Irish Independent

Klopp: They made us look like butchers

- Jack Pitt-Brooke

JURGEN KLOPP accused Paris St Germain of so much play-acting in the Champions League game last night that they made Liverpool look like “butchers”.

Klopp could barely hide his frustratio­n after Liverpool’s 2-1 defeat in Paris, and said that it was “not cool” how many stoppages there were when PSG players were apparently injured. He even called for the officials to be stronger on this in future, showing yellow cards for players who looked injured but turned out not to be.

“The number of interrupti­ons in that game was just not cool,” Klopp said. “Two times in a row we won the Fair Play table in the Premier League. But tonight we looked like butchers, when you look at the yellow cards we had. It was clever of PSG, especially of Neymar. A lot of the others went down, like there was really something serious.”

He added: “There are a lot of things you could do. You can give yellow cards for anything. If you act like you die and the next moment you get up again.”

His side must now beat Napoli in their final group game by more than one goal to ensure progress to the knockout stages of the Champions League.

THE case against Neymar is tiresomely well-known by now, but what about the case for him? He made that argument himself last night at the Parc des Princes, with a display of quick-footed imaginatio­n and execution, skipping his way through Liverpool as PSG clambered past them in the Champions League. He was the best player in this great match, reminding the world with his flashing boots why he is the most expensive player of all time, and why he sometimes acts as if the normal rules of behaviour do not apply to him.

Before last night, PSG and Neymar were challenged with precisely the same set of questions. When will they finally do it against a big team? Can they find the intensity required? Can they raise their level to a higher standard than strolling past cowed opposition in Ligue 1.

And, in those smaller questions, one bigger one: was it all worth it? Neymar himself cost €222million of Qatari millions just to get him out of Barcelona. And if he found himself in February taking on Astana in the Europa League, it would feel to everyone involved like the most shaming waste.

Progress

But Neymar and PSG can relax in the knowledge that those questions have been answered, for a while. This 2-1 win was their first against another top team since they beat Bayern Munich here 14 months ago. It means that if they win in Belgrade in two weeks’ time they will progress from this, the hardest of the eight groups.

Neymar has a signature performanc­e of his own to be proud about. Because this was what everyone connected to PSG had been waiting for since the summer of 2017: an influentia­l, decisive, entertaini­ng performanc­e against top opposition in a crucial Champions League game. Yes, it is only November, and there is plenty more for him to do. But at least playing like this is a start.

Just take his goal, that gave PSG that 2-0 lead with eight minutes left in the first half. Yes the finish was perfect but that was only the climax of it. The move started with Neymar himself, finding himself room at left-back and immediatel­y sensing that a counter-attack was on.

He broke forward at speed, and was let through by Joe Gomez, having got the right-back cleverly booked minutes before. Then a one-two with Kylian Mbappe, then releasing Mbappe again at precisely the right moment. The finish, after Mbappe crossed to Cavani, was the least of it.

PSG were forced back in the second half but Neymar was still their most dangerous player, always wanting the ball, able to keep it in tighter spaces and up against more opponents than anyone else on the pitch. He nearly set up their third when Marquinhos’ header from his corner was saved, and Allison had to scramble to keep out his long-range free-kick.

But the game was won in the first half and Neymar was the most important player then, as PSG tore into Liverpool with an intensity people doubted they were capable of. Even out on the left in Thomas Tuchel’s 4-4-2 he pressed as hard as he could, drove forward at every opportunit­y, getting kicked, buying fouls.

This felt like a more mature Neymar, one who had reminded himself that he is playing an 11-a-side game, and that his team mates want the same things that he does. This has not always been obvious in the past, as he selfishly tried to win games all by himself for PSG or for Brazil in the World Cup. But then Neymar has nothing to show for those attempts to redefine the sport into a test of individual performanc­e art. ‘L’Équipe’ ran a story yesterday about how bad his record has been in big games at PSG so far, how he had disappoint­ed when the expectatio­ns were highest, against Bayern Munich and Real Madrid last season, against Liverpool and Napoli this time. The damning suggestion was that he was “strong against the weak and weak against the strong”.

Of course those who choose not to like Neymar can always find reasons to justify that. He is not someone who is embarrasse­d by his flaws, or who tries to hide them. He has been hammered since the World Cup for his play-acting, that indulgent childishne­ss that has harmed his global reputation even more than leaving Barcelona for PSG in the first place. And has it got through to him? Maybe not.

Because Neymar spent plenty of yesterday evening rolling around on the ground, reacting to early introducti­ons from Sadio Mane and James Milner as if he were desperatel­y trying to drag the eyes of the world back onto himself even as the game sped away from him.

But no-one is perfect and given what Neymar has given the world, in his performanc­es all over the world this decade, it feels churlish in the extreme to focus on the bad rather than the good. Football needs him and if he can drag PSG into the serious end of the Champions League this spring, the competitio­n will be richer for it. (© Independen­t News Service)

 ??  ?? Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp remonstrat­es with referee Szymon Marciniak in Paris last night
Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp remonstrat­es with referee Szymon Marciniak in Paris last night
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