The Sun (Malaysia)

Return of the king

- BY IAN HERBERT

THE most obvious answers are often there all along. It just requires the gift of fresh eyes to see them. That’s why Jurgen Klopp looked at Alberto Moreno, a leftback, and thought it would be a very good idea for Liverpool to start employing him as... a leftback.

And it is the reason he wondered why on God’s earth Steven Gerrard, an individual so fundamenta­l to Liverpool Football Club that he would text transfer targets on the manager’s behalf and break bread with prospectiv­e owners, had been allowed to leave Anfield and close the door behind him.

If the very detailed picture of his exit which Gerrard has released in fragments is to be believed, then it has been nothing less than a derelictio­n of duty on the club’s part.

The man was woven into the fabric of the place, just like Jamie Carragher – another who should never have gone. Yet when his agent, Struan Marshall, turned up for a critical contract meeting, the chief executive, Ian Ayre, was late. The assignatio­n lasted a mere 15 minutes because Liverpool had other engagement­s to see to.

You always felt there was an element of self-preservati­on where Brendan Rodgers was concerned.

Many outsiders have felt the keen, critical eye of the Merseyside establishm­ent in the Anfield corridors and sought to protect themselves against it. Rodgers appointed many acolytes with a very distinctiv­e brand of devotion to him.

Gerrard respected his coaching deeply but was not religiousl­y devoted. Klopp does not fear a Gerrard power base. He has the self-confidence to know that he is the man.

It is certainly a less complicate­d discussion that he will have with Gerrard than the ones Rodgers found himself circling around at a time when the captain’s expectatio­ns of game time exceeded what Rodgers was prepared to offer last season.

The conversati­on between the two when Rodgers told Gerrard last March that he would not be starting against Manchester United was excruciati­ng.

The occasional start, which has not been ruled out, would now be extraordin­ary. Back then it felt desultory. The allure of LA was also in the background, then. Gerrard knows the California­n reality, now. Long-distance travel. A variable quality of sport. Loneliness.

Klopp is not the only one who has appreciate­d that a presence such as Gerrard or Carragher offers something more ethereal than a day-to-day contributi­on.

The deep commitment of Tom Werner, the chairman, to Gerrard staying seemed to com- pound the mystery of how they let him go in the first place.

Klopp wants Gerrard to bring profession­alism to Melwood, though the 35-year-old’s contributi­on amid such emerging talents as Cameron Brannagan and Connor Randall is likely to reach well beyond that.

To have watched Gerrard at close quarters at the club’s Kirkby academy, a year ago, was to know the effect he has on the club’s next generation.

One of the 10 giant boards depicting Liverpool legends at Anfield encapsulat­es what Liverpool lost when he left.

“Once in a generation a player comes along for whom nothing seems impossible,” it states. “Luckily that man wears the No. 8 shirt at Anfield.”

There could be no wiser move than Klopp’s attempt to draw him back. – The Independen­t

“Once in a generation a player comes along for whom nothing seems impossible,” it states Luckily that man wears the No. 8 shirt at Anfield.”

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 ??  ?? Los Angeles Galaxy’s jaded players wheeled their welltravel­led suitcases through the arrivals hall at LAX for the final time in 2015, they had covered 35,000km in the course of the regular Major League Soccer season, a competitio­n that enforces...
Los Angeles Galaxy’s jaded players wheeled their welltravel­led suitcases through the arrivals hall at LAX for the final time in 2015, they had covered 35,000km in the course of the regular Major League Soccer season, a competitio­n that enforces...

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