Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp cut a tetchy figure during a slightly
shambolic press conference in Moscow yesterday to preview his side’s
Champions League game against Spartak Moscow. Sound issues, some
peculiar questions from local reporters and a confused interpreter made
for a surreal atmosphere, but Klopp was also irritated by the questions
he received from the British journalists present.
In response to a fairly lighthearted question about which Liverpool
players he loves, after his Tottenham Hotspur counterpart Mauricio
Pochettino declared his ‘love’ for Harry Kane, the usually genial German
pulled a face.
“I’m really impressed that we are in a Champions League press conference
and we talk about things like this. I really don’t understand the
business anymore,” Klopp said. “Yes, I love the club, that includes the
players. I love Harry too. But he’s a Tottenham player. I love good
footballers. That’s how it is.”
As the female interpreter, sitting to his left, began to translate his
answer into Russian, Klopp interrupted. “It’s not important for Russia,
the question or my answer,” he said. “It’s just an English thing.
Pochettino loves Kane. And who do I love? That was the question. It’s a
waste of time.”
Klopp was similarly unimpressed by a query about his team’s
well-documented defensive problems, which have seen them concede 10
goals in their three Premier League away games. Asked what the solution
was, Klopp told his audience in a hotel suite at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo
Airport: “Work better together. Defence how I understand it is a
teamwork thing. That’s what we were speaking about. I know you and your
colleagues (in the media) talk about different things, but I talk about
the team performance. We have to defend better and that’s what we’re
working on all the time.”
If Klopp has been spared more trenchant criticism, it is because his
team, when on song, are capable of playing attacking football of
scintillating quality. Liverpool crushed Arsenal 4-0 at the end of
August and in Sadio Mane, Roberto Firmino, Philippe Coutinho and new
signing Mohamed Salah they possess some of the most talented forwards in
the Premier League.
The suspicion, which Klopp does not exactly deny, is that as long as his
team are scoring goals at one end of the pitch, he will not lose too
much sleep about what is happening in his own penalty area. “If you
would ask me: ‘Do you want your team perfect in defending set-pieces,
but don’t know how to play football, or would you prefer the other way
round?’ I still would take this (second) one,” he says.
Liverpool’s quest for greater defensive solidity has not been helped by
the unpredictable form of goalkeeper Simon Mignolet or by Klopp’s own
selection choices. The 5-0 capitulation at Manchester City earlier this
month came after he made the questionable choice to start Ragnar Klavan
instead of usual first-choice centre-back Dejan Lovren, who remained on
the bench.
The Liverpool manager also regularly chops and changes his defence,
notably rotating his full-backs between games, which has made it
impossible to achieve any kind of continuity.
Matters were not helped by Liverpool’s frustrating transfer window,
during which they missed out on prime defensive target Virgil van Dijk.
Loris Karius, who Klopp has confirmed will start in goal instead of
Simon Mignolet at Otkrytiye Arena today, said he and his teammates have
been working on how to tighten up at the back. “We scored a lot of goals
up front and sometimes we conceded a few,” said the German goalkeeper,
who kept goal in Liverpool’s 2-2 draw with Sevilla in their opening
group fixture.
“I don’t think that’s just down to the defence. It’s got to do with our
very offensive style of play, which means we sometimes take a few risks
in defence. It’s worked very well for us in most of the games. Some
goals, we had a few words about as a team. I know we can defend them
better. But we learned from it and we practise in training. Of course we
look at things and we know where we can do better in defence. There’s
not really any worries because I know we have the quality.”
Russian champions Spartak looked set to open their Group E campaign with
a useful 1-0 victory away to Maribor, only for Damjan Bohar to net an
85th-minute equaliser for the Slovenians. Spartak’s Italian coach
Massimo Carrera worked alongside Antonio Conte at Juventus and he has
sounded out the Chelsea manager about how to get the better of
Liverpool. “We’ve discussed Liverpool with Conte,” said Carrera, who led
Spartak to their first Russian title since 2001 last season after
succeeding Dmitri Alenichev at the dawn of the campaign. “It’s obvious
that they’re strong and have plenty of star players in their line-up.”
Liverpool’s players train at the club’s Melwood training complex in Liverpool, north west England, yesterday, on the eve of their Champions League Group E football match against Spartak Moscow in Russia. (AFP)