Klopp’s champions crowned at the Kop
LIVERPOOL: Standing on the Kop that should have been filled with Liverpool’s most ardent supporters, Jordan Henderson did what no captain of the team had done before: Lift the Premier League trophy.
As fireworks exploded from the roofs of the mostly empty Anfield stands, red smoke filled the void.
Not since 1990—two years before the inception of the Premier League —have Liverpool been crowned champion of England.
Only a late government reprieve ensured players at least had a few family members inside the stadium to witness the crowning moment of a season like no other in the history of English football.
Top-flight football trophies are never handed out in July in England, but the chilly weather inside Anfield felt more like winter when Liverpool started to run away with the championship. Only the pandemic—no opponent—put glory in doubt.
For three months, players and fans agonised whether the season would even resume. The only way it could was with fans shut out of the stadiums. No exemptions, even for a title party.
Instead seats in the centre of the Kop were removed and replaced by the purple podium where manager Jurgen Klopp followed by his coaching team and players went up to collect their winners’ medals.
“I was never on the Kop before, it was pretty special,” Klopp said. “It makes sense in the moment when the people are not in that we use the Kop to celebrate it with them together in our hearts.”
Mohamed Salah, whose goals have transformed Liverpool into English, European and world champions, was wrapped in an Egypt flag. Trent Alexander-arnold, the 21-year-old Liverpoolborn defender, peered down as he inspected his medal.
He really was a Premier League champion, achieving what hometown greats Steven Gerrard and Jamie Carragher had been unable to as the drought persisted.