Sunday Mirror

Aldo: Hate heats Red hot clash

- BY STEVE BATES

course, for our own history with me it is obviously something we have not achieved yet.

“This team wrote their own story and made their own history and this would be another step. But we cannot make it by simply talking about it.

“We have to go there and play the best football we can play, with the biggest balls, being ready for each challenge, THERE is something different about this Manchester United v Liverpool clash.

Something significan­t , something worrying for every United fan.

If I can borrow a phrase from Gary Neville, it feels a tiny bit like The Dog & Duck v… well, the Champions of Europe.

By that I mean simply that Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s team go into the game KNOWING they are an inferior side. He knows it, his players know it.

As a profession­al, you just know. You know when an opponent is quality and better than you. I’m not saying that means they’ll inevitably win. But you still know.

And here’s the thing.

When I was at Liverpool, we never felt inferior.

United won everything and we won very little, but, when we played them, we always felt we had a team as good as they were, could give as good as we got and beat them.

Now people can make their own assumption­s on that – and I know they will. They’ll say if we were so good, why didn’t we win more. They’d have a point. But we still believed it.

The 1996 Cup Final, they adapted their successful, fighting for every ball, all that stuff. That is what we have to do.”

Salah has drawn a blank in his four games against United home and away. But Klopp reckons that statistic makes it more likely the Egyptian will break his duck sooner rather than later.

“It is difficult to know what he’s thinking. If someone had told me he’d never scored against United I would have brilliant game plan completely, because they were playing us.

Made it a grim game, because they knew how dangerous we were, after we’d outplayed them at Old Trafford that season. And they won, so fair play. I’ve spoken to Gary Neville a few times since those days and he’s said to me that he felt we could be a better team than them when we met.

We had real quality - but they had it too and, crucially, they had an ability to always find a way to win.

We never once felt inferior, though, or at least I didn’t.

On one occasion we went to Old Trafford in December 2000, they hadn’t lost at home for two years and we beat them, with a Danny Murphy free-kick.

At the end, some of the lads went a bit crazy, celebrated wildly, but I didn’t, just clapped the fans and got off the pitch.

The next day, Gerard Houllier called me into his office.

He had a bit of a go at me, wanted to know why I didn’t join in with the team, didn’t join in with the ‘spirit’ of the occasion. “Because it was embarrassi­ng,” I said.

“We are Liverpool. Beating Manchester United isn’t a huge achievemen­t. That’s what little clubs do… we’re not a little club. We don’t celebrate like we’ve just won the league simply because we beat them.”

He accepted my point eventually. There were reasons we didn’t win the league, but we said, ‘Really?’ I suppose the more you go without scoring against an opponent there may be one moment when you start scoring against them,” said Klopp.

“All these games are big tests. I don’t see it as a specific test for him, but, yes, it is a big test. And sometimes there will be ‘old-school challenges’ and you have to be ready for them. That is how it is. But there is a reason for these stories, just were a damn good side, who could match any team, and went into every game, even against United, believing that.

I don’t think this current United side can have that unshakeabl­e confidence.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying for a second that means they’ll lose. Far from it.

I am saying I think Solskjaer can’t simply expect his side to go toe-to-toe with Liverpool and outplay them. I am saying he’s going to have to produce a clever tactical plan to try and somehow combat Liverpool’s strengths to have a chance.

And that is desperatel­y worrying for them because when was the last time United went into a game with Liverpool knowing they were inferior?

Even in the 80s when Liverpool were the ones winning everything, no Bryan Robson side thought they were inferior.

I’ll bet Sir Alex Ferguson (along with Gary Neville) will be watching with an impending sense of fear and horror.

To be fair, Jurgen Klopp has gone there the last couple of seasons with a better team and not got a win – though not this much better – and that’s what Solskjaer now has to play on.

Yes, he’ll need to do the work, to play on the tactics, probably try to kill the game, but most of all, he’s got to say, ‘ We’re Manchester United, we’re playing Liverpool’.

That will be the bones of it. They have to respond to that, remember who they are and what it means.

We won there several times. In the 80s, United beat Liverpool many times.

Somehow, from somewhere, Solskjaer has to drag that same belief, same spirit from his side this time. It’s their only chance.

As for Liverpool, well, if they do win, as the bookies overwhelmi­ngly suggest they will, then I’d be gutted if I saw them celebratin­g wildly. like our history against United away, such as the stadium or the intensity of the game.

“We’ve got closer, closer and closer since I’ve been here, but still it has not happened.

“The Europa League game there was a sensationa­l game, but the league game there last season was not. If there had been a winner, it would have been us.”

John Aldridge was speaking at the launch of Hotel Tia as an official Carlsberg supporter’s venue. This season Carlsberg will be upgrading venues across Liverpool to improve fan experience on matchdays.

 ??  ?? Jurgen Klopp has Liverpool in pole position – and United’s 1996 FA Cup winners
(below) UNITED FRONT Neville shares a joke with United boss Solskjaer JOHN ALDRIDGE believes hatred still fuels Liverpool’s clash with Manchester United – even though Old Trafford is no longer a Theatre of Dreams.
But alongside the loathing, he says there is a deep mutual respect – a legacy from the history United and Liverpool have created over decades.
United may be engulfed by troubled times as they desperatel­y search for a way out of the wilderness that trapped Liverpool after their glory years in the 1970s and 80s.
But former Kop hero Aldridge, who scored 63 goals in 104 games for Liverpool, admits no game gets his nerves jangling more than United – and today’s clash at Old Trafford will be no different. He said: “I’ll be nervous as always because anything can happen.
“Just look at last season at Old Trafford when we were flying and the game ended in a 0-0 draw. We
didn’t approach that game in the right manner last season, in my opinion, we were caught in two minds.
“We thought a point was probably a decent result away at United, and that Manchester City would probably not win all their remaining games.
“You look at United now and they are in a massive transition, they’re struggling big time.
“But this is Liverpool. They know. If you ask United fans who their biggest game is, it is Liverpool. It’s not City.
“Never has been – historical­ly, Liverpool’s biggest game is United.
“Because of the respect – but also the hatred – between the two biggest teams in England by a million miles.”
Jurgen Klopp has Liverpool in pole position – and United’s 1996 FA Cup winners (below) UNITED FRONT Neville shares a joke with United boss Solskjaer JOHN ALDRIDGE believes hatred still fuels Liverpool’s clash with Manchester United – even though Old Trafford is no longer a Theatre of Dreams. But alongside the loathing, he says there is a deep mutual respect – a legacy from the history United and Liverpool have created over decades. United may be engulfed by troubled times as they desperatel­y search for a way out of the wilderness that trapped Liverpool after their glory years in the 1970s and 80s. But former Kop hero Aldridge, who scored 63 goals in 104 games for Liverpool, admits no game gets his nerves jangling more than United – and today’s clash at Old Trafford will be no different. He said: “I’ll be nervous as always because anything can happen. “Just look at last season at Old Trafford when we were flying and the game ended in a 0-0 draw. We didn’t approach that game in the right manner last season, in my opinion, we were caught in two minds. “We thought a point was probably a decent result away at United, and that Manchester City would probably not win all their remaining games. “You look at United now and they are in a massive transition, they’re struggling big time. “But this is Liverpool. They know. If you ask United fans who their biggest game is, it is Liverpool. It’s not City. “Never has been – historical­ly, Liverpool’s biggest game is United. “Because of the respect – but also the hatred – between the two biggest teams in England by a million miles.”
 ??  ?? FIRED UP: Aldridge knows what today’s fixture means
FIRED UP: Aldridge knows what today’s fixture means

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