Irish Daily Mail

KLOPP SAYS NO

Liverpool turn down £90m Coutinho bid

- By PETE JENSON and DOMINIC KING

LIVERPOOL have rejected a £90million bid for Philippe Coutinho from Barcelona.

The Merseyside club are adamant that the Brazilian playmaker will not be sold this summer, despite this third bid that follows Barca’s initial offers of £72m and £80m last month.

Although Coutinho has made Liverpool aware that he is keen to leave, they are fighting to resist the moves from Spain — especially so close to the new season. Coutinho is not expected to feature in Liverpool’s Premier League fixture at Watford on Saturday after missing training again due to a back injury.

Sources in Spain are confident the move will still take place, although it is unlikely to be before the end of this week. Manager Jurgen Klopp has insisted the player is not for sale.

Coutinho, 25, has been undergoing treatment on a back issue at Melwood since Liverpool returned from a fitness camp in Germany last Thursday.

He missed the final warm-up fixture against Athletic Bilbao in Dublin last Saturday as a precaution but he has not made the anticipate­d progress ahead of the trip to Vicarage Road.

JAMIE REDKNAPP

THIERRY HENRY: It was like he was playing a different game at times. He used to glide, he was so smooth. The way he used to run down the left, cut inside and bend one into the corner was amazing. If you closed your eyes you could picture him doing it time after time. He was an incredible footballer, scored unbelievab­le goals and if you had him in your team you would have won league after league. He had a sensationa­l appetite to win. There have been some brilliant Premier League players — Frank Lampard, Steven Gerrard, Alan Shearer, Roy Keane, Patrick Vieira — but Henry was the one.

IAN LADYMAN

ROY KEANE: Would have got in any Premier League team of the last 25 years. A leader and warrior and a much better technical footballer than many people appreciate.

CHRIS SUTTON

THIERRY HENRY: I am a huge fan of Roy Keane — he was very influentia­l in that unbelievab­le Manchester United era — and Alan Shearer’s goals put him up there, but the best has to be Henry. Not only was he the best player in the Premier League, he was the best player in world football for a period. You could not say that about many others. In the Invincible team he was unplayable. The goals he scored and the threat he was in that Arsenal team were absolutely sensationa­l.

LAURA WILLIAMSON

PAUL SCHOLES: I loved how this serial winner was so brilliantl­y effective and reliable without being in the slightest bit flash. We’ll overlook his tackling.

DOMINIC KING

RYAN GIGGS: The boy wonder who accumulate­d a treasure chest of trophies. A fixture in Manchester United’s team, capable of regularly providing moments of jaw-dropping brilliance.

MARTIN KEOWN

THIERRY HENRY: An Olympic sprinter with football boots instead of spikes. At his peak, his pace, power and swagger made him almost unplayable.

SAMI MOKBEL

DENNIS BERGKAMP: A true magician. Scorer of great goals, and creator of them.

MATT LAWTON

THIERRY HENRY: A player with more flair, grace, skill and athleticis­m than anyone else we have seen in modern English football.

LEE CLAYTON

THIERRY HENRY: Pace, class, swagger, goals.

MIKE KEEGAN

ALAN SHEARER: Guaranteed goals wherever he played. At Blackburn 113 in 133 games was incredible. Honourable mentions: Thierry Henry, Paul Scholes.

LAURIE WHITWELL

PAUL SCHOLES: In terms of pure talent, it has to be Cristiano Ronaldo. But for a personal favourite: Scholes. He was a joy to watch, so utterly at ease on the ball and with a mind like no other. His passing was perfect and his shooting dynamite. He was tough and nofrills too, which appealed more as the game moved on.

RIATH AL-SAMARRAI

THIERRY HENRY: Close between Henry and Eric Cantona, who you suspect was never quite as good as he wanted to be. Henry is an example of sustained, bankable brilliance.

ADAM SHERGOLD

RYAN GIGGS: Was a player unsurpasse­d in terms of longevity and consistenc­y of success.

TOM FARMERY

THIERRY HENRY: Football should be fun. Thierry Henry on a football pitch made the game fun. One touch and go. Defenders feared his turn of pace and goalkeeper­s rarely worked out which part of their goal he would target. At his prime one of the best to play the game.

KIERAN GILL

ALAN SHEARER: The greatest goalscorer in the Premier League. Englishman who scored the simple and the spectacula­r.

SIMON JONES

RYAN GIGGS: Great to watch. Longevity of his career underlined dedication to his craft

AMITAI WINEHOUSE

DAVID SILVA: Under-appreciate­d because of his lack of goals but he is magical on the

ball and with his vision.

SAM MORSHEAD

RYAN GIGGS: A dribble wizard turned master craftsman, who won it all.

PETE JENSON

MATT LE TISSIER: One-man goal of the season contest. And everything the Premier League was not supposed to be — understate­d, unfashiona­ble, slightly out of condition and not interested in chasing the money.

JACK GAUGHAN

THIERRY HENRY: He was breathtaki­ng to watch, scorer of stunners and owning the classiest sidefoot in world football.

BEST GOAL JAMIE REDKNAPP

SERGIO AGUERO (Manchester City v QPR, 2012) THE most incredible goal I have seen live. There have been great volleys from Alan Shearer, Henry’s dribbling, great team goals, but the most dramatic I have seen was Aguero snatching the title for City — and denying United — in the dying seconds of the season. The moment, added to Martin Tyler’s commentary Gary Neville’s face — that makes it for me!

IAN LADYMAN

DENNIS BERGKAMP (Newcastle v Arsenal, 2002) SO exquisitel­y unique that even now — after endless viewings — I still can’t work out exactly what he did, never mind how he did it.

CHRIS SUTTON

MATT LE TISSIER (Southampto­n v Blackburn, 1994) AN incredible goal. There are a lot of good strikes and people who lash the ball in but this was Le Tissier at his best. He turned a couple of players inside out and then placed it from about 35 yards into Tim Flowers’ top corner. Flowers tried to save it but eventually took his hands away because he was nowhere near it. It was the fact that he didn’t go for sheer power that did it for me. He knew what he was doing, he placed it with amazing accuracy. A stunning goal.

LAURA WILLIAMSON

GARETH BALE (West Ham v Tottenham, 2013) THE way he salvaged a win for Spurs in the dying seconds with this wonderful strike summed up everything about a world star who was made in the Premier League.

DOMINIC KING

STAN COLLYMORE (Liverpool v Newcastle, 1996) NOT the most spectacula­r, not the most obvious but the dramatic strike that defined the greatest Premier League match played in the last 25 years.

MARTIN KEOWN

KANU (Chelsea v Arsenal, 1999) AFTER selling onrushing goalkeeper Ed de Goey with a dummy on the byline, Kanu floated in a shot from the tightest of angles that left two World Cup-winning defenders in Marcel Desailly and Frank Leboeuf flounderin­g. This late strike completed a hat-trick that saw us win from 2-0 down!

SAMI MOKBEL

MATT LE TISSIER (Southampto­n v Wimbledon, 1994) PERHAPS the most inventive free-kick in the Premier League era. Flick up, volley, goal. Truly audacious, utterly brilliant.

MATT LAWTON

THIERRY HENRY (Arsenal v Man Utd, 2000) EXTRAORDIN­ARY — back to goal, flick of the foot and a stunning volley on the turn.

LEE CLAYTON

DENNIS BERGKAMP (Newcastle v Arsenal, 2002) MENTIONS for Tony Yeboah (Leeds v Liverpool), Alan Shearer (Newcastle v Everton), Andy Carroll (West Ham v Crystal Palace).

MIKE KEEGAN

DALIAN ATKINSON (Wimbledon v Aston Villa, 1992) STUNNING display of skill, balance, pace and precision from the sadly departed Villa man. Brilliant goal, brilliant celebratio­n.

LAURIE WHITWELL

ERIC CANTONA (Man Utd v Sunderland, 1996) POSSIBLY because it came during the early days of my matchgoing experience but this chip has a magnetism about it like no other goal in my memory. Cantona strutted across the pitch and delivered a finish that hung in the air before hitting its target with millimetre precision. Then that celebratio­n.

RIATH AL-SAMARRAI

DENNIS BERGKAMP (Newcastle v Arsenal, 2002) ONLY his brain and feet could have come up with that.

ADAM SHERGOLD

DENNIS BERGKAMP (Newcastle v Arsenal, 2002) BALLETIC spin and sublime finish.

TOM FARMERY

STAN COLLYMORE (Liverpool v Newcastle, 1996) ‘BARNES, Rush, Barnes, still John Barnes... Collymore closing in!’ Late, late goals are great. This one had an impact, a 4-3 scoreline ending Newcastle’s title hopes. Pure drama and a deafening Kop roar.

KIERAN GILL

THIERRY HENRY (Arsenal v Man Utd, 2000) THE flick, the turn, the finish. A thing of beauty.

SIMON JONES

SERGIO AGUERO (Manchester City v QPR, 2012) PETER CROUCH for Stoke against Manchester City in 2012 deserves a mention but, for importance, Aguero’s title clincher.

AMITAI WINEHOUSE

TONY YEBOAH (Leeds v Liverpool, 1995) ‘YEBOAH with a chance,’ said the commentato­r, arguably the biggest overstatem­ent in football history. Better because he hit the bar.

SAM MORSHEAD

THIERRY HENRY (Arsenal v Man Utd, 2000) ARROGANCE, skill and style — everything that defined Henry — in an extraordin­ary bundle.

PETE JENSON

DALIAN ATKINSON (Wimbledon v Aston Villa, 1992) I CAN still hear the commentary: ‘It’s a great run, now what about the finish? Oh! That’s not bad either!’

JACK GAUGHAN

THIERRY HENRY (Arsenal v Man Utd, 2000) BACK to goal, flick up under pressure from Denis Irwin and a volley all in one movement to leave Fabian Barthez helpless.

BEST MANAGER

WE ALSO asked our experts to pick the best manager and, bar one dissenting voice, they all plumped for Alex Ferguson.

AMITAI WINEHOUSE

ARSENE WENGER IF IT were not for Wenger, the Premier League would not be in the shape it is today. Revolution­ised the game.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES REUTERS ?? On his own: Ferguson was best manager Pure magic: Bergkamp’s 2002 classic at Newcastle
GETTY IMAGES REUTERS On his own: Ferguson was best manager Pure magic: Bergkamp’s 2002 classic at Newcastle
 ?? AFP EPA GETTY IMAGES EMPICS ?? Class act: Thierry Henry was sensationa­l at Arsenal Showman: Le Tissier was an early star Trademark: Shearer’s goal celebratio­n Drama: Aguero yells after his goal won the title with almost the last kick of the 2012 season
AFP EPA GETTY IMAGES EMPICS Class act: Thierry Henry was sensationa­l at Arsenal Showman: Le Tissier was an early star Trademark: Shearer’s goal celebratio­n Drama: Aguero yells after his goal won the title with almost the last kick of the 2012 season

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