Whatever the result in the Champions League final, Jurgen Klopp and Liverpool will win or lose it their way

Klopp has bravely stuck to his principles right through this run to Kiev and it may be enough to topple Real Madrid

Mark Critchley
Northern Football Correspondent
Thursday 24 May 2018 14:57 BST
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Liverpool's Champions League campaign in numbers

“We have to handle it like an opportunity because it is an opportunity,” Jürgen Klopp said earlier this week, previewing Saturday’s Champions League final against Real Madrid, before touching on the defining characteristic of his Liverpool side’s journey to Kiev.

“We will show the players why it makes so much sense to be brave,” he added. “It was not easy to be brave against Manchester City and against Roma but we did it. The moment we tried to defend the result we were almost out.”

His point was clear. Whatever the result of Liverpool’s eighth European Cup final appearance, they will win or lose it their way. They will attack. They will “be brave”. By now, we should know not to expect anything different.

Klopp and his players are capable of killing a game off. The final hour of the quarter-final first leg against City, when they prevented the best team in Europe from registering a single shot on target, was arguably more impressive than the opening half-hour in which they established a 3-0 lead.

This Liverpool team was already known for an ability to produce short, devastating bursts of attacking play back then - they had done the very same to City just a few months earlier - but the mature and controlled way they shut City down that night at Anfield was something new.

Yet as their performance at the Stadio Olimpico three weeks ago demonstrated, building a lead comes more naturally to these players than protecting one.

No matter the scoreline, if Mohamed Salah has 40 yards of space to run into on the right, he will run into it. The entire midfield phalanx will usually push up in support, Trent Alexander-Arnold is often not far behind. This team has a bloodlust. They are most at home when on the hunt.

Champions League final 2018: Mohamed Salah v Cristiano Ronaldo

The worry for Saturday’s final might be whether Klopp’s insistence on “being brave” crosses the line into stupidity, and whether such a relentlessly cavalier approach leaves Liverpool vulnerable to canny, tactically-astute opponents.

Fortunately, their opponents are Real Madrid, a team that seems just as unlikely to alter their game plan.

Under Zinedine Zidane’s stewardship, Madrid are expansive, forward-focused team that rarely set up to counteract specific threats. The ‘arrogance’ that comes with being the most successful club in the history of this competition almost allows them no other option but to do the same in Kiev. They will play on the front foot and try to strike first.

For Liverpool, that means there will be space. Much of Madrid’s attacking play relies on the contributions of full backs Marcelo and Dani Carvajal, who invariably vacate acres of room in their own half while venturing forward. This is Madrid’s main defensive weakness and it is not one they will necessarily look to cover for. Salah, Sadio Mané and Roberto Firmino should be afforded plenty of opportunities to exploit it.

Still, Klopp will need to contain a side that has scored a total of 148 goals this season - six more than his own players have managed. Liverpool’s midfield of Jordan Henderson, James Milner and Georginio Wijnaldum were their best performers in Rome, though will need much more defensive support from the forward line than they received that night.

Cristiano Ronaldo, meanwhile, must be relishing a far post match up against either Robertson or Trent Alexander-Arnold. Both full-backs, still inexperienced at this level, will need to win each and every one of their battles against the Champions League’s all-time leading goalscorer in order to keep him quiet.

It seems possible, though, that Madrid’s approach will suit Liverpool’s, more so than if Jupp Heynckes’ Bayern Munich or Ernesto Valverde’s Barcelona were waiting in the final. By sticking to his principles, Klopp may see his team tear strips off a Madrid side that attempts to take the initiative and in doing so, over-commits in key areas.

What is certain is that Liverpool will attack and leave space for Madrid, so Madrid will attack and leave space for Liverpool. Like many of the other outings in this Champions League campaign, it could go either way. Klopp asks only that his players are ‘brave’ and in doing so, hopes their final gamble will pay off.

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