Author Topic: Jürgen Klopp  (Read 1077280 times)

Offline Samie

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11560 on: May 16, 2024, 04:45:12 pm »

Offline DonkeyWan

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11561 on: May 16, 2024, 04:47:03 pm »
'More than a manager – the definitive history of Jürgen Klopp at Liverpool' - by Paul Joyce:-

Leader, legend, hugger… the German delivered trophies but also inspired murals, hero worship and even had a pub named after him. He didn’t just reawaken a club – he created a movement

www.thetimes.co.uk/sport/football/article/jurgen-klopp-liverpool-manager-definitive-history-jd9hgj50p - or in full & free, here: https://archive.ph/SfnWv



That's a lovely piece, so much better than the shitty one in the Guardian by Saccharine Nakrani
Beatings will continue until morale improves...

Offline Kashinoda

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11562 on: May 16, 2024, 06:18:42 pm »
 :'(

<a href="https://www.youtube.com/v/qY23DMPzmho" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">https://www.youtube.com/v/qY23DMPzmho</a>
:D

Offline Samie

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11563 on: May 16, 2024, 06:20:15 pm »
https://twitter.com/CraigEvans_LFC/status/1791132512665616651

Quote
Our last staff photograph with Jurgen and his winning silverware taken at Anfield this week. Proud and privileged to have been here throughout his whole tenure. #DankeJurgen

Offline kop306

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11564 on: May 16, 2024, 06:38:54 pm »
what do people think of redmen tv charging people to watch a jurgen interview ?

Offline kasperoff

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11565 on: May 16, 2024, 06:42:28 pm »
Feels very real now. Obviously sad to see him go, but we've reached the end of a cycle and it's best to see him go on his own terms. It's almost a perfect end, would have been nice to win another trophy, but it all just came to a head a bit early. It's almost like he's literally run out of fuel and has been running on the fumes over the past month or so. You can clearly see the lights have dimmed a little. He's lost that sparkle. Running this team and achieving what he did would suck the life force out of anyone.

What can you say about his tenure? Pure class, inspiration, excitement, achievement. Won, and won in the right way. A gentleman and a fierce leader when it was called for. Pretty much the perfect manager in many ways, and certainly the perfect man for Liverpool.

There was a period where we were genuinely unbeatable. The best side on the planet and one of the best sides there will ever be. Won the lot and goes down in history as one of the greats.

Thanks Jurgen.
I think the same, can't stand him, but if you could have a £1million pound cheque or steve bruces head hollowed out and filled with pound coins which would you have?

Offline kop306

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11566 on: May 16, 2024, 06:43:03 pm »
thanks for posting the link to the free times article

Offline oojason

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11567 on: May 16, 2024, 06:44:03 pm »
what do people think of redmen tv charging people to watch a jurgen interview ?

I think you should probably find another thread for that discussion, mate - and not fuck this one up.
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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11568 on: May 16, 2024, 10:24:47 pm »
<a href="https://www.youtube.com/v/292ALpy7oFg" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">https://www.youtube.com/v/292ALpy7oFg</a>

Sasha Goryunov smashing it when talking about Klopp (from 38 minutes).
We have to change from doubter to believer. Now.

Offline amir87

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11569 on: May 16, 2024, 10:51:46 pm »
Managed to not think too much about it the last few months but boy has it hit home badly this week.

Going to be incredibly hard to watch great man say farewell.

Offline LFCEmpire

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11570 on: May 16, 2024, 11:01:27 pm »
Its wonderful to get to say farewell to legend like Klopp on good terms. Football today is a cesspit, remember how Wenger was nearly booed out of the Emirates.

Im so glad Jürgen is a red!

Offline WhereAngelsPlay

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11571 on: May 16, 2024, 11:02:42 pm »
Managed to not think too much about it the last few months but boy has it hit home badly this week.

Going to be incredibly hard to watch great man say farewell.

I'm the same & I pretty much switched off all emotions after going out of Europe (was the one I really wanted this year), games aside I am still not watching or reading anything.

I will catch up the next time we're top of the league  ;D
« Last Edit: May 16, 2024, 11:36:37 pm by WhereAngelsPlay »
My cup, it runneth over, I'll never get my fill

Offline Terry de Niro

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11572 on: May 16, 2024, 11:12:18 pm »
I would simply like to shake his hand, look into his eyes and say 'thank you'
This..

Offline Gifted Right Foot

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11573 on: May 16, 2024, 11:35:34 pm »
It's really hit me the last day or so.  I'm not ready. 

Offline Sevens and Eights

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11574 on: May 17, 2024, 12:44:49 am »
O Captain! my Captain! our fearful trip is done,
The ship has weather’d every rack, the prize we sought is won,
The port is near, the bells I hear, the people all exulting,
While follow eyes the steady keel, the vessel grim and daring;
                         But O heart! heart! heart!
                            O the bleeding drops of red,
                               Where on the deck my Captain lies,
                                  Fallen cold and dead.

Gods, I will miss him. I fear I will be quite drunk watching the Match. what a glorious 9 years He has given me.

Offline DrTobiasFunke

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11575 on: May 17, 2024, 01:33:58 am »
Not sure why I didn't before but watched the Anfield Wrap Jürgen documentary last night on YouTube. Very well made and shows the impact he's had everywhere he's been.

Others on here will be able to put it much more eloquently but it was an absolute privilege having him as our manager. He's as genuine and authentic as they come and he also won us a shitload of matches/trophies while playing exhilarating football.

Offline Avens

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11576 on: May 17, 2024, 05:50:10 am »
Its wonderful to get to say farewell to legend like Klopp on good terms. Football today is a cesspit, remember how Wenger was nearly booed out of the Emirates.

Im so glad Jürgen is a red!

This is exactly how I see it. I wish he wasn't going, but I'm so glad that he's going on his own terms and in a way that just allows us to celebrate the time with no caveats. The greatest. He made us believe and got us back on our perch at a time when the competition was stronger than it's ever been (for 115 reasons or another).
We have to change from doubter to believer. Now. - Jurgen Klopp

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11577 on: May 17, 2024, 08:36:08 am »
This is exactly how I see it. I wish he wasn't going, but I'm so glad that he's going on his own terms and in a way that just allows us to celebrate the time with no caveats. The greatest. He made us believe and got us back on our perch at a time when the competition was stronger than it's ever been (for 115 reasons or another).

He always knew he was going from around now to 2026, he's made sure that he's leaving us in a strong position, that's the quality of the man as a professional, cant do more than that. Fergie left the Mancs in the shit, we've got a great set of players and some absolute quality coming through from the academy, the futures bright, the futures red.
Jurgen YNWA

Offline 12C

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11578 on: May 17, 2024, 10:31:13 am »

Nice article about our Jürgen,and the fact he isn’t a cheat. https://x.com/MiguelDelaney/status/1791045571081326601
He makes the subtle point that without Klopp, the league would have been won these past 7 years by a national team project just like France - a farmers league with no one able to compete with the state backed club.


Almost captures what he means to us. It’s more than winning cups, it’s about being part of a crazy roller coaster, with a man who is genuinely a nice person.
The fact he won more in his tenure than the fans of most clubs have ever seen their teams win explains the blind bitterness.
The fact that he actually a nice guy means we love him for what he is as well, unlike the narcissistic drug cheat down the road.
I love how he also makes the point that Arsenal are now only just finding out what it’s like to compete with the cheating of Abu Dhabi.
Jürgen has answered the critics (many of them blooshites) who called him a motivator, and said he hadn’t won a thing other than two Bundesliga titles when Bayern were shite. His motivation of players and fans comes from his leadership and enthusiasm for football and life.
Yes we were lucky to have him, but the reason he wanted to come here was he recognised that the people of this city are as football daft as he is.
Remember his shout telling us to all all rock up to the UEFA final in Basle, which he then had to retract because UEFA crapped itself at the thought.

The usual Abu Dhabi sportswashing bot accounts in the replies, one even had the stupidity to mention victory parades.
Because let’s face it, two trams stops down Deansgate was sooo much better than the parade we had with BigEars.



"I want to build a team that's invincible, so that they have to send a team from bloody Mars to beat us."

Offline 12C

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11579 on: May 17, 2024, 10:34:15 am »
He always knew he was going from around now to 2026, he's made sure that he's leaving us in a strong position, that's the quality of the man as a professional, cant do more than that. Fergie left the Mancs in the shit, we've got a great set of players and some absolute quality coming through from the academy, the futures bright, the futures red.
The club have also realised there will never be anyone to replace him, and have put a structure in place to support any new coach coming in.
"I want to build a team that's invincible, so that they have to send a team from bloody Mars to beat us."

Offline FlashingBlade

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11580 on: May 17, 2024, 10:36:19 am »
Just watched press conference...He was..as expected...Brilliant....felt gutted when it ended....dreading Monday.

Offline jillcwhomever

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11581 on: May 17, 2024, 10:41:35 am »
He talked so eloquently about everything.
"He's trying to get right away from football. I believe he went to Everton"

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11582 on: May 17, 2024, 10:49:17 am »
I would simply like to shake his hand, look into his eyes and say 'thank you'

No Hug?
"Ohhh-kayyy"

Offline Sheer Magnetism

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11583 on: May 17, 2024, 11:10:01 am »
Klopp did something of an 'exit interview' with Andy Hunter, feels very relaxed for the most part. One thing I found interesting however:
Quote
I could say now [to the owner, Fenway Sports Group]: ‘You didn’t back me enough and I could have been more successful,’ but I never saw it that way. We had discussions about it, but I would have never made them public. I didn’t want to bring any feelings to the outside world that we were not united. If we had an argument then we had it internally but outside we say: “That’s our way, that’s how we do it.” If it would help to invite the public into discussions I am the first to do so, but it doesn’t help.

Offline demain

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11584 on: May 17, 2024, 11:15:04 am »
I am a coward, not watching any of the farewell tribute videos, it'll just make it all that bit harder to let go.
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Offline gamble

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11585 on: May 17, 2024, 11:18:29 am »
Very sad weekend for us. Watching us win the Champions league and Premiership was enough for me, I gave up hope of ever winning the league. Should have had some more but hard to compete against the financial cheats.

Which coaches are leaving this weekend too?

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11586 on: May 17, 2024, 11:21:52 am »
Jürgen's final pre-match press conference

<a href="https://www.youtube.com/v/iz6uhE17zgA?si=QvcjXh1Ccvt1yIfC" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">https://www.youtube.com/v/iz6uhE17zgA?si=QvcjXh1Ccvt1yIfC</a>
"We have to change from doubters to believers"

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Offline TheMan

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11587 on: May 17, 2024, 11:29:11 am »
Klopp did something of an 'exit interview' with Andy Hunter, feels very relaxed for the most part. One thing I found interesting however:

That is interesting, Klopp's strategy was not to wash the dirty linen in public. Benitez, on the other hand, would have used the court of public opinion to pressure the owners to spend more.

With Klopp having such massive support among the fanbase it is arguable that if he did go public then that strategy may have worked.

Offline bornandbRED

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11588 on: May 17, 2024, 11:33:02 am »
It’s crazy when you look back at your own life and how it runs in parallel with LFC. And then you think of what was going in parallel with Klopp’s LFC. The world was such a different place in 2015 - pre-Brexit even

Klopp and his team has been a huge influence in so many ways.. it really does feel like a painful heartbreak

Offline coct3au

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11589 on: May 17, 2024, 11:37:04 am »
That is interesting, Klopp's strategy was not to wash the dirty linen in public. Benitez, on the other hand, would have used the court of public opinion to pressure the owners to spend more.

With Klopp having such massive support among the fanbase it is arguable that if he did go public then that strategy may have worked.

I would guess that (as indicated in other comments about "doing it in the right way" and "spending all our money on players, the stadium, or the training ground"), Klopp must have felt that fundamentally, FSG/the bigwigs had our best interests at heart (or at least perceived that our interests were aligned), even if they might have disagreed on individual issues or approaches etc. So was prepared to respect that and work as a team.

Whereas Rafa was working under profiteering scumbags who definitely DIDN'T have our best interests at heart, so there was no managerial "team", he was basically in a power struggle with them, to stop our club being destroyed from within. The fanbase was one of the few weapons he had to use against them.

Offline Cracking Left Foot

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11590 on: May 17, 2024, 12:02:05 pm »
I had to laugh when Jurgen paid tribute to John Achterberg and said "and now he's off to Saudi with Stevie....", looked at the camera, paused and grinned and laughed "good  luck with that!".

I somehow doubt we'll ever see Jurgen take the Saudi dollar. What a fella. Gonna miss him so much.
Thank you Jurgen

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11591 on: May 17, 2024, 12:19:04 pm »
Klopp did something of an 'exit interview' with Andy Hunter, feels very relaxed for the most part. One thing I found interesting however:

Jurgen has more EQ than 100 other top-level managers put together.  his ability to see the big picture and instinctively understand what the right attitude / behaviour is, never ceases to amaze me.

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11592 on: May 17, 2024, 12:52:09 pm »
Can someone explain why I am emotional and close to tears about a bloke leaving who I've never met?!?! Every article this week or video clip of him, and I feel tears coming on!!
JFT97

Offline The Final Third

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11593 on: May 17, 2024, 01:05:57 pm »
Klopp did something of an 'exit interview' with Andy Hunter..

Jürgen's pretty forthright in this so quoted in full:

‘We get punched hard, get up and go again’: Jürgen Klopp on love, leadership and Liverpool
Andy Hunter

Firstly, how do you reflect on the past eight and a half years?

It is so rare in this industry that you can create this kind of relationship to a club and to a city because, in the beginning, what did we know? It is not that we can lie. In the 15 years before I arrived I watched loads of football, but did I watch a lot of Liverpool? No. So coming here and living the life I did, dedicating everything to it, which is what I had to do for the people, is really special. The way people in England see it, you either love Liverpool or hate Liverpool. Obviously it was very easy for me to fall in love with the club and the people. It is a super special story. Could it have been more successful? Yes. With me? I don’t know. We did absolutely everything. I am very self-critical but I do not reflect on this in a critical way. We had really good times with super football moments, real development, tough moments, overcoming all of them. OK, maybe not always in time, but I look back with a smile.


You made several predictions at your first press conference – telling fans to turn from doubters to believers and saying you’d have to work in Switzerland if you didn’t win a trophy in four years …

That went down well in Switzerland! My skiing holiday will not be there. I’m sure people think I planned to say those things. I just wanted to survive the press conference. My English was not that great. I’d been talking to people about why they changed from Brendan [Rodgers] to me , what happened in not becoming champions in 2014 and what it meant being so close. I realised everyone was doubting what Liverpool does and no one liked the team. Not even the team liked the team. The players were not comfortable in their skin. The four years comment was, not to buy time, but I know how football works. If you do not arrive early enough where people want to go then it will not happen.

What I actually meant was not that I would have to coach in Switzerland but you would need a coach from Switzerland, you would have to try with somebody else. Anyway, it was bullshit! The people had lost patience long enough and wanted to see something they could believe in again. It was a good team but not for the big prizes and we had to change it step by step. I could say now [to the owner, Fenway Sports Group]: ‘You didn’t back me enough and I could have been more successful,’ but I never saw it that way. We had discussions about it, but I would have never made them public. I didn’t want to bring any feelings to the outside world that we were not united. If we had an argument then we had it internally but outside we say: “That’s our way, that’s how we do it.” If it would help to invite the public into discussions I am the first to do so, but it doesn’t help. I really understood how we do it and for us it is the Liverpool way. We do it the right way. We don’t overspend, we always spent what we earned on the team or a stand or a training ground. This is a healthy club. To be a healthy club at this time and be on our level … you can say Barcelona is not a healthy club but still up there but I don’t think that would be the Liverpool thing.

Other clubs have massive money and try really hard. We need to do it this way because that is what the people really believe. That is proven historically. Lefties, educated by Bill [Shankly]. Most of us don’t know him. We didn’t even live in that era but it is always around. You cannot just change now to the other side. The younger faction might be like that but who cares? For us older people and probably from around 30-something, they want to have it the proper way and I thought we always did that. We were unlucky or maybe in moments not good enough to win three Premier Leagues and three Champions Leagues. We all know with a bit more luck or a better decision it could have been different. We were so close that minutes and millimetres decided things for us.

I know for the people it makes a massive difference if I won more. If I win three [Premier League titles] I am definitely a successful manager. If I win one in nine years people can argue about it. But I couldn’t care less. In these seasons when we had 90-odd points we had 364 really enjoyable days and were nearly there, and then one moment is awful, horrible. The block at City, the handball of Rodri, post against Real Madrid, [Sergio] Ramos – was it a red card? I’m not sure but it was harsh. From time to time, I see Vinny’s [Vincent Kompany’s] screamer and think: “Are you kidding me?” Seconds before that goal I was thinking: “Come on Brendan, take [James] Maddison off, he’s tired.” He was five yards away and just had to move to block the shot. I was lying on my sofa with my hands in my pockets and a second later I felt like I’d had a stroke. What can you do when that happens?


You can beat Barcelona in the Champions League semi-final the very next night …

My favourite. People always want to talk to me about leadership. I never read a book about it so how can I talk about this? But if my career didn’t teach me how to deal with setbacks, then there is no career for that. And it goes for all of us. There are obviously more important things in life than football but where can you really learn in advanced age groups about how to deal with things? Why do people talk – and it is a big story – about us not winning the league in 2019 by a point? Why we didn’t win the Champions League in 2018 and the way we lost that game? Winning it the next year, don’t win the league for a point but win it the year after. This period is a complete comeback. A comeback over 70-something games, which is absolutely insane.

For me it was like not getting promoted with Mainz for a point, not getting promoted for a goal. We could have given up but it is just not in my DNA. I suffer like crazy after these things, just not for long. After the last Champions League final we lost – I decided before that, if it doesn’t happen, I will not waste a lifetime on suffering. We play that game and shoot every three minutes on their goal but their keeper has 12 hands, and then they score and we talk afterwards about the one mistake where we could have defended better. Their guys were in the wrong position 23 times and we didn’t punish it. That has nothing to do with their defending, that was that fucker [Thibaut] Courtois. I couldn’t go down that road again that night and feel like you usually feel after a defeat like that.

We had the Madrid moment, we had other moments, we won the league, we won cups, and I really think the two Chelsea finals in 2022 were two of the best games I ever witnessed. I enjoyed so many moments and it’s how I understand life – I want it but others want it as well, from time to time you get it and from time to time they get it. I’m at peace with it.


You will be spoken about in the same breath as Shankly in the future by Liverpool fans, for how you revitalised the club and the connection you had with them. How does that sit with you?

It’s part of folklore. Bill Shankly didn’t do it alone. You couldn’t do what Bill did in each city in the world. You cannot do it in London where there are 25 clubs. You are here and it’s red or blue. This is the place you can do it. The way Bill understood it, and as far as I know it, because of the political way the people are coming from, you need someone that understands it is the power of unity. We give our all, we see what we get for it, we overcome obstacles, and Bill was obviously the right man to do that. When I arrived people would probably describe it as darker times. It was 10 years since they won the Champions League. At other clubs they would still talk about that but here it was too long. I knew the tricky situation of Liverpool.

Three years before Ian Ayre [Liverpool’s then managing director] called me up when I was at Dortmund and asked if I was interested. I thought: ‘Eh?’ Dortmund were flying, maybe champions again. I thought: ‘No chance’ but I didn’t want to leave at all so I was like: ‘Why do you call?’ Liverpool was not in a great place, not a place you would say: ‘Yes, Liverpool is calling, come on let’s go.’ That changed three years later. For me it was the No 1 choice. I just thought that’s the one I want to do. What we did with the people, we restored the belief and the togetherness. People enjoy winning of course but fighting for it especially. It is part of our history here that we really get punched hard, get up and go again.

It was not a plan but it is how people are here. The general view on life in Liverpool is very similar to mine. I’m ready to fight for the right things. Do I think I deserve everything? No, and it’s fine that other people should have things as well. I’m not a socialist but I do come from there and I understand life like that. I fitted so well. I didn’t have to change a bit – that was the biggest blessing. Just be myself. That’s why it worked out so well in my relationship with the people. I understand from the outside people might see it like that but, as Bill probably did think, alone would have been impossible. From his boot room, the guys who supported him all took over: boom, boom, boom. They were all there before but it was all about Bill – that’s how it is in the city. It’s all about me. Who spoke about Pep Lijnders? They spoke about Pep Lijnders when his book came out and we didn’t play well and they said: “How can you write a book?” Are you all crazy? But now he goes out and will conquer the world and people will realise. For what the outside world needs it is easy for me because we have the same view on life and I don’t have to pretend to be someone else. I can just say what I think. The rest of the world doesn’t like it but Liverpool people rather like it so we agree on most of the things.


You recently said scousers were the most passionate football fans. Why?

I’m nine years living here so I’m massively biased. It’s just what it means to the people. It means absolutely everything. I felt really guilty after the Everton game. We lose and the next night City are playing. Definitely not watching that. My son is saying: “Let’s go for a beer.” So we went for a beer and sat outside. I didn’t want to go inside, not because I expected people to push me through the room saying: “You lost!” but because you don’t want people thinking: “Going for a beer? You better prepare the team for the next game!” But people realised I was sitting outside and I said: “I’m sorry; we tried but it didn’t work out.” And they were so nice, so thankful, “Don’t worry about it”, and in that moment it was about what the whole thing besides results means to all of us.

I am so happy that we can leave a club in a position, not where it is in the table, but as a healthy club. You look at the outside world and think, Arsenal, young, they can go again. Pep [Guardiola] will not stay for ever at City. Even [Kevin] De Bruyne gets older, Bernardo Silva gets older, Phil Foden plays another 12 years of course, [Erling] Haaland. There is a good chance to stay in that group. With new influences. They are really important. Our football doesn’t have to change completely but can be modified here and there. It is not an emergency case where you hear beep, beep, beep and then beeeeeeeep. It is a really healthy, vital club with a wonderful training ground, sensational stadium and financially not bad. That is what I am most proud of. With everything that happened over the years, in crazy times, we never overdid it. And then you get punished years later with these points deductions. It’s horrible. I am not sure they cheated on purpose but somehow they knew: “Mmmm, it’s probably not 100% right but maybe we can get through that.” Obviously they couldn’t and I really like the way we did it.


Diego Simeone once said: “The biggest thing is the responsibility. My wife asked me when I am happiest, and I was speechless until I answered ‘When I go to sleep because nobody is talking to me’.” Do you recognise that feeling?

I recognise what he is saying, absolutely. Besides Ulla [Klopp’s wife] pretty much, meeting me means talking about football. I am like Google: ‘Why do you do this? Why do you do that?’ Visiting friends come over, watch the game and for me it’s work and for them a holiday. Family come over, and for me it’s work and for them a holiday. You know how many interviews we have after a game. I don’t have a personal problem with you but you deliver the shit message when I’m not in my best moment. It’s just where we clash. But it is very often the moment you go asleep. I listen to a lot of audio books. I love to read but when I read everyone gets to talk to me. When I have the headphones on people realise I’m not listening. It’s probably one of my strongest characteristics: to feel responsible for an incredible amount of things. It was a big thing when I said I would step aside because I know what it means to a lot of other people.
Memorable Jürgen Klopp press conference moments at Liverpool – video

Bad days or good days, there is a really nice vibe in this building [the AXA training centre]. The reason for that is because if I don’t feel great when I enter the building, I don’t let them feel that. We really like working with one another. There’s a lot of uncertainty for people and I didn’t want that for them. I knew if I chose to leave in another year or two it would be exactly the same for these people. That cannot be the reason for not doing it. It was a big part, but I had to overcome that. I had to think of myself first, which doesn’t happen a lot actually as I can deal with pretty much everything.


What will you miss most of all?

I don’t know. I didn’t miss anything in the short break I had after Dortmund; sometimes on a Saturday I forgot the Bundesliga was on. It’s my life so I might miss it but I need to have a look on the other side because it makes absolutely no sense not to. I love what I do but it’s super-intense and there is no space for anything else. If you look at my three clubs, we always built a training ground, we always expanded a stadium or built a stadium. I was not a coach in the sense of plan a session, go home and have a shower. Especially not here. I need to find out if I will miss it. I turn 57 next month. I will not stop working but must it be exactly that? I don’t think so but we will see later. I want to have a proper break and figure out what that does for me.


So what is next?

I’ve got an invitation for the Champions League final but I need more tickets. It’s the first time in my life I’m asking for tickets – normally it’s me who is always being asked! Now I am asking it really feels strange. We have tickets for a few games at the Euros but besides that we didn’t plan anything. Being in Germany for a long time, meeting friends, nothing spectacular. Just easy-going, not planning a pre-season or being involved in any transfer talks. I’m really looking forward to it. I think I will be at the Paralympics. Everything is usually about the schedule. The family never asked me: “Can you do this?” Being flexible, that’s exactly what I want to do. Be spontaneous. That will be a challenge.

Offline TheShanklyGates

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11594 on: May 17, 2024, 01:32:24 pm »
<a href="https://www.youtube.com/v/Lk8IojAbpE8" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">https://www.youtube.com/v/Lk8IojAbpE8</a>

Jurgen when he said goodbye to Mainz. Oh boy, Sunday is going to be tough.
I've just wiped the sticky residue from my bellend onto the television screen. Taste it Leo. You deserve it.
I would honestly let Wijnaldum jizz in my face right now

Offline pazcom

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11595 on: May 17, 2024, 01:48:49 pm »
i watched the Dortmund goodbye yesterday...I wonder if he'll do the same on Sunday. It was a pre-recorded message to the Dortmund fans as he found the Mainz goodbye to difficult to speak through, as evidence by the video above.
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Online Dim Glas

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11596 on: May 17, 2024, 02:37:56 pm »
i watched the Dortmund goodbye yesterday...I wonder if he'll do the same on Sunday. It was a pre-recorded message to the Dortmund fans as he found the Mainz goodbye to difficult to speak through, as evidence by the video above.

It’s already been said he’ll talk to the crowd on Sunday.  So no pre-recorded messagse this time. No screens to show it on anyway!

Offline pazcom

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11597 on: May 17, 2024, 03:09:54 pm »
It’s already been said he’ll talk to the crowd on Sunday.  So no pre-recorded messagse this time. No screens to show it on anyway!

Didn't know he'd said he'll talk to the crowd, that will be tough to watch...assumed the club would try and get some big screens into the stadium...no point though if he's gong to talk directly
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Offline exiledintheUSA

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11598 on: May 17, 2024, 03:10:46 pm »
i watched the Dortmund goodbye yesterday...I wonder if he'll do the same on Sunday. It was a pre-recorded message to the Dortmund fans as he found the Mainz goodbye to difficult to speak through, as evidence by the video above.

He's going to talk to the fans.  During the lap of honor, a stage will be erected in the center circle.
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Offline StL-Dono

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Re: Jürgen Klopp
« Reply #11599 on: May 17, 2024, 03:19:15 pm »
I'm struggling to picture a similar outpouring not just from fans, but everyone through the media when Pep decides to leave MC.  I doubt he's going to go out for any reason other than his own decision, but will anyone care or make a fuss?  Maybe the AbuDhabi press corps maybe...   

We've known JK was special all along, but somewhat gratifying to see it from many different corners as well.