The Independent

Klopp faces up to renewed United in ‘special’ rivalry

- RICHARD JOLLY SENIOR FOOTBALL CORRESPOND­ENT

Jurgen Klopp put the emphasis on the definite article. “It is the game against United,” he said. “Quite a big club as well and always when we face them it is massive.” Klopp was 48 before he experience­d Liverpool against Manchester United in the flesh, but his memories of the meetings of English football’s two

biggest and most successful clubs dated back to his boyhood in Germany. It is a match that he feels defines the sport, that gives it some of the meaning football requires to offer escapism from the problems of day-to-day life.

“The whole world will watch it,” he said. “I will watch it. The moment when Liverpool v United is not a special game any more then something went really wrong. Liverpool v Man Utd, who? That would be really difficult, that would be really sad.

“I love football, I love the fuss we make of it, most of the time at least, and then it is like, ‘Liverpool v United, I want to see it’. It has to be like that otherwise football would have absolutely no right to exist any more. People ... need to know what both clubs are doing. That is why I have no problem with them, particular­ly. It is a big game and it always was in my life a big game; since I was allowed to watch it on television it always was. Thank God it is still one.”

But big rivalries can often spill over into venomous conflict, so Klopp and Erik ten Hag have joined forces to call on Liverpool and Manchester United fans to stop “tragedy chanting” and offensive songs about the Munich, Heysel and Hillsborou­gh disasters.

United have condemned their supporters for singing about Hillsborou­gh, after 97 Liverpool fans lost their lives in and following the 1989 FA Cup semi-final, while United have faced taunts about the 1958 plane crash in Munich, where eight players were among the 23 people who died.

Klopp said: “One of the main reasons why the rivalry between Liverpool and Manchester United is so special is that it is so intense and no one should ever want to change this. But at the same time when the rivalry becomes too intense it can go to places that are not good for anyone and we do not need this.”

The question of what each club is doing has produced very different answers last season and this; then Liverpool were beating United 5-0 and 4-0, finishing 34 points ahead of them, competing for four trophies and winning two. Now United are fighting on four fronts, with silverware already secured. They are

10 points ahead of Liverpool and, while they have been busy with their cup commitment­s, that lead has been trimmed from 14 in the last week. “Yes, they play a better season than us so far but thank God that means absolutely nothing for the game on Sunday,” Klopp said.

The argument that form is irrelevant in such meetings has not always stood up to scrutiny. Last season’s twin thrashings were not anomalies but indicative of broader trends, of much that Liverpool were doing right and United wrong. If many have been taken aback by the turnaround Erik ten Hag has orchestrat­ed, Klopp is not among them. Perhaps there is an inevitabil­ity to clubs of Liverpool and United’s magnitude rousing themselves from the doldrums, though that would be to downplay Klopp’s feat in inheriting a club in 10th place and making them champions of Europe and, for the first time in three decades, of England.

Now United are renascent. They are still more of a financial superpower than Liverpool but Klopp saw potential in the players Ten Hag was bequeathed, albeit in an underachie­ving team, and a short-termism in the approach. He built for the future whereas the Ten Hag signings who are his first-choice pairing in midfield, Christian Eriksen and Casemiro, are both in their thirties. The Dane will miss the trip to Anfield but has been a catalyst. Casemiro scored in the Carabao Cup final.

“It is obviously not a team built for the next 20 years because the players they signed are for now but for now it is really good,” said Klopp. “Surprised? Probably not. Go through the team. How could they not be good? They don’t have one player where you think, ‘Woah, what is he doing there?’ They are really experience­d, they have quality, and a new way to defend. Defensivel­y [it is] a massive difference, properly man orientated and with the ball, just quality. Super-experience­d players came in like Eriksen and Casemiro. They were all over the world successful.”

The extra dimension is that Marcus Rashford, in Klopp’s words, is in the form of his life. The Mancunian has 25 goals this season, the first against Liverpool. He has been a past scourge of the Merseyside­rs, with six goals against them. Klopp has long been a fan of Rashford as both player and person.

“It is difficult, I would say pretty much impossible, to be happy about something positive at Manchester United when you are the Liverpool manager. I am here for seven-and-a-half years, it’s not that I watch them and hope they win,” he said. “But I am really happy for Rashford. He had a difficult year last year and I knew this would change again and now he is playing incredible. His speed, technique, mix of everything. How calm he is in front of goal, he scores worldies, he scores the simple ones, he’s there, he puts his head in.”

Mohamed Salah has often been the player in the game. Now Klopp and Liverpool have to ensure it is not Rashford.

Liverpool vs Manchester United kicks off at 4.30pm on Sky Sports Premier League

 ?? (Getty) ?? Liverpool trail their rivals by 10 points ahead of today’ s clash
(Getty) Liverpool trail their rivals by 10 points ahead of today’ s clash
 ?? (Getty) ?? If many have been taken aback by the turnaround Erik ten Hag has orchestrat­ed, Klopp is not among them
(Getty) If many have been taken aback by the turnaround Erik ten Hag has orchestrat­ed, Klopp is not among them

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