The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Reds gaffer is wary of Villarreal threat

- CARL MARKHAM

Jurgen Klopp has promised Liverpool will not underestim­ate Champions League semi-final opponents Villarreal and their head coach Unai Emery.

Almost six years ago, in his first season at the Merseyside club, Klopp’s side led 1-0 at half-time of the Europa League final against Emery’s Sevilla in Basel but went on to lose 3-1.

It was the first – and only – time Emery has beaten Klopp, having lost four and drawn one during his time at the Arsenal helm.

Villarreal, last year’s Europa League winners, are bidding to reach their first Champions League final but Klopp insists the Reds will not make the same mistake as Juventus and Bayern Munich, who have already been dispatched by the Spanish side.

“It is a massive game,” said Klopp, who is bidding to lead Liverpool to a third final in five years. “So many coaches out there work their socks off their whole life and have no chance to be close to a semi-final so we have to enjoy it.

“There might have been a little advantage in the last two games. Maybe Juve or Bayern under-estimated them, but that will never happen to us.

“They are still a really good football team who wants to make history as well. It would be the first time they will go to a final, which would be a massive thing to Villarreal, but it is to us the same importance.”

Klopp said he has not thought about the 2016 Europa League final defeat for a while but believes it was a significan­t moment, just seven months into his Anfield reign.

“I said it that night, I think that we would come back, without knowing we would come back, but at that moment I really thought we had a chance to come back stronger and we did,” he said.

“Would it have been anything different since then if we had we won that night? I don’t think so.

“I would have loved to have lifted that trophy that night but you have to learn from these things and that’s what we tried to do.”

While Klopp may not have given that night in Switzerlan­d much thought of late, for captain Jordan Henderson it lives long in the memory.

The midfielder was an unused substitute at St

Jakob-Park as Joe Allen, Christian Benteke and Divock Origi were all brought off the bench ahead of him in an attempt to turn the game around.

“That night always sticks out,” the 31-year-old said.

“I always remember it just because I can remember after the game going back to the hotel and the lads were all very disappoint­ed and all just wanted to go back to their room, not see anyone.

“But the gaffer was a bit different to what you expect. He got everyone together downstairs in the bar area and sort of spent the night together.

“I felt as though he knew this was the beginning, the start of something special to come. As a player, it is very difficult to think that then, when you’ve just lost the final.”

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