In early 2017, a few players were in the canteen at Melwood discussing which team-mate they felt had the makings of a future manager
Gini Wijnaldum was the overwhelming response on account of his tactical intelligence, his ability to shape-shift according to what JĂźrgen Klopp requested, and the analytical way in which he could dissect a display.
By the end of that year, the Netherlands international - bought as a playmaker from Newcastle United, but operating as a defensively diligent left midfielder for the Reds - would line up in a back three during a 5-1 victory at Brighton.
The positional switch at the Amex materialised from an injury crisis and the shape - Wijnaldum to the left of Dejan Lovren with Emre Can as the right centre-back - was tested in the final 20 minutes of training on the eve of the encounter.
The 27-year-old only knew he would be starting in defence when Klopp announced the XI on matchday, yet he adjusted and executed in a commanding victory.
âJust throw him in goal next,â laughed the same group that touted Wijnaldum as a future face in the dugout. âGini, where canât you play?â
With Wijnaldum now excelling at the base of Liverpoolâs midfield this season, thatâs a great question.
The No.6 role is the seventh he has undertaken since his days at Sparta Rotterdamâs academy.
Gini started off as a centre-half before his eighth birthday, before functioning as a right full-back at Under-11/12 level.
The first person to view Wijnaldum as a midfielder was coach Cyril Helstone, and until he moved on and made his debut in the first team at Feyenoord, that is where the Schiemond native was stationed.
In his third season at De Kuip, the clubâs new manager Gertjan Verbeek swapped Gini from the centre of the pitch to the right wing, largely due to his dribbling wizardry.
âI performed well there so they didnât want to move me out, but in my mind, I always believed I was better in midfield,â Wijnaldum previously explained.
âI was just happy to be playing, though, because I was young. When youâre still developing, getting games is so important. I learnt a lot playing on the wing and now I understand what the guys in those positions want from me.
âBut when I got older, I knew I wanted to be a midfielder. Iâve had to have discussions with my agent, managers, directors, chief executives to explain that I am a midfielder, especially at Feyenoord.â
In his final campaign there before joining PSV, Wijnaldum would morph into a No.10 under the guidance of Mario Been - a duty he relished and was incredibly effective carrying out, even at Newcastle.
He was deployed as a second striker at times too, and could not have envisioned being turned into one of the No.8s in a three-man midfield following his ÂŁ25 million transfer from Tyneside to Anfield.
The adaptation from goalscorer and creator to being Liverpoolâs golden thread - their link man - suited Wijnaldum more than anyone who hasnât worked with him could have predicted.
âA lot of people see me differently, a lot didnât think I could play the way I am,â he admitted.
âThey thought I was just an attack-minded player, the dribbler or the goalscorer without the discipline to defend and check on the movements of my team-mates.
âI think Iâve surprised many people because Iâm showing I can still make the runs and get goals, but Iâm regaining balls, keeping the rhythm in the passing, covering for those around me and getting assists - theyâre seeing the complete version of me.â
Wijnaldum was instrumental during his first season at Liverpool - scoring goals against Manchester City, Chelsea, Arsenal and the vital opener against Middlesbrough to finish in the Champions League places on the final day of the campaign - but 2017-18 was more subdued.
Klopp held talks with the Dutchman imploring him to be more involved in matches, and with the introduction of Naby Keita and Fabinho to the squad this summer, it was understandable that many wrote Wijnaldum out of the starting XI.
However, the Reds boss has selected him as the âquarterbackâ in all three games so far, entrusting Gini with the responsibility of ensuring the team have a solid foundation both defensively and offensively.
Wijnaldum misplaced just one of his 76 passes in the 1-0 win over Brighton and his lowest passing accuracy this season has been 91% at Crystal Palace, where he won 63% of his duels and made three tackles.
In the 4-0 victory over West Ham on the opening Premier League weekend, he had three shots as well as regaining possession eight times.
The variety and awareness in his game has been appreciated by the manager. âGini can switch from one mindset to the other and that is pretty good for us,â Klopp said.
âHeâs a good footballer, but it is important that you have the kind of mindset that you can cool yourself down in different situations.â
Wijnaldum has allowed Liverpool to bed Fabinho in slowly and not rush Jordan Henderson back into the XI following his World Cup exertions. Moreover, he carries out No.6 responsibilities in contrast to both, giving the manager more flexibility in that area.
âThe connection point for everything,â who is closing in on a century of appearances for the Anfield side, has also guided new-boy Keita through games, while Joe Gomez and Virgil van Dijk have saluted his âfootball brain.â
Ironically, Wijnaldum had initially wanted to be a gymnast as a child. His blend of balance, flexibility, strength, agility, endurance and co-ordination is now cherished by Klopp.
When rotation becomes a necessity, the German will count his pliability as a massive advantage; he can rely on Gini to be a controller, the knitter, a ball carrier or an amalgamation of all those things.
Just so long as he never has to âthrow him in goal next.â
https://www.joe.co.uk/sport/gini-wijnaldums-tactical-gymnastics-gifts-JĂźrgen-klopp-solutions-at-liverpool-197379
Interesting, maybe this is partly the reason why Wijnaldum has been more reserved in his distribution? But then again, we did play 2 very strong disciplined defensive teams in Brighton and CP. He was more than fine vs West Ham who were more open.