Tag: league crown

  • ‘‘Will be a superstar’: Liverpool gun set to join Spanish giants on blockbuster $450k per week move

    ‘‘Will be a superstar’: Liverpool gun set to join Spanish giants on blockbuster $450k per week move

    Trent Alexander-Arnold’s move to Real Madrid from Liverpool at season’s end is a done deal, according to multiple reports from the United Kingdom and Spain.

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    The defender has been tipped to trade Anfield for the Bernabeu on a free transfer at the end of his contract for some time, and it has been reported that the Spanish giants have secured the 26-year-old with a five-year offer worth more than £220,000 a week.

    Carlo Ancelotti’s side view the England international as the long-term successor to 33-year-old Dani Carvajal, who is out with an ACL injury sustained in October, and he would join the likes of top English players David Beckham, Steve McManaman, who backed Alexander-Arnold to “be a superstar” in Madrid, Michael Owen and Jonathan Woodgate to represent Los Blancos.

    Alexander-Arnold has been free to discuss terms with overseas clubs since January, and his impending move to Real would also reunite him with his friend and England teammate Jude Bellingham.

    Real made an approach to Liverpool on New Year’s Eve to try sign Alexander-Arnold during the January transfer window, but the Premier League champions in waiting declined to cash the right-back in for reportedly around £20 million to boost their chances of a league crown.

    That move was vindicated as Arne Slot’s side sits 12 points clear atop of the table with nine matches remaining, but will leave them without any profit on Alexander-Arnold as he can join Real for free like French superstar Kylian Mbappe did last year from PSG.

    Alexander-Arnold is sidelined at present after injuring his ankle during the Reds’ Champions League exit at the hands of PSG and missing the League Cup final loss to Newcastle as a result.

    He is tipped to return next month, in time for the crowning few weeks of the Premier League campaign and what is set to be a fitting farewell to his boyhood club.

    Alexander-Arnold made his first team debut as an 18-year-old in 2016 after joining Liverpool’s academy as a six-year-old.

    Many Reds fans on social media have been outraged however, calling for him to not be selected for the remainder of the season

    Under esteemed manager Jurgen Kloop, Alexander-Arnold won the Champions League, Premier League, FA Cup and Club World Cup.

    He is also one of three key Liverpool players out of contract at season’s end, with the futures of golden boot leader Mohamed Salah and star defender Virgil van Dijk still unclear.

    Liverpool have declined to comment on the reports.

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  • From ‘the normal one’ to an all-time icon: Five games that made Klopp a Liverpool legend

    From ‘the normal one’ to an all-time icon: Five games that made Klopp a Liverpool legend

    Jurgen Klopp will leave Anfield on Sunday as a living legend, having restored Liverpool to the elite of English and European football while building a lasting bond with the city and its people.

    Ever since the manager in January announced the shock decision he would be stepping down at the end of the season, the sense of loss that has enveloped Merseyside has been palpable.

    The raw emotion is testament to a transformation that Liverpool had not seen since the days of Bill Shankly decades ago.

    On Klopp’s first day in charge at Anfield in October 2015 he modestly declared himself as “a Normal One”, in stark contrast to Jose Mourinho’s bombastic “Special One” arrival as Chelsea boss a decade earlier.

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    Yet the German would prove he was anything but normal, becoming the only Liverpool manager to complete the collection of Premier League, Champions League, FA Cup, League Cup, Club World Cup and Community Shield during his tenure.

    Klopp arrived with Liverpool 10th in the Premier League table and without a league title in 25 years.

    Yet his force of personality, charisma and coaching nous soon began to enchant a highly emotive fanbase.

    “This is a very, very special club. I didn’t make them believe, I reminded them that it helps when you believe,” said Klopp earlier this month.

    “Everybody was ready to push the train. That’s what we did now for eight-and-a-half years.”

    Here are the five moments that sum up his special time on Merseyside.

    Klopp led Liverpool to a first Champions League title since 2005.Source: AFP

    2016: Dortmund delight

    It took nearly four years for the trophies to start flowing for Klopp in England but there were memorable moments from his first season as Liverpool reached the Europa League final, where they lost to Sevilla.

    Klopp faced a reunion with former club Borussia Dortmund in the quarter-finals. After a 1-1 draw in the first leg, two early goals from the Germans at Anfield left Liverpool with a mountain to climb.

    But the Reds roared back, with Dejan Lovren scoring a late winner as Klopp bounced up and down on the touchline, celebrating a 5-4 win on aggregate.

    Liverpool would go onto reach four European finals under Klopp as he restored the English giants as a powerhouse in continental competition.

    Liverpool’s Croatian defender Dejan Lovren (L) celebrates with Jurgen Klopp after the epic win.Source: AFP

    2019: Barcelona blown away

    For all of Liverpool’s rich history in European competition, arguably Anfield’s greatest ever night came in a remarkable fightback against Barcelona to reach the Champions League final in 2019.

    A Lionel Messi-inspired Barca had won the first leg 3-0 at the Camp Nou. Back at Anfield they were demolished by an understrength Liverpool, who were without two of their own talismanic front three in Mohamed Salah and Roberto Firmino.

    In their absence, Divock Origi was the unlikely hero as he and Georginio Wijnaldum each scored twice in a stunning 4-0 victory.

    Klopp celebrates with Mo Salah and Virgil Van Dijk after one of Liverpool’s greatest European nights.Source: Getty Images

    2019: Champions League glory

    After beating Barcelona, Tottenham were tamed as tens of thousands of Liverpool supporters turned Madrid red in celebration of a sixth Champions League title.

    Salah and Origi scored the goals at the Metropolitano Stadium as Klopp finally got his hands on Europe’s biggest prize after losing his two previous finals with Dortmund and Liverpool.

    Klopp with the Champions League trophy as the team celebrated in an open-top bus parade in Liverpool.Source: AFP

    2020: First Premier League trophy for 30 years

    Liverpool posted a then club-record 97 Premier League points in the 2018/19 season, but still missed out on the title by one point to a relentless Manchester City.

    The following year they were not to be denied — even by the interruption to the season caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

    Klopp’s men won 26 and drew one of their opening 27 games on their way to racking up 99 points and claiming a first league title in 30 years.

    The players had to lift the trophy at an empty Anfield because of Covid restrictions, but thousands of fans defied the ban on socialising to gather outside the stadium, setting off red flares.

    After years of near misses, Liverpool finally ended their long wait for another league crown in 2020.Source: AFP

    2024: Unlikely final trophy

    After a difficult 2022/23 campaign, Klopp proved his managerial acumen once more by refreshing the squad with youth and energy, which inspired another quadruple quest.

    Klopp’s goodbye did not reach a glorious crescendo as Liverpool’s Premier League title challenge came off the rails in the final weeks of the campaign and they exited the FA Cup and Europa League.

    However, there was still silverware to celebrate from his final season in the League Cup.

    Virgil van Dijk’s header minutes from the end of extra-time beat Chelsea 1-0 to secure an unlikely triumph for Klopp’s understrength side.

    Liverpool were severely weakened by injuries and absences at the Africa Cup of Nations and Asian Cup when they arrived at Wembley.

    But Klopp’s faith in a clutch of teenagers paid off as they helped turn the tide in Liverpool’s favour during extra-time before Van Dijk’s stooping header broke the deadlock.

    “It was a win-win situation from the first day. I enjoyed each second of it,” Klopp said recently.

    “The responsibility and love that grew over the years is a big part of the decision I made, so I’m absolutely fine and at peace with the decision.”

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