The Star Malaysia

Liverpool face mountain of criticism after Spurs humbling

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LONDON: Juergen Klopp’s splutterin­g Liverpool team faced a barrage of criticism in the British media after the 4-1 defeat by Tottenham Hotspur which one observer predicted would be the worst defensive display of the season by any top-tier side.

The normally assured German has seldom had to deal with such negativity in his two years at Anfield but with the club languishin­g in ninth place, 12 points adrift of leaders Manchester City, the pressure is cranking up.

Such is the rollercoas­ter of modern football that reflection­s on Liverpool’s 7-0 trouncing of Maribor in the Champions League last week have been crowded out by talk of their defensive frailties.

The statistics are damning. Liverpool have conceded more goals, 16 in nine games, than in any campaign since 1964-65 and shipped more away from home than bottom side Crystal Palace.

Writing in the normally supportive Liverpool Echo, James Pearce said Sunday’s display was the worst by a Liverpool side since the 6-1 hiding at Stoke in May 2015 when the regime of Klopp’s predecesso­r Brendan Rodgers started to unravel.

Liverpool’s defensive problems have been well documented, with doubts regularly aired about keeper Simon Mignolet and whichever combinatio­n of defenders Klopp settles on.

Each of Sunday’s four goals stemmed from individual errors, some comically bad.

“The first (goal) would not happen if I was on the pitch but I am in the middle of the technical area in my trainers,” said Klopp.

“It is unbelievab­ly easy to defend, to close the space, we only have to clear the ball, shoe it, we don’t do it.”

Six months ago they gave centre half Dejan Lovren a new four-year deal, reported to be worth £100,000 (RM558,000) a week. If you include the £20mil (RM112mil) they spent on buying him from Southampto­n, and his wages to date, that represents a £50mil (RM279mil) investment in a player who was so poor that he was substitute­d after 30 minutes.

“It was Dejan Lovren who took the walk of shame, but Juergen Klopp could have taken his whole defence off after 31 minutes and returned them to the manufactur­er as faulty goods,” wrote Paul Hayward in the Telegraph.

Four of the back five on show predated Klopp’s arrival, with Joel Matip, who arrived on a free from Schalke, his only signing. Andy Robertson, the one defender Klopp did pay money for, has seldom played since his £10mil (RM56mil) move from Hull.

His back line is not helped by a midfield pairing of Jordan Henderson and Emre Can who seldom shield in the way N’Golo Kante does at Chelsea, for example, while Klopp’s indecision over his best goalkeeper has added to the air of fragility.

In the short term the only answer lies on the training ground.

“We have to prove we are better defenders than we showed,” Klopp said. “I cannot fix it here but we will fix it. We have to work on it.”

The clock is ticking.

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