Daily Dispatch

Agonising wait ends in Madrid

Liverpool, Tottenham chase history and biggest club prize in Champions League final

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Among the rewards for the Champions League winners in Madrid on Saturday will be silverware, status and history but the greatest prize awaiting Liverpool or Tottenham might be an end to the agonising wait.

Combined, it has been 18 years – seven for Liverpool, 11 for Tottenham – since either lifted a trophy, despite huge strides made in recent years under the muchpraise­d Jurgen Klopp of Liverpool and Mauricio Pochettino of Tottenham.

Klopp and Pochettino have been singled-out as two of Europe’s best coaches after crafting teams that reflect their personalit­ies – Liverpool thrilling and fearless, Spurs brave and unrelentin­g.

And while scepticism has greeted the perfection of Manchester City’s star-studded squad in England, approval has also followed Liverpool and Tottenham’s nurturing of youngsters.

Trent Alexander-Arnold of Liverpool and Harry Winks of Spurs came through the clubs’ youth systems while Andrew Robertson, Dele Alli and Kieran Trippier joined aged 24 or younger.

All of them could start at the Wanda Metropolit­ano. But any admiration still comes with an asterisk.

Liverpool’s last trophy was in 2012, a League Cup that remains their only success since they won the FA Cup in 2006. And Tottenham’s barren spell goes further back to the League Cup in 2008, which was their first trophy since winning the same competitio­n in 1999.

Pochettino has tended to bristle at suggestion­s his team have a habit for coming close but failing to get over the line. When asked in January if the club needed a trophy, he said: “I don’t agree with that, it’s good for the ego. But in reality the most important thing is to build a team that is always going to be in the top four.”

The expectatio­ns are higher at Liverpool, where Klopp’s vow to win something within four years of taking charge reaches its endpoint.

“It didn’t happen yet,” said Klopp in April. “How long it will take I have no clue.”

Klopp’s also denied a personal need for silverware after having lost six cup finals in a row as coach, three of them with Liverpool. “I don’t think that way at all,” he said earlier this month. “In football if you want to win you have to accept that there are occasions when you also might lose.”|

The pressure on Liverpool may be more intense, not just because of their success-laden past but because of a craving for satisfacti­on after a season in which they amassed 96 points in the Premier League but still fell just short of champions City.

They will be favourites, having beaten Tottenham home and away already this season and with their experience of last year’s final in Kiev. In the Spurs squad, only Toby Alderweire­ld has played on this stage, losing with Atletico Madrid in 2014.

For a shot of belief, Pochettino might instead turn to Harry Kane, who has declared himself fit after recovering from an ankle injury.

Kane has not played a competitiv­e match since April 9 and Tottenham have survived without their star striker, even if a storming run in the Champions League belied a collapse in form domestical­ly. If he is fit, Kane’s goal threat means he will start, most likely at the expense of Lucas Moura, despite the Brazilian’s dizzying hat-trick against Ajax in the semifinal.

Liverpool’s own front man, Roberto Firmino, is also expected to play after sitting out the last three matches with a groin strain.

Harder to predict will be Klopp’s selection in midfield, where he must choose three from James Milner, Jordan Henderson, Georginio Wijnaldum and Fabinho.

Considerab­ly more than the 32,000 ticket-holding fans were predicted to descend on Madrid.

For Liverpool and Tottenham, it’s another chance to end the agonising wait. –

 ?? Picture: GETTY IMAGES/JULIAN FINNEY ?? PRIZED ASSET: Tottenham manager Mauricio Pochettino, left , and Liverpool’s Jurgen Klopp are determined to end a long wait for silverware when their teams clash in the Champions League final in Madrid.
Picture: GETTY IMAGES/JULIAN FINNEY PRIZED ASSET: Tottenham manager Mauricio Pochettino, left , and Liverpool’s Jurgen Klopp are determined to end a long wait for silverware when their teams clash in the Champions League final in Madrid.

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