The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Klopp’s unforgetta­ble Liverpool moments to reign over rivals Man Utd

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LIVERPOOL — It was like Disneyland, according to Ed Woodward’s infamous, almost apocryphal and ultimately unsuccessf­ul sales pitch. It was not enough to persuade Jurgen Klopp to join Manchester United. Later, he instead signed up for historic rivals. He has been an indictment of United, not an inspiratio­n for them. Klopp against United has been a nineseason battle that comes to an end this afternoon. In some respects, he has only shaded it. United have actually nished ahead of Liverpool four times, including the season when Klopp was parachuted into An eld in October.

The nal score there will only be 5-4. Klopp will end up with another winning record: seven victories to ve so far, but, explosive as many of his games can seem, draws outnumber either. He has not beaten United in two games this season, despite 59 shots.

He has lost on both trips to Old Tra ord in Erik ten Hag’s reign. He has only won twice in 10 visits there.

And yet those wins were seminal, sensationa­l, spectacula­r. A 4-2 in May 2021, three days before Alisson headed Liverpool’s injury-time winner against West Bromwich Albion, came amid a surge into the Champions League places from a team without senior specialist centre-backs.

The rookies Rhys Williams and Nat Phillips played at Old Tra ord, the latter assisting Diogo Jota’s goal, before taking their return journeys to obscurity.

Five months later, there were ve goals in the rst 50 minutes; Liverpool were 5-0 up, Paul Pogba came on and was promptly sent o and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer pronounced it his darkest day as United manager. It ensured there weren’t too many other days, too: he limped on for four more games.

And it underlined an aspect. Klopp’s wins felt momentous and consequent­ial; immediate illustrati­ons of where United were going wrong, sometimes catalysts for change. Jose Mourinho was sacked two days after 2018’s 3-1 defeat at An eld where the scoreline obscured the level of Liverpool’s dominance as they chalked up 36 shots.

That was Klopp’s second victory. His rst, in the Uefa Cup in 2016, was an advertisem­ent for the energy of his football. It suggested Liverpool had hired the future and United, in Louis van Gaal, had the past; they soon came to that conclusion, too. His third win was also 2-0 at An eld: it ended with the Kop, scarred by near-misses, chorusing: “We’re going to win the league”. Sir Alex Ferguson had knocked Liverpool o their perch: Klopp restored them there and the second goal, sparking their fans’ admission they were unstoppabl­e, was assisted by Alisson.

It was scored by the single most in uential player in the rivalry in the Klopp years. Mohamed Salah contribute­d a hat-trick in the 5-0 win. He has goals in his last ve visits to Old Tra ord, a record 10 league goals in the xture. United, by way of contrast, have only scored twice at An eld during Klopp’s tenure.

The twin triumphs at Old Tra ord in 2021 were Klopp’s fourth and fth victories. There is a case for arguing the sixth represente­d the nest performanc­e of all: a 4-0 eviscerati­on at An eld in April 2022 took the aggregate score between the clubs that season to 9-0. It featured a masterclas­s by Thiago Alcantara, two more goals by Salah and some confused thinking by the godfather of gegen pressing who may have been designed as United’s answer to Klopp, with Ralf Rangnick drafting in Phil Jones and switching to a back three. It didn’t work.

Then there is the most recent victory, the most emphatic ever in a xture that dates back to 1894. Liverpool 7 Manchester United 0: a scoreline to echo through the ages. “One for the history books,” Klopp said. “A crazy score.” But his reign has featured a host of them, of unmissable occasions, unforgetta­ble days.

Part of the measure of Klopp’s success is that he has claimed two prizes United have never threatened to secure in the last decade, in the Premier League and the Champions League, even if he has nished second in each more often than rst.

Another is that he has delivered most of what both United owners and supporters, two very di erent constituen­cies, would want: prospering on a budget, without criticisin­g the powerbroke­rs, yet generating a bond with the crowd, o ering entertaini­ng football, underlinin­g the sense there is something special about his club.

Meanwhile, on and o the eld, United have lost their way. If Liverpool’s job descriptio­n for their next manager could simply be to copy Klopp, the same may be said for every United manager in recent years; now, having played his part in nishing o Mourinho and Solskjaer, he could help doom Ten Hag.

Or, perhaps, United could strike a double blow to Klopp’s fairytale farewell, costing Liverpool the FA Cup, derailing their Premier League title push. Ten Hag has already changed the course of his reign by registerin­g his rst win at Klopp’s expense: perhaps his FA Cup victory last month will help buy him another season.

But even if Klopp bows out against United with a defeat, Liverpool have been the real winners of his rivalry with the club who once tried to hire him. Independen­t

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