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Why Liverpool’s Van Dijk is calm under pressure

▶ ‘Everybody is going to watch the bad things and that is how it is,’ says Liverpool’s £75 million defender. ‘Everything is going to be analysed’

- RICHARD JOLLY

Virgil van Dijk is aware the spotlight shines on him. He knows mistakes will be magnified, excellence either ignored or explained as something that should be expected because of his cost.

It is as though his name has acquired a new prefix which colours views. He is “the £75 million defender Virgil van Dijk”.

The pressure of being the most expensive centre-back (roughly Dh366 million) in footballin­g history could be overwhelmi­ng.

It is not, Liverpool’s record buy insisted.

“It is pretty easy for me,” Van Dijk said. “I am pretty calm on that.”

A laidback approach and a confidence in his own ability help account for why Jurgen Klopp felt he had the personalit­y as well as the talent to flourish at Anfield.

Van Dijk comes from a Dutch tradition of being open with his views – he accused Harry Kane of diving to win a penalty in Tottenham Hotspur’s 2-2 draw on Sunday – but he is capable of blocking out the background noise of talk about him.

“It is a strength of mine to not really bother too much when people have their opinions, especially negative opinions,” Van Dijk said. “You are always going to be judged. I know because I made such a big step right now, for a lot of money, everything is going to be analysed.

“No one is going to look at the good things that you do. Everybody is going to watch the bad things and that is how it is.”

Van Dijk was unconcerne­d when Jamie Carragher, Liverpool’s best centre-back of the Premier League era, suggested he needed to lose weight.

“Other people around – fans of other clubs, pundits – can have their opinions,” he reasoned. “But it doesn’t really bother me.”

That may be just as well. His Liverpool career began superbly, with a late winner on his debut in a Merseyside derby.

They have not won in his three subsequent appearance­s, losing to Swansea City, being knocked out of the FA Cup by West Bromwich Albion and conceding six goals.

The last of those cost Liverpool victory on Sunday, Van Dijk’s injury-time challenge on Erik Lamela leading to the spot kick Kane did convert.

The newcomer is aware general conclusion­s can be drawn from isolated incidents. He preferred to focus on his display as a whole, arguing Liverpool’s muchcritic­ised rearguard acquitted themselves well against Spurs.

“I know when I am doing well and exactly when I am doing wrong,” he said. “That is what I am working on and obviously [on Sunday] no one will talk about my performanc­e in general.

“We defended very well, had two penalties against us with a lot of question marks around them, but I know that as a team and the players around me, we did very well against one of the best strikers in Europe.”

In a culture of knee-jerk reactions, there is a rush to judgment. Van Dijk accepts it uncomplain­ingly, but Klopp has stressed he was signed for the long term. He is in an acclimatis­ation period, adjusting to a side who play with a higher defensive line and who commit more players forward.

“The football we play – the pressing, the different options with players – is totally different. So you need time to get used to everything,” he said.

He may be denied time in the court of popular opinion. Minds will probably be made up at St Mary’s when Van Dijk returns to Southampto­n on Sunday.

Some of Liverpool’s contingent of former Saints are jeered and the Dutchman said: “Maybe they can boo the whole game. What can you do about it? You can’t do anything about it. I made the decision. I have moved on.”

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 ?? EPA ?? Liverpool’s Virgil van Dijk, left, understand­s that the size of his price tag increases the amount of criticism he may face
EPA Liverpool’s Virgil van Dijk, left, understand­s that the size of his price tag increases the amount of criticism he may face

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