The Guardian (USA)

Liverpool have run out of steam. But Klopp’s legacy is already cemented

- Jonathan Wilson

And so there will be no glorious farewell for Jürgen Klopp. Saturday’s 2-2 draw with West Ham, coupled with victories for Manchester City and Arsenal, means any realistic hope of a second Premier League title is effectivel­y over. Klopp is exhausted, his team is exhausted and the manic emotional energy that gripped the side during the League Cup final and immediatel­y after has dissipated.

There will be questions about the wisdom of revealing when he did that he would be leaving. This has been a truism if English soccer since Alex Ferguson announced in 2001 that he planned to quit Manchester United. Do that, even if you’re as fearsome a figure as Ferguson, and the danger is that authority wanes. Something similar seems to have happened with Emma Hayes, who will leave Chelsea Women in the summer after a hugely successful 12-year stint to take charge of the USWNT. Would Saturday’s touchline spat with Mohamed Salah have happened had the Egyptian thought that Klopp would still be his manager next season? (It now seems likely that Salah, who has only a year left on his contract, will also leave in the summer).

The oddity is that Liverpool haven’t played especially poorly in recent weeks. As Klopp has pointed out, they had the chances to beat not only West Ham, but Manchester United in the league and FA Cup, Crystal Palace and even Atalanta. It’s just that when the wheels come off, they all come off. Chances were missed, defensive errors were made and slowly, a spirit-sapping combinatio­n of fatigue and anxiety spread through the side.

Injuries haven’t helped. Given changes in the midfield, this was always likely to be a transition­al season; there was no expectatio­n that either Fabinho or Jordan Henderson would leave, never mind both, and Wataru Endo, as well as he has performed, was only ever a stopgap signing. It’s not unreasonab­le to wonder whether either Darwin Núñez or Luis Díaz has the precision of finishing to be the highest level of forward. Salah, having begun the season brilliantl­y, has been desperatel­y out of sorts since damaging his hamstring at the Africa Cup of Nations.

In that context, Liverpool did exceptiona­lly well to remain in the title race.

And yet these past couple of weeks have meant that Klopp has ended his time at Liverpool with the sort of season that has been characteri­stic of his career. With Mainz, with Borussia Dortmund and with Liverpool, he has always been fighting against the odds. He has always had at least one far better-resourced opponent to struggle with, and yet at the same time he has narrowly missed the prize remarkably often.

With Liverpool he won the Champions League but also lost in three European finals. He ended the league title drought but also finished second twice; this season is likely to be his second third-place finish. With Dortmund, he won the Bundesliga twice but finished second twice. He won the Pokal once but twice lost in the final and also lost in the Champions League final. With Mainz, there were two agonising near-misses for promotion (they took two points from their final three games in 2001-02 and were undone by a three-goal goal-difference swing in the final 10 minutes the following year) before it was secured.

It would, obviously, be absurd to be too critical when in so many of those cases the achievemen­t is to have got into the position in the first place. But equally it is a telling flaw that Klopp has faltered near the line so often: it’s one thing to be defeated at the last by Bayern or Real Madrid or City, another to have lost out to Eintracht Frankfurt,

Wolfsburg or Sevilla.

There are those for whom his record of one Champions League and one Premier League feels a little meagre, but context is essential. He has done that against a far wealthier club in City that has one of the greatest coaches in history. In those two seasons when Liverpool finished second, they amassed 97 and 92 points, tallies that even 15 years ago would have guaranteed the title.

Or put it another way. Who are the greatest five managers in Premier League history? Would anybody really not have Klopp in there alongside Ferguson, Arsène Wenger, José Mourinho and Guardiola? He has transforme­d Liverpool, turned them from faded giants into serious contenders. He has taken a form of soccer favoured in England 40 years ago, rejuvenate­d it, repackaged it and sold it back to the English. He has produced a side that even neutrals thrill to watch.

It has not ended as Klopp or Liverpool would have wanted. Fatigue has won and reality has set in. It’s been another season of excitement, of greatness glimpsed but not quite grasped. And for Klopp, nothing could be more characteri­stic.

This is an extract from Soccer with Jonathan Wilson, a weekly look from the Guardian US at the game in Europe and beyond. Subscribe for free here.Have a question for Jonathan? Email soccerwith­jw@theguardia­n.com, and he’ll answer the best in a future edition

bold decisions sometimes. But doing it immediatel­y afterguara­nteeing $100m to an establishe­d veteran who plays the same position? And without talking to that quarterbac­k beforehand? The Falcons’ decision to take Washington’s Michael Penix Jr, a 24-year-old with a big left arm and a similarly big injury history, looks more bizarre in that context. Cousins’ will play this season at 36 years old, so it’s not unreasonab­le to plan for three years down the line. But for the Penix decision to pay off, the Falcons will need to have been the smartest guys in the room. That has not historical­ly been true of the men running this particular franchise, which may explain why long-suffering Atlanta fans seemed perturbed by the CousinsPen­ix two-step.

Denver Broncos. Grabbing Oregon quarterbac­k Bo Nix at No 12 was a bit less weird than what the Falcons did with Penix, but only a little. Nix is another old prospect at 24 himself. He developed into an excellent college QB by the end of his five-year career, but that is just the issue: It took Nix a long time (and a nice age advantage over his competitio­n) to become useful at Oregon, where the coaching staff helped him succeed with a barrage of quick, short throws that allowed his teammates to make plays with the ball. How much developmen­t he has left in front of him in the NFL is a reasonable question, and it is why most thought he would, like Penix, remain undrafted until later in the first round or even the second. It is not easy to see Nix becoming an above-average starter, but now the Broncos need that from him. Meanwhile, they will pay Wilson nearly $40m while he plays elsewhere this season. It smells like questionab­le asset management from a team that has missed the playoffs eight times running.

Defensive players. The first 14 names called in Thursday’s first round all belonged to offensive prospects. The drought didn’t break until UCLA edge defender Laiatu Latu joined the Indianapol­is Colts at No. 15. That marked by far the worst stretch of draft futility for defenders in the post-1970 merger NFL, as 2021 (when the first defender taken was the No 8 pick) represente­d the previous low point. Why was 2024 so exceptiona­l? A league-wide thirst for even passable quarterbac­k play contribute­d, as six QBs were off the board in the first 12 picks. Also playing a role was an unusually strong class of wide receivers (led by Marvin Harrison Jr, now of the Cardinals) and the presence of an elite tight end, Brock Bowers (who went to the Las Vegas Raiders). The run on offensive players was mostly a run on throwers and catchers. But that won’t make the lost earnings any better for defenders who slid down draft boards.

 ?? ?? Under Jurgen Klopp, Liverpool have won the Champions League but also lost in three European finals. Composite: Guardian Picture Desk
Under Jurgen Klopp, Liverpool have won the Champions League but also lost in three European finals. Composite: Guardian Picture Desk

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