Irish Daily Mirror

If home is where the heart is, we should all be Liverpool fans

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LIVERPOOL’S fine season is a reason for English football to celebrate because it’s being driven by home-grown talent.

On the Kop they love nothing more than getting behind local youngsters.

And in a testing week, when manager Jurgen Klopp was forced to measure his squad strength because of illness, injury and internatio­nal call-ups, he discovered the conveyor belt from academy to first team at Anfield is in good order.

In the 2-0 win at Arsenal in the FA Cup and the Carabao Cup semi-final first leg against Fulham, Klopp’s youngsters and local lads stood up to be counted. From Trent Alexandera­rnold (now facing three weeks out with a knee injury) to Curtis Jones, Jarell Quansah, Conor Bradley and Bobby Clark, they did him proud.

People talk about the Manchester United academy churning out homegrown talent from the Busby Babes to the Class of 92 and the current crop led by Marcus Rashford, but great Liverpool teams are usually built around local prodigies.

Where Steven Gerrard and Jamie Carragher were once the soul of Anfield, all of a sudden Klopp has peeled back the curtain and given fans a glimpse of the future with kids centre stage – and the future is bright. We have known about TAA’S talent for several years but, when the Mersey men trailed Fulham in midweek, Jones drove Liverpool forward with his energy and Bradley (below) played with the assurance of a stalwart at right-back.

Quansah settled down nicely against Arsenal at the Emirates in the absence of Virgil van Dijk, and it’s clear Klopp has a nucleus of young players he can trust.

I tipped Manchester City in August to win the Premier League and I am not going to change my mind halfway through the season but I will say this about Liverpool:

They are the only team who can stop City making it four titles in a row.

I don’t think Arsenal will recover from back-to-back defeats against West Ham and Fulham and, although Aston Villa’s form has been a revelation under Unai Emery, I regard them more as a top-four candidates than potential champions.

If Liverpool are still top of the table by the time Mo Salah returns from the Africa

Cup of Nations, I can see it being another nip-and-tuck race to the line with City.

Klopp has the best deck of cards to choose from up front in Salah, Darwin Nunez, Luis Diaz, Cody Gakpo and Diogo Jota.

And, although I don’t expect them to sweep the board this term, Liverpool are the only club left still competing for a Quadruple just two seasons after they went so close to a sensationa­l four-timer.

Wednesday night’s comeback against Marco Silva’s Fulham was the seventh time this season Liverpool have recovered from conceding the first goal and gone on to win the game.

At Anfield, when they get on a roll, they still look capable of overwhelmi­ng opponents.

And all this after a wholesale rebuild in midfield last summer, with Alexis Mac Allister, Dominik Szoboszlai, Ryan Gravenberc­h and Wataru Endo all arriving in a rush, seeming to rule Liverpool out of the title race because Klopp’s transition would need time t.

But now, with the kids making their presence felt, the Mersey beat is strong and manager Klopp makes you believe anything is possible.

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