The Borneo Post

Robin Hood, Rocky Balboa help Klopp passion shine

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LIVERPOOL: A confessed admirer of the underdog tales of Robin Hood and Rocky Balboa, Jurgen K lopp i s probably uncomforta­ble with Liverpool’s status as strong favourites in Tuesday’s Champions League semi- f inal, f irst leg against Roma.

However, it is testament to how far the German has revitalise­d a sleeping giant on the European stage that Liverpool’s f irst appearance in the Champions League last four for a decade is met with such expectatio­n.

It hasn’t always been a such a smooth ride since Klopp arrived an Anfield two- and- a-half years ago.

Indeed, even in the aftermath of a 5-1 quarter- final thrashing of hitherto tournament favourites Manchester City, Klopp warned the clock was ticking on his promise to deliver a trophy within four years of taking charge.

Early in his reign Klopp at times bemoaned the subdued a t mos p h e r e in modern English grounds, even at the mythical Anfield, compared to his grounding in Germany’s Bundesliga.

By contrast, Anfield will be at fever pitch on Tuesday to try and inspire the five- time European champions back to club’s football’s biggest game in the Kiev final on May 26.

“The Champions League nights are special for the fans too,” Liverpool’s talisman Mohamed Salah — who has scored an incredible 41 goals in his debut season for the club — told CNN.

If something is important to me, I cannot hide my feelings. When I’m happy everyone can see and it’s the same when I’m angry. Jurgen Klopp, Liverpool manager

“You can feel it on the streets.

“The atmosphere in that first game against Man City was the first time I had really seen something like that.”

Premier League champions City’s eviscerati­on by a threegoal blitz in 19 first-half minutes was just another chapter in a long history of famous European nights at Anfield.

“The Liverpool fans, they all believe ‘ this is our competitio­n’,” recognised City boss Pep Guardiola afterwards.

But it came on the back of a rallying cry by Klopp for his players not to be intimidate­d by Liverpool’s history in the competitio­n, but to make memories they too will be remembered for.

Liverpool’s high- energy style that even City couldn’t cope with is a mirror image of their manager on the touchline.

“If something is important to me, I cannot hide my feelings. When I’m happy everyone can see and it’s the same when I’m angry,” Klopp told The Big Interview podcast.

However, Klopp’s revival of Liverpool has come from far more than rabble rousing.

His f luid 4- 3- 3 system has brought the best out of a prolific front three of Salah, Sadio Mane and Roberto Firmino, who have combined for 83 goals this season.

“I think Jurgen is a master to buy players with what he really needs for the way he wants to play,” said Guardiola, who has suf fered more defeats in his career to Klopp than any other manager.

Most impressive­ly of all, Klopp’s management has also ensured that Liverpool’s f lurry of goals hasn’t dried up despite losing Philippe Coutinho to Barcelona for 142 million ( 199 million) in January and not buying a natural replacemen­t.

Instead just over half of that fee was spent on Virgil Van Dijk to bolster a defence that often let Klopp down in his first two years in England.

Since the 75 million Dutchman was recruited, Liverpool have conceded just once in four European outings.

Klopp has also learned from his own mistakes. The intensity of his demands left Liverpool drained in the second-half of last season after a promising start to the campaign.

This season no manager has rotated more than Klopp in the Premier League with the payoff that his side remain the sole English representa­tives in the last four. — AFP

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