Irish Daily Mirror

I never thought Klopp was ruthless enough, but then he ditched the weak links.. and turned an £8m kid into a world-beater

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NIGEL PEARSON was bob-on to leave three important players out of his match-day squad against Southampto­n on Sunday.

And his actions showed why he is the right man to rebuild Watford in or out of the Premier League.

The coronaviru­s is by no means done and a party like the one alleged to have been thrown by Andre Gray and attended by Domingos Quina and Nathaniel Chalobah (all above) could well be the trigger for a devastatin­g spike in football.

Pearson was decisive and that showed the character of the manager.

As for their team-mates, football dressing rooms are funny places — it might be laughed off on the whole, but you’d also be left knowing that what you’d done was bang out of order.

You can never be quite sure where you stand with some people, and I’m absolutely sure Troy Deeney and some of the seniors will be desperatel­y unhappy with it.

They will be saying, ‘You three have potentiall­y cost us a place in the Premier League’, when they see them again.

There are no excuses if the allegation is proved and I’m surprised they did it knowing that if Pearson found out he would come down on them like a ton of bricks.

If Pearson does stay, that trio may find they are surplus to requiremen­ts.

MORE than £263million was splurged on agents from February 2019 to January 2020 and – against a backdrop of clubs coming with begging bowls to us, the taxpayers, when the coronaviru­s pandemic hit – that’s a disgrace.

For an intermedia­ry to trouser between £6m and £10m for three or four meetings is a farce, and is anything but value for money to the football industry and its clubs.

Agents should be paid like lawyers with a set, hourly rate that is sanctioned and audited so we can see how and when moves are made – and such a system would also act against money laundering.

It’s high time the ‘undisclose­d fee’ was jettisoned as well.

A CONFESSION: For as long as Alberto Moreno was leftback I wondered if Jurgen Klopp had the ruthlessne­ss to turn Liverpool into a titlewinni­ng team.

I always looked at the Spaniard and thought, ‘Damn, this is Klopp’s Achilles heel’.

He messed up several times, most notably in the 2016 Europa League final.

And I remember thinking back then, ‘Ooh, hang on. Is Klopp a guy who likes to play really good football, but someone who will be swept asunder by Pep Guardiola’s absolute insistence that every stone is turned to ensure his club does everything at full pelt on and off the pitch?’

Klopp’s answer to the Moreno problem was to replace him with James Milner and you’re thinking, ‘Well, that’s not a title winning left-back, is it?’

But the signings of Andy Robertson (left) in 2017 and Virgil van Dijk the following January saw the pieces of the jigsaw starting to fall into place.

And when he bombed out Loris Karius (circle) and replaced him with Alisson, Klopp showed he did have the ruthless streak the very best managers require. Within a year,

STEVE BRUCE wants clarity over his position at Newcastle, so I will give it him: if anyone with serious money gets a takeover across the line, you won’t be staying on as gaffer. everything had changed and both he and his team looked like they would stop at nothing to finally end the Reds’ wait for a Premier League title.

Sometimes in football, as in life, you have to have a bit of luck to go with your talent and already having Trent Alexandera­rnold at the club and growing into a world-class right-back was just that.

Nobody saw Jordan Henderson’s leadership, captaincy and strength of character coming. I certainly questioned whether he was a worthy heir to Steven Gerrard on and off the pitch.

And Klopp aside, because he put them together, nobody really thought Sadio Mane, Mo Salah and Roberto Firmino were going to dovetail in quite the way they have.

The way Klopp has done it all has been masterful.

Making the big signings work is impressive enough, but what he has done with Robertson is just brilliant.

Most of the top flight’s bottom five or six clubs at the time would have baulked at the £8million Klopp paid Hull for him. Yet the German took a

SHEFFIELD UNITED only conceded three goals or more four times between 2016 and 2020, yet last week they did it twice in four days.

They’ve now had four games since the restart and haven’t won one, which makes me wonder if Chris Wilder’s men are the first serious example of a team that cannot play without a crowd? An empty Bramall Lane is their kryptonite. jobbing young left-back and turned him into arguably the world’s best in that position.

Can you name me one Steady Eddie who has arrived at Manchester City under Guardiola’s reign and is now seen as the preeminent player in his position?

Klopp has worked wonders with individual­s and collective­ly he has made that dressing room.

Everyone in that squad clearly loves each other and it’s obvious the manager has drilled home the importance of doing things properly and making sure there aren’t any cliques.

For it to have taken just under five years to get from where Liverpool were when Klopp arrived to where they are now as world, European and Premier League champions is an incredible feat.

You look at the players they have now and say, ‘Now that is a Liverpool squad’.

People fear playing them and their boss, someone who can now be talked of in the same breath as Bill Shankly, Bob Paisley and Kenny Dalglish.

There can be no higher praise bestowed on any Liverpool manager. those Liverpool fans who launched fireworks and left the city in the state they did last week are an absolute disgrace. An empty statement condemning them simply wasn’t strong enough — they deserve to have their season tickets revoked for that sort of behaviour.

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