Daily Mail

KLOPP’S AGONY

We’ve lost our mojo admits Anfield boss

- DOMINIC KING

LiverpooL were battered in Belgrade last night to leave Jurgen Klopp questionin­g his team and admitting they have lost their way.

Klopp said that his side had ‘lost its mojo’ and, when asked to put his finger on what went wrong, replied: ‘i only have 10 fingers.’

They are top of their Champions League group on goal difference after Napoli and pSG fought out a 1-1 draw. Liverpool go to paris on November 28 before finishing up against Napoli next month, but they are struggling for form with only three wins from their last nine games. ‘We have to do better,’ said Klopp. it looked as if Tottenham were heading out of the competitio­n after trailing pSv 1-0. But england captain Harry Kane threw them a lifeline with two late goals as Spurs claimed a dramatic 2-1 victory. it put Spurs three points behind second-placed inter Milan, who are up next at Wembley.

‘Winning this one will be a big boost and we’ll play inter Milan full of energy and hopefully we can do the same,’ said Kane.

FIVE added minutes had just flashed up on the scoreboard when Jurgen Klopp wearily turned his back on the action and trudged to his seat.

He had seen enough. Liverpool’s manager had spent most of the game with arms outstretch­ed like a scarecrow, screeching his fury, but it had been pointless. Klopp’s team had been wretched.

As he sat down, his thoughts would have turned to how he can make sure Liverpool are not eliminated from the competitio­n that means so much to them. One false move in their last two games, against Paris Saint-Germain and Napoli, and the Reds could be out.

That is the reality following an abysmal 90 minutes in Belgrade, which ended with a superb Red Star side recording their most famous win at this level — thanks to two terrific, unanswered Milan Pavkov goals — since they lifted the European Cup in 1991.

Perhaps Liverpool thought it was going to be a formality. Klopp would never entertain that suggestion and the players would deny it, but this was a display that invited such stinging criticism.

The contest would surely have been different if Daniel Sturridge had snaffled the kind of opportunit­y in the 17th minute that you would expect him to convert with his eyes closed.

It was at the end of the one Liverpool move before the break that had any fluency. The ball went down the left, from Adam Lallana to Sadio Mane, and the forward’s cross squirted past Andy Robertson to Sturridge. His shot from six yards was high and horrible.

Klopp was startled by the miss and did a double take, while Sturridge was so aghast that he clamped his hands over his eyes. His constant head-shaking showed he was replaying it in his mind.

How costly it proved. Red Star, whose fans provided a relentless din of encouragem­ent and intimidati­on, saw a chance to get a foothold in the contest and, with more than a little help from last season’s runners-up, they took it.

Their first goal arrived following a mistake by Virgil van Dijk, usually a figure of such calm and poise. He fluffed a clearance to Ben Nabouhane, whose shot from 20 yards was turned away by Alisson. From Marko Marin’s resulting corner, Pavkov plundered the first of his two goals.

Such was Red Star’s delirium at going in front that some of their backroom staff ran down the touchline and ended up in Klopp’s technical area, but any anger he felt was aimed solely at his statuesque defence.

If that was bad, worse was to follow. Liverpool’s midfield was getting overrun, but the feeble way in which Gini Wijnaldum was brushed aside after James Milner had squandered possession deserved punishment and Pavkov duly obliged.

With Wijnaldum franticall­y trying to get back into position, Pavkov held out his arm to fend off the Holland internatio­nal and unleashed a shot that ended up in Alisson’s net before the keeper had even finished his dive. There is not much elegance about Pavkov, who is a big slab of a centre forward, but what he lacks in grace he makes up for with power. The celebratio­ns, in keeping with the night, were suitably manic.

Liverpool had not come from two goals behind in a European game since April 2016, when they defied logic to beat Borussia Dortmund in the Europa League quarter-finals, but there was not a sliver of hope of them repeating the feat here.

Don’t be kidded by the fact they dominated possession in the second period and spent the last 15 minutes launching balls towards Van Dijk, who became a fifth striker at times.

Red Star were never at their wits’ end, remaining discipline­d and tenacious to the last.

If one moment summed up this abject Liverpool display, it came when the out- of- sorts Mane somehow passed the ball straight out of play, rather than down the

touchline, while barely two yards from Klopp.

In terms of scoring chances after the interval, the best Liverpool could do was a cross from Robertson on 56 minute that looped off a defender on to the top of the bar and a shot from Salah in the 71st minute that thudded off the outside of a post following a corner.

The manner in which heads dropped at that point was telling and Liverpool have now lost three consecutiv­e away games in Europe for the first time since 1979.

Should that sequence be extended in Paris three weeks from now, the ramificati­ons could be grave.

Liverpool’s history is littered with tales of recovery from adversity, but if they play like this again, their campaign could be finished.

 ?? PICTURE: ANDY HOOPER ?? . . .BUT HARRY IS A HOT SPUR Still alive: Harry Kane celebrates his first goal as Tottenham fight back to beat PSV
PICTURE: ANDY HOOPER . . .BUT HARRY IS A HOT SPUR Still alive: Harry Kane celebrates his first goal as Tottenham fight back to beat PSV
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 ?? REUTERS ?? Up for it: Pavkov’s header makes it 1-0 to Red Star
REUTERS Up for it: Pavkov’s header makes it 1-0 to Red Star
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 ?? REUTERS/PROPAGANDA ?? Losing it: Klopp rages on the touchline as Pavkov (right) doubles the lead
REUTERS/PROPAGANDA Losing it: Klopp rages on the touchline as Pavkov (right) doubles the lead

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