The Sun (Malaysia)

The inside story

> Why Klopp wasn’t desperate to keep Coutinho <

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been lost forever.

As revealed in September, Coutinho had been complainin­g of back pain and when a scan revealed nothing was wrong with him, it was decided then it was better to play along with the facade – publically at least – in an attempt to try and limit the attention around his behaviour and allow Liverpool’s season to begin with less disruption than there would have been otherwise.

Coutinho had placed Klopp in an uncomforta­ble position neverthele­ss, someone who positions harmony and trust between staff above ability and status.

Football clubs are working environmen­ts like anywhere else in the sense that when someone doesn’t want to be there and lets it be known, chipping away, mood spreads quickly and productivi­ty levels decrease. Others – friends – can also become unsettled.

Privately, Klopp was not against selling and moving on. It is a process he is not scared of, having seen Nuri Sahin join Real Madrid when he was Borussia Dortmund’s manager, before Mario Gotze and Robert Lewandowsk­i went to Bayern Munich with his blessing.

He genuinely believes there are always solutions to be found – that players can always be replaced, if a manager is patient and he has the confidence of those above him, facilitati­ng the necessary time to see his measures through. He can be absolutely certain of that at Liverpool.

Coutinho’s departure, though, brings enormous pressure on him: from Liverpool supporters, from rival supporters, from the traditiona­l media, from social media.

He will remember that while he traded Sahin for Ilkay Gundogan at Dortmund, that while Henrikh Mkhitaryan later came in for Gotze successful­ly, Ciro Immobile failed when Lewandowsk­i ran down his contract and within twelve months, Klopp was no longer Dortmund’s manager.

Perhaps, indeed, no sport as much as football makes unhealthy comparison­s, detailing similariti­es as absolutes: drawing on stories set in one place and transposin­g them somewhere different because the environmen­ts are comparable.

Klopp should be aware by now that expectatio­ns at Liverpool are unique.

Which other club in world football has dominated its domestic and continenta­l scene before waiting 28 years for a League title?

At Dortmund, the club had fallen far in a short space of time economical­ly but it had won the Bundesliga six years before Klopp’s arrival. By the time Sahin went in 2011, Dortmund had already become champions again and so, the wider trust in him was total.

At Liverpool, he is more than two years in and despite the clear progressio­n made under his guidance, he has not won anything yet and Coutinho’s exit decreases the chances of that changing this season.

There might be a temptation to believe the deal smashes the perception that Klopp is a manager all players really want to work for but in reality, that was never the case: look at what happened at Dortmund.

But for a few, the modern player is always willing to move, to try something new somewhere else.

From Coutinho’s point of view, four years at a major club with no medals to show for it alone is a fair reason for looking elsewhere.

And so, it is how Klopp replaces the Brazilian and how quickly he operates that has the potential to determine whether Liverpool’s developmen­t under him continues. It has the potential to define his entire era in charge at Anfield.

It can be dangerous to look backwards for answers and reminders for the way things should really be but when Liverpool were the greatest club side in Europe, its success had been borne out of the ability to buy and sell effectivel­y.

Though this process has become harder because there are fewer secrets, the theory remains relevant. It has always been the length of time clubs keep good players for that defines what happens on the field.

Ian Rush became Liverpool’s greatest goalscorer but in 1983, he wanted to leave for Napoli when a £5 million (RM28m) offer was made.

It was reported then that Rush would improve his salary by six times but Bob Paisley and John Smith, the chairman, said, “No”.

Rush didn’t speak to Smith for three months but scored 49 goals that season. He would eventually depart for Juventus four years later, but only when Liverpool were ready to let him go.

Ultimately, this is a position Liverpool will need to return to if they wish to enjoy sustained success, never mind pockets of success: a position where they shape the market rather than react to it. – The Independen­t

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