The Scottish Mail on Sunday

I know what you’re thinking about us

DEFIANT KLOPP WON’T RUN AWAY FROM THE BIG DECISIONS AS HE HEADS TO HIS BOGEY GROUND

- By Joe Bernstein

JUST about the only thing missing in Jurgen Klopp’s managerial career is a victory at Old Trafford. Even without points at stake today, it’s most important he breaks that duck with Liverpool’s season unravellin­g amid injuries to key players and four league games without a goal. Having sent out the kids to play in the FA Cup last season, Klopp will turn to star man Mo Salah to start against the old enemy.

The Egyptian, whose contract has entered the last 18 months, has a particular point to prove in a stadium where he has never scored.

Klopp’s reaction to the shocking home defeat against Burnley on

Thursday has been to deflect attention from his players and place the responsibi­lity on himself.

The German is an unusually driven individual, even for a high-profile manager, and has a special, intense bond with the places he works. At 53, he has managed only three teams in

20 years: Mainz, Borussia

Dortmund and Liverpool.

Contrast that to Jose Mourinho, who began his managerial career only 12 months earlier and is on his ninth club.

‘I don’t feel pressure from outside.

I’ve dealt with the pressure I put on myself my entire life. I am used to that and know myself well enough,’ says a reflective Klopp on coping with a rare slump.

‘Short term, I am quite easy to excite but it is difficult to make me really happy with something in the long term. It is not easy.

‘When you’ve had our success, there are two directions afterwards. You keep going on exactly the same level, which is difficult with the challenges around. Or it gets a little bit less. At the moment, it feels like it’s a lot less and that is what we have to change.’

Liverpool are entitled to a blip given last season’s Premier League title and two consecutiv­e Champions League finals. They’ve had to deal this term with both first-choice central defenders Virgil van Dijk and Joe Gomez suffering long-term injuries and are still, nonetheles­s, the Premier League’s top scorers, just six points off the top and unbeaten at home for nearly for four years before last week’s upset. But Klopp is too much of a perfection­ist and cares too deeply to deal in excuses. Behind the scenes, he may be a hard taskmaster but in front of the crowd, he is sensitive towards his players. He’ll know Trent AlexanderA­rnold is having the first dip of his career, while Roberto Firmino’s tally of five goals in 27 appearance­s is not good enough for a Liverpool striker regardless of other attributes. This is a time for Klopp to circle the wagons and, in that respect, Old Trafford is the perfect venue to start.

‘The tests we face are constantly in public and on the television,’ he adds as he defended his players.

That means everybody watches each little step in whichever direction. Obviously, that is very nice when you have a good run. When it is not a good run, there is not the same enjoyment.

‘Sometimes you need a really low point to change things properly and that’s for sure what we will try, what we will go for now.’

It was significan­t that his two most experience­d players, Jordan Henderson and James Milner, weren’t on the pitch against Burnley.

Skipper Henderson was injured, while Milner was held back for this United clash, that in turn enabling others a break before Thursday’s equally big game at Spurs.

Klopp can rely, without asking, on his battle-hardened pair to settle any worries in the dressing room.

‘I can imagine what a lot of people think about us at the moment but the players don’t change overnight,’ he says.

‘They are still brilliant people and brilliant characters, all of them. They have made what has happened over the past few years and they don’t change their personalit­y overnight. This is a challenge that we didn’t want to have.

‘Was it absolutely impossible it could happen? No, especially in the situation we are in. They are still a really good group, led by some (Henderson and Milner), who are always strong.

‘But I don’t have to “use” them because they work without remote control. They have always been very important.’

The FA Cup hasn’t been at the top of Klopp’s priorities since he came to England in 2015. Liverpool have only gone beyond the fourth round once in that time — last year when Under-23s boss Neil Critchley took charge of the replay against Shrewsbury while Klopp and his first-team players were on a mid-term sabbatical.

On this occasion, Klopp will be in full command, putting more pressure on himself than any fan, pundit or keyboard warrior could manage.

It’s well documented that his tenure at Dortmund lasted seven years and this is his sixth at Anfield. Yet there isn’t even the tiniest sign of him being demob happy.

‘We are not thinking that just because we try, we should get everything,’ he says. ‘At the moment, we haven’t used the right tools and that is what we have to improve. We are really ready for the fight, 100 per cent.’

 ??  ?? LIFE IN THE GOLDFISH BOWL: it is not so much fun for Mo Salah right now
LIFE IN THE GOLDFISH BOWL: it is not so much fun for Mo Salah right now

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