Jurgen Klopp's latest challenge? Ensuring none of his Liverpool players feel left behind

As his Liverpool team evolves and grows stronger, the challenges that Klopp faces become different

Simon Hughes
Monday 29 October 2018 08:23 GMT
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Liverpool 2018/19 Premier League profile

“That is our life - ignoring useless news,” Jurgen Klopp reminded when asked about the views of the outside world and how it collides with his own. As his Liverpool team evolves and grows stronger, the challenge becomes different. They are not necessarily problems but they are things for him to consider. Like how, for example, players like Adam Lallana, Jordan Henderson and even Georginio Wijnaldum must feel when new signings come in and some supporters – in their attempts to welcome them – react by pushing those that have been there much longer aside in the excitement of it all. Cruel messages on the social media pages of Lallana and Henderson suggest that they are already viewed as a sort of natural wastage, as the Red tank pushes on.

Lallana started for Klopp on Saturday and was substituted with half an hour to go. Though he was unlucky not to score with the second to last touch of the first half when his arcing header was cleared off the line, he had been removed by the hour mark having scurried up and down the right wing in an unfamiliar position without creating much.

It did not help Lallana that his replacement, Xherdan Shaqiri, had an impact; securing Liverpool’s victory by scoring beautifully in front of the Kop with his first goal for the club. Considering Henderson wasn’t even involved and in his absence through injury, Liverpool have scored eight goals in a week, there is now a clamour for Fabinho to start regularly, the midfielder who does not begin games at break-neck speed but has eased himself into each of his opportunities, with his pick-pocket tackles later helping Liverpool win possession back and counter attack with the pace that sees opponents crumble.

Though Wijnaldum has been relentless in the wins over Red Star Belgrade and arguably has been Liverpool’s most consistent performer all season, it does not help him either that there is not one particularly outstanding feature to his game. Wijnaldum is a good old all-round seven-out-of-ten midfielder who seems to be appreciated more inside Liverpool’s dressing room, where his leadership skills were reflected last week when a vote at Melwood to establish the team’s new third and fourth captains saw him come only behind Virgil van Dijk.

There are different ways of looking at the purpose of this vote and one of them relates to Henderson and his deputy James Milner, a pair who surely now know their positions in the starting XI are not guaranteed. Broadly, it not only confirms that Klopp is confident about the depth of options available to him but also, that it is fair to conclude he has transformed a dressing room from the one he inherited where the primary criticism had been that it did not contain any forceful leaders to one which now has an abundance of personalities. Andy Robertson was made Scotland captain in September and he is not even in Liverpool’s top four – and neither are any of the front three, who take so much of the acclaim when Liverpool perform at their best; players who could be received as captains because they inspire by what they do. Mohamed Salah captains Egypt, of course, and so does Sadio Mane with Senegal.

Klopp was adamant that nobody will feel left behind under his guidance but credited his players for their common sense in appreciating what needs to happen for progression to be marked down as truly successful. He thought back to a moment last season before a Champions League game when the camera lenses of photographers waiting for Liverpool to go out and train were focused on just one person.

“We were standing inside and I said we could go out naked except for Mo and they would not notice,” he smiled. “It is not a bit of a problem. Footballers are used to it. We are a smart team. They are not jealous or whatever. Everybody who comes in, meanwhile, is like, ‘wow it so much better than what we had before’. How can anyone forget Gini Wijnaldum? It is impossible. For the team, it will not happen. Outside, you cannot imagine how less we care about it.”

“Mo had a fantastic run last year; this year it starts with people asking why he does not score,” Klopp reflected. “For the boys, it should only be important what I think. They like it when new players come in. We brought them in to make us better in specific situations. They really are fine. We have these choices, that is the most important thing.”

As Klopp spoke from the bowels of Anfield, a couple of hundred yards away down Walton Breck Road, Liverpool supporters were celebrating another victory. They are always trying to find clever ways of shoehorning the names of their most adored players into recognised songs. The upstairs floors in the Twelfth Man shook as lyrics relating to the defensive capabilities of van Dijk were belted out to the tune of Dirty Old Town. This will catch on.

Jurgen Klopp with Virgil van Dijk after the victory over Cardiff (Getty)

Van Dijk’s enormous presence in the team now means that when opponents like Cardiff score to make it 2-1, there are fewer nerves. Klopp believed that, “We controlled the game but we didn’t control it exactly like we had to,” and he was right to assess that Callum Patterson’s goal ended up helping Liverpool extend their lead because it gave Cardiff hope they could equalise and in their attempts to push forward, Liverpool remained confident and were able to exploit the gaps. There had been little panic. Klopp is a manager who can achieve victory through organised chaos. His team have reached a stage of development where they have nevertheless encouraged a calmer Anfield.

“It was not a world class atmosphere and not a world class game, but what I like is that we really act together,” Klopp concluded. “It was not a game where you always need the crowd on their toes. You wish they enjoy the game, and I think they enjoyed the four goals, the result and the position in the table. That’s good, but there is space for improvement. We are in a good moment as a club and with a connection with the crowd. The boys deserve that trust and faith.”

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