WILL REDS ONLY KEEP CROWN BY SPENDING?
Klopp kings are in danger of standing still if no new faces
THE world is a more complicated place than it was when Liverpool’s progress was mapped by a group of coaches who sat around on upturned beer crates in a windowless former kit store called the Boot Room.
But having brought the title home at last, the more curious minds around Anfield will surely ask what kept it coming? How did they win it six times in eight years?
A lack of pomp, certainly. Medals were ritually dished out from a cardboard box. But a relentless process of renewal, too. Not a year went by in those great years without the club paying out substantially for a new arrival — and it was generally only one.
Phil Neal, David Johnson, Alan Hansen, Alan Kennedy, Frank McGarvey, Ian Rush, Mark Lawrenson all marked the changing of the seasons.
The club did not always need these improvements. Rush waited two years to break through. Kennedy was initially unconvincing. McGarvey did not play once following his arrival from St Mirren. But the thinking was that a little more competitive tension was good.
There are risks attached to drawing conclusions from the first instalment in the current squad’s title defence.
These are early days and extraordinary times. But this was certainly not the lethal intensity we have come to know.
‘They kill you in a football way. They just don’t stop.’ That’s what managers usually say about Liverpool. It was actually Jurgen Klopp’s description of Leeds.
The promoted side’s second equaliser was a metaphor for Liverpool’s casual play.
The high ball Virgil van Dijk tried to ease around the corner for Andy Robertson, presenting Patrick Bamford with his goal on a plate, screamed complacency — for all his manager’s attempts to dress it up as a something else.
‘A misunderstanding between Virgil and Alisson — one of those things that can happen,’ Klopp suggested, unconvincingly.
But Van Dijk’s mind had also drifted somewhere else moments earlier, when he failed to clock Bamford loitering freely in space behind him. The striker might have capitalised had Pablo Hernandez found a better ball from the left.
Klopp either did not hear, or did not want to hear, when asked if Leeds’ intensity was why Liverpool had struggled defensively or whether there was ‘more to it than that’? So the question was put again.
Jack Harrison scored Leeds’ first, said the German, because both Trent Alexander-Arnold and Robertson were both higher than the centre halves. ‘That should never happen in football,’ said Klopp.
Mateusz Klich scored Leeds’ third, he said, because no one closed him down and the centre halves were perhaps too far apart. ‘Our formation was moving and it didn’t close one gap. We let him run, that’s true.’
And there was fatigue, of course. An international break and minimal preparation time. ‘Defending is not like riding a bike,’ Klopp observed. ‘You have to work on it constantly.’
These conversations cropped up at the start of last season, when analysis showed Liverpool’s high defensive positions had accounted for them facing 40 shots on their goal in their first three games, compared to 19 for the same period a year earlier.
Again, Van Dijk had just returned from international duty, where his defensive focus had been manmarking — not Liverpool’s way of playing against the ball, in which the formation moves in sync with every inch the ball travels.
Liverpool’s defence turned out to be the best in last season’s Premier
League. But the value of adding one to the ranks still adds up, especially if that incomer was Thiago Alcantara.
The Bayern Munich player could actually help more against less ambitious sides than Leeds. He doesn’t press opponents to death as all of Liverpool’s midfielders do, instead bringing the control and vision to find the pass which cuts through teams that sit deep.
Yet his presence would relieve some of the pressure on AlexanderArnold and Robertson to attack and defend — a workload which contributed to Saturday’s chaos. Klopp barely seems to see these two as defenders. ‘You need both wingers 100-per-cent involved in defending,’ he said. Mo Salah’s electrifying contribution suggested that the debate about what goes on behind him is purely academic. Liverpool have now won each of the last 35 Premier League games in which
Salah has scored — a sequence surpassing Wayne Rooney’s Premier League record of 34 consecutive wins when scoring from September 2008 to February 2011.
On this subject at least, Klopp was happy to expand, with the Egyptian’s hat-trick on Saturday taking him to 76 goals in 109 games for the club.
‘The numbers tell the story a little bit. All the rest around you probably don’t know about,’ said the Liverpool boss.
‘But this is a very good example of it. He put three more goals on his scoring list, but the performance all-round was absolutely exceptional in a game like this.
‘He deserved the goals 100 per cent. There have been a lot of good performances for us from Mo for sure, but this was one of the better ones.
‘He should be proud of it because it’s very special to get these kind of numbers. Long may it continue.’
Yet Klopp knows as well as anyone that, even with as superb a performer as Salah in their ranks, no club can stand still.
‘We know we have to improve,’ he reflected, which sounded somewhat ominous for the rest of the league.