Jürgen Klopp has admitted Liverpool have become “too easy” to play against and must toughen up if they are to stand any chance of winning the Premier League title.
Klopp’s side travel to Fulham on Sunday in third, two points behind Manchester City and below Arsenal on goal difference, having drawn and lost their past two league fixtures, against Manchester United and Crystal Palace, respectively.
On Thursday they also exited the Europa League at the quarter-final stage after a 3-1 aggregate loss to Atalanta and, all in all, are performing poorly. Their hopes of winning a quadruple in Klopp’s final season in charge are long gone but the German still believes he can leave on a high, though only if his players rediscover the character, as well as class, that had them competing on all fronts a little over a month ago.
“There is no season where there were no moments I thought: ‘Ah, we should have won that, we should have done that.’ It is part of life that you have to deal with them,” said Klopp. “It is never about how many punches you get, it is always how you deal with them. That’s how we have to deal with the situation.
Pep Guardiola admits he is questioning himself after Man City lose to Juventus
Stephen Bradley and Shamrock Rovers expecting tough test against Bosnian visitors Borac
Saka inspires Arsenal to beat Monaco and boost automatic qualification hopes
Manchester City lose for seventh time in 10 games as Juventus win in Turin
“That’s the challenge in football because we never play just for ourselves, we always have an opponent. So we have to make sure we become that opponent for each team again that they don’t want to play against – we made it a bit too easy and we should change that.”
Klopp was generally pleased with Liverpool’s display at Atalanta on Thursday – “I loved our game,” he said afterwards – and in winning the second leg in Bergamo 1-0 they kept a first clean sheet in 10 games.
Trent Alexander-Arnold also made a first start in two months after his recovery from a knee injury while there was a third substitute appearance in succession from Diogo Jota after he had been sidelined with a similar problem.
A squad ravaged by injury is slowly but surely returning to full health – Andrew Robertson, Dominik Szoboszlai and Curtis Jones have also returned from serious injury – and Klopp sees that as another reason to believe Liverpool can be champions for a second time under his charge, albeit he also expressed caution in that regard.
“It’s good to have them [back] but it is not about who wears the shirt, it is about how we perform,” he said. “We have to find a way to help the boys in the best way, to bring them as quick as possible into their best form or shape and from there we have to go. But of course each player plays with that quality anyway and without them we wouldn’t have a chance. With them we have a chance, with them in a really good football moment the chance gets bigger and bigger.
“I think if we would win all our games there is a good chance we will be champions. Maybe we only have to win five, but nobody knows. Who would have thought that Arsenal lose against Aston Villa? We have to go there still, it’s not one of my favourite away games. But it happens. We don’t think about that. It is just how can we make sure we start wining games again. I’m absolutely positive and after processing things properly, I’m more than happy with the situation.”
After facing Fulham, Liverpool travel to Everton on Wednesday evening for what will be the final Merseyside derby of the Klopp era before taking on West Ham at the London Stadium next Saturday lunchtime. – Guardian
- Sign up for push alerts and have the best news, analysis and comment delivered directly to your phone
- Find The Irish Times on WhatsApp and stay up to date
- Listen to our Inside Politics podcast for the best political chat and analysis