Bangkok Post

ECCENTRIC KLOPP TO BRING DASH OF DARING TO LIVERPOOL

Highly-rated coach faces another Dortmund-like challenge as he takes over the Anfield hot seat in an attempt to rejuvenate sleeping English Premier League giants

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ith his zany demeanour, all-action football philosophy, manic touchline antics and flair for wry soundbites, new Liverpool manager Juergen Klopp is poised to take English football by storm. The 48-year-old German, who was named as Brendan Rodgers’ successor on Thursday, inherits a task similar to the one that faced him at Borussia Dortmund in 2008, that of restoring a sleeping giant to former glories and upsetting the establishe­d hierarchy.

He led Dortmund to two Bundesliga titles and a Champions League final, while the style of breathless pressing football that he inculcated looks custom-made for the blood and thunder of the Premier League.

“Fighting football, not serenity football, that is what I like,” he has said.

“What we call in German ‘English football’ — a rainy day, heavy pitch, finishing 5-5, everybody is dirty in the face and goes home and cannot play for weeks after.”

Klopp might not find exactly that on the immaculate playing surfaces of the English top flight, but his blend of charisma and candour seem certain to strike a chord with Liverpool fans, not to mention his sense of humour.

Discussing an injury to Dortmund defender Mats Hummels, he said: “We will wait for him like a good wife waiting for her husband who is in jail.”

Asked for his thoughts after Dortmund had demolished Bayern Munich 5-2 in the 2012 German Cup final, Klopp grinned: “It could have been a bit warmer.”

But while he rivals Jose Mourinho — whose path he will soon cross — in the quotabilit­y stakes, it is on the pitch and the training ground that Liverpool’s owners Fenway Sports Group will expect him to deliver.

Dortmund were stagnating when Klopp arrived from Mainz in 2008, having finished seventh twice, ninth and 13th in the previous four seasons, and Liverpool have also reached something of an impasse.

After narrowly missing out on the Premier League title in 2014, they finished sixth last season and currently sit in 10th place after one win in their last six games.

Under Rodgers, Liverpool spent around £300 million (US$456 million) on new players, but with Luis Suarez, Steven Gerrard, Jamie Carragher and Raheem Sterling having all departed during his tenure, they now lack an identity.

The current squad are a disparate bunch and Rodgers’ tactical tinkering proved a barrier to onpitch continuity, but the clear-sighted Klopp will look to impose order quickly.

“The first point is to get the right players, try to recognise the potential, try to develop it and turn it into skills with everyone who is involved,” he said while at Dortmund.

“That’s how you can find success. You need a game philosophy which reflects your mentality, which reflects the club, which gives a direction to follow.”

Klopp, unmistakab­le with his stubble and glasses, built Dortmund’s game around the principle of ‘gegenpress­ing’, or counter-pressing.

It soon became a buzzword in European football and fans in Germany grew accustomed to the sight of Klopp’s yellow-shirted hordes asphyxiati­ng their opponents with high pressing and quick transition­s.

It was an approach that reached its apogee in a 4-1 demolition of Mourinho’s Real Madrid in the 2012-13 Champions League semi-finals, when Robert Lewandowsk­i scored all four goals.

Dortmund ran out of puff last season, finishing seventh in the league and losing to Wolfsburg in the German Cup final, but Klopp has had time to finetune his philosophy during a five-month sabbatical.

“He is for me one of the best in the world,” says Germany great Franz Beckenbaue­r. “This combinatio­n — Liverpool and Juergen Klopp — it’s a very good combinatio­n.”

Liverpool’s 25-year wait for a league title has only served to increase the emotional attachment fans feel towards their club, but although that emotion can cloy, Klopp is likely to embrace it.

In place of the Westfalens­tadion’s Yellow Wall he now has the famous Kop and with ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’ lustily sung before home matches at both clubs, Anfield will feel like a second home.

 ??  ?? Klopp celebrates with the Bundesliga trophy in 2012.
Newly appointed Liverpool manager Juergen K
Klopp celebrates with the Bundesliga trophy in 2012. Newly appointed Liverpool manager Juergen K

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