Barcelona club president candidate hopeful Jordi Farre says talks have been held with Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp. (Sport - in Spanish)
Haha 🙂
Haha 🙂

I can imagine how that conversation went.Barcelona club president candidate hopeful Jordi Farre says talks have been held with Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp. (Sport - in Spanish)
Haha 🙂
Didn't the same happen to Klopp initially? Before he got Mainz promoted (or was it after)?The idea of offering a sabbatical seems a good one in principle but I'm not sure it would work for us in practice, as I'm far from convinced about Lijnders stepping in. He crashed and burned in his one and only go at a far less pressurised management job in Holland.
We're getting close to a rebuild now ! If FSG don't let go of the purse strings then I can see us regressing.Hopefully (HOPEFULLY!) when Klopp does go we will be in the rare position of being able to get a new manager in who can take over a winning squad and not feel they have to massively rebuild it. We've literally not had that for 35 years.
Politicking.Barcelona club president candidate hopeful Jordi Farre says talks have been held with Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp. (Sport - in Spanish)
Haha 🙂
Didn't the same happen to Klopp initially? Before he got Mainz promoted (or was it after)?
Hadn't heard that. I do recall some suggestion of it, in the British media at any rate, when he announced he'd be leaving Dortmund but I don't think that was ever established. Klopp himself denied that tiredness was the reason for his departure so I suspect the idea was never really a runner anyway.
Let’s see how he goes in the next 3 years in terms of trophies and rebuilding.
Yes, I think like with losing a loved one it's difficult to even contemplate it happening. So it is with life after Klopp.The problem of being able to see beyond Klopp is that he is so so right for this club in terms of his character as an individual with the added success he has got us, that it is just to difficult to actually say " I would like so and so after him..." because you know you will never get such a perfect match. I cannot even think about it right now - him moving on from LFC will probably feel like losing a loved one ( not on that level but most of you get what I mean ?).
OK, I tried, but our Jurgen speaks as quickly in German as he does in English and it was hard work! Not much I can add to the above - the possibility of a complete pause was also mentioned (though that's what he thought he was doing when he left Dortmund). One other point I did manage to pick up was that he said he'd been blessed with the atmosphere at all the clubs he's managed: Mainz was great, Dortmund was even better and without question the best club atmosphere in Germany but Anfield is something else again - he describes it as "complete madness". 😀
Yep. I promulgated this elsewhere some time ago. In full agreement.At this point the club should consider giving him a year off while Ljinders manages. That way Klopp gets his time off, and we get to test his much regarded replacement. Unconventional, but the way things have been happening lately, what's normal anymore.
A little unfair TBH. The majority of new managers sink without trace. If we are talking of treading water for a season whilst Klopp has a break then Lijnders + other backroom staff should be well capable of doing that (no doubt with remote discussions with Klopp who certainly couldn't just switch off entirely).I wouldn't necessarily be against the idea of Klopp having a temporary break, but please - not Lijnders. Great coach right enough but he sank without trace as a manager in the Eredivisie. If we're going to do this, he is NOT the guy to step in as caretaker.
True. But how many of them step into a ready made position with nothing to do but keep the cogs oiled? None ?They do, Froggy, but what that tells me loud and clear is that Lijnders is simply not ready for a job this size. Caretaker or not, he'd still be manager of Liverpool Football Club. I'd add that football history generally is littered with good or even great coaches who didn't make a success of the step up to management.
Nah, Pep wasn’t truly trusted by his club. He could have continued on with his philosophy but got fired early. Klopp was given that trust at Mainz. Could have gone very differently for Klopp had he started his managerial career somewhere else.They do, Froggy, but what that tells me loud and clear is that Lijnders is simply not ready for a job this size. Caretaker or not, he'd still be manager of Liverpool Football Club. I'd add that football history generally is littered with good or even great coaches who didn't make a success of the step up to management.
