, gunners really should appreciate him more...not you TV, but there are many that don't. I think Tuchel might be a good option for the gunners.

As for our JK, well, the man oozes class, and humility.
Jamie looked all but in love with him last night... LOL!!
 

AfricanTech

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AW does deserve loads of credit, gunners really should appreciate him more...not you TV, but there are many that don't. I think Tuchel might be a good option for the gunners.

As for our JK, well, the man oozes class, and humility.
Jamie looked all but in love with him last night... LOL!!
Man hugs all round!

I like AW - always been a very classy manager
 

SinghDude

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Yeah, Wenger has been brilliant.



Everybody wishes they had Klopp :D

He is like an evil, mad scientist wrapped in humour. I like......
 
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