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      Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager (Part 2)

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      Benladdie3000
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #391: Jan 12, 2020 07:54:30 pm
      He's getting a win against united for sure
      AZPatriot
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #392: Jan 12, 2020 08:46:48 pm
      He's one win shy of 150 wins as Liverpool manager.

      Just past Patterson a few matches back


      Houllier next at 167 wins.


      After that it's Rafa at 197.
      AussieRed
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #393: Jan 12, 2020 11:30:23 pm
      Robby The Z
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #394: Jan 13, 2020 01:16:18 am
      Just past Patterson a few matches back


      Houllier next at 167 wins.


      After that it's Rafa at 197.

      Might get Gerard this season yet.
      Billy1
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #395: Jan 13, 2020 07:13:38 am
      Mediocre at best as a player, Walt; pretty sure he's said that himself.  But as we know, you don't need to be a top player to become a great manager.

      Many top players have tried their hand at management and failed miserably. Jürgen Klopp might not have made the grade as a top class footballer but he has proved himself as a world class manager.
      Robby The Z
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #396: Jan 13, 2020 06:41:28 pm
      Many top players have tried their hand at management and failed miserably. Jürgen Klopp might not have made the grade as a top class footballer but he has proved himself as a world class manager.

      A good quote from Pete Krawietz in an Athletic article speaks a bit about Jürgen and staff's attention to detail:

      "Liverpool assistant manager Peter Krawietz said in Raphael Honigstein’s biography of Jürgen Klopp that the priority from Klopp’s second full season onwards was the players learning “agreed procedures” to unpick opposition defences. “The point of coaching is to try to make football, a game based on many random events, less random, to force your luck in a sense,” he said. “A coach’s job is to practise these sequences to instil an idea, repetition and situations, to increase the chance that they will work under real live conditions, when there’s pressure and an opponent interfering.”

      We see the smiling, bear-hugging Klopp a lot, but the serious and thorough approach he brings to the job shouldn't be overlooked.
      waltonl4
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #397: Jan 13, 2020 09:29:33 pm
      Many top players have tried their hand at management and failed miserably. Jürgen Klopp might not have made the grade as a top class footballer but he has proved himself as a world class manager.

      if you earn your living as a footballer player then you are a decent player Billy. He learned so much as a player that has led him to the position he is in today. So yes a decent footballer but an outstanding manager and an even better human being
      HUYTON RED
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #398: Jan 16, 2020 07:04:26 pm
      Jürgen Klopp's Authentic, Infectious Aura and Ultimate Mission

      Jürgen Klopp has Liverpool on course to end a 30-year domestic title drought all while having a unique gravitational pull due to his overwhelming charisma, overlooked intelligence and sheer desire for connectivity.

      “HERE HE IS!”

      It is a measure of Jürgen Klopp’s popularity that when Megan Rapinoe and Alex Morgan, world soccer stars in their own right, attended FIFA’s recent awards gala in Milan, they did not go out of their way to meet Lionel Messi or Cristiano Ronaldo—but they did make a boisterous beeline for Klopp, the 52-year-old German, now in his fifth season at Liverpool, who today may be the best coach in any sport. At the very least he’s the most charismatic, a fist-pumping force of nature who smothers players in bear hugs after games, which these days almost always end in victory. Entering 2020, the reigning Champions League winners had claimed a stunning 58 Premier League points, winning 19 of 20 games.

      “I was excited to meet him, so I just went right up and got in there,” says Rapinoe, fresh off of winning FIFA’s Women’s Player of the Year award herself. “He’s so warm and genuine. I think everyone would say that about Jürgen Klopp.”

      That night, as Klopp accepted his own award for the top men’s coach, he announced he was joining Rapinoe, Morgan and 130 other sports figures in Common Goal, whose members donate 1% of their incomes to charity.

      “I met [Rapinoe] for the first time that night, and I loved her,” says Klopp. “It’s very important that we have people like her to be a bit chatty about important things. I share 100% her opinion about Donald Trump [with whom Rapinoe has publicly sparred]. That’s easy to do, but you need to have balls to do it in public, in these moments when you win something. Megan and Alex, they were brilliant company.”

      The two American stars found out in Milan what Merseyside denizens have known for years, how it’s hard not to feel connected to the gregarious German. In Liverpool, Klopp’s aura seeps into every corner of the fabled port city. Check into a downtown hipster hotel and the elevator door is plastered with a giant caricature of the smiling coach above the word 'BOOM!'

      Step into a taxi and ask for a ride to Melwood, the Reds’ training ground, and the driver will inquire in wondrous Scouse: “Going to see the German god?”

      Speak to Dutch midfielder Georginio Wijnaldum and he’ll tell you about the day he signed with Liverpool, how he visited his new boss’s home that afternoon and how Klopp barely spoke about soccer.

      “Most people just go straight to the business,” Wijnaldum says. “We spoke about our lives, basically. And we still do.”

      Klopp rarely idles his drive to forge human connections. When 750,000 Liverpool fans turned out for the parade celebrating the Champions League triumph last June, Klopp swears he tried to hold eye contact for at least a fraction of a second with each person he saw from his perch atop the team bus.

      “How much it meant to the people? I thought I knew, but seeing it is completely different,” he says. “You had 60-, 70-, 80-year-old men and women punching their chests, screaming, ‘I! LOVE! YOU!’ Life is all about having that kind of relationship.”

      That worldview is reflected on the field, where the key to Klopp’s high-pressing style is to combine the collective talents, desires and energies of players from a wide range of nations into a unit that is greater than the sum of its parts.

      So explains Klopp, legs crossed on a white-leather office couch, speaking between puffs on a vape. He’s dressed a bit like a dad going to his kid’s weekend soccer game: black sweatshirt, windpants, white running shoes, no socks. But what stands out above all else in person are his teeth. They’re majestic, like a human Hoover Dam, and they can express multitudes, whether it’s the pleasure of a radiant smile or the “Let’s go!” urging of a sideline gnash or the cackling cocksureness of the cartoon-villain laugh he emits when his team concedes.

      This is the morning after another Champions League victory at Anfield, and Klopp can’t help flashing those choppers as he reminisces about one of the greatest comebacks in sporting history. Last May, in the Champions League semifinals against Barcelona, the Reds were staring down a 3–0 first-leg defeat to mighty Messi & Co., which meant their best chance of advancing was a follow-up 4–0 win at home ... without two of their best players, forwards Roberto Firmino and Mohamed Salah.

      “I said two things to the boys,” Klopp recalls. “One, it’s impossible—but because it’s you, we have a chance. And: I want everybody to close your eyes for 10 or 15 seconds. Imagine the best game you’ve ever played. That’s exactly the game we have to play tonight. And then the boys played that game.”

      Liverpool had three goals by the 56th minute, including two from Wijnaldum. Ultimately, Divock Origi landed the decisive blow on a trick corner.

      “It’s one of the most wonderful stories ever in football,” says Klopp, whose team went on to beat Tottenham Hotspur 2–0 in the final.

      But while the Champions League hardware may be the most coveted in club soccer, and while the Reds (who face Atlético Madrid in this year’s round of 16) are well positioned to retain it, it’s also a trophy Liverpool has now won twice in the last 15 seasons. There’s another one, a supposedly lesser one, that supporters want even more. When the team won the English league title in the spring of 1990, it was the club’s record 18th championship, far surpassing archrival Manchester United’s seven. But almost 30 years have passed, and in that time United has won the league 13 times, Liverpool none.

      If it seems inevitable that 2020 is the year the Reds tip the scales back in the other direction, with 13 points (and a game in hand) between them and second-place Leicester City entering the new year, remember: These fans have been burned before. Liverpool’s 97 points last season would have been the second most ever by an English team, if not for Manchester City’s 98. And don’t even mention Steven Gerrard’s title-costing slip-up of ’14.

      Neil Atkinson, host of the popular Anfield Wrap podcast, enumerates the stakes.

      “I’m 38, so Liverpool last won the league when I was 9,” he says. “I’ve got an entire adult supporting life where Liverpool haven’t won the title—and my father has 13 leagues. You’re in this situation where you want one. Just one. That’s the Holy Grail.”

      Flash back to the 1980s, when Liverpool won the league seemingly every other year. As a teenager in Milwaukee back then, working concessions at Brewers games for spending money, Mike Gordon never could have imagined owning the storied European soccer club. But there he was in 2001, by then a wildly successful asset manager, joining a Red Sox ownership group led by John W. Henry. Nine years later, that organization (now called Fenway Sports Group) bought Liverpool FC, for which Gordon became FSG’s point man in ’12.

      Today Gordon lives in Brookline, Mass., a private-pathway walk from Henry’s mansion. But he spends plenty of time in Liverpool, where the most powerful figure at the world’s best soccer team happily goes unrecognized in a black LFC cap and jeans.

      That’s by design. But as intensely private as Gordon is—his interview with SI marked only his second as a soccer exec—he’s also deeply involved. In 2015, after firing manager Brendan Rodgers, he oversaw the process, along with sporting director Michael Edwards and director of research Ian Graham, of finding a replacement. It wasn’t long before they lasered in on Klopp, who in his seven years with Borussia Dortmund had won two Bundesliga titles and reached a Champions League final.

      “Analytically, [Dortmund] stacked up very well relative to expected performance,” Gordon says. “I called Jürgen. We had an extraordinary conversation, and it was pretty clear to me by the time I hung up that he was the right person. We arranged a meeting in New York City, had a lengthy discussion late one night and the following day, and it was very straightforward. This was the perfect choice.”

      Eventually Klopp stepped out of that meeting so his agent could negotiate terms. The coach, on his first visit to New York, aimlessly walked the streets, burned through a few smokes and then jumped into a golf store to buy a hat. Foreign tourists were starting to recognize him.

      Inside, he was quaking with excitement. “I’ve loved this game since I’m 2,” he says, “and that’s what Liverpool is all about, the passion and the love and the emotion. ... I thought about how important football is to Liverpool supporters and the situation they were in”—hovering around sixth or seventh place throughout the early 2010s—“and me wanting to change things.”

      Catching up to his new English rivals would be one thing if Klopp had inherited something akin to Man United’s wealth, but Liverpool is hardly Europe’s richest club. The team ranks seventh in revenue, according to the international accounting firm Deloitte, and in recent years has sold off two of its biggest stars, Luis Suárez and Philippe Coutinho, to higher-up-the-money-chain Barcelona. So how has Liverpool made up the wealth difference to conquer Europe?

      For starters, the team doesn’t spend for spending’s sake. When the club made no major purchases last summer, Klopp was clear: It’s part of his job to make his own players better. And when Liverpool does spend—like the $48 million dished out to land Salah, an Egyptian forward, in 2016; or the $100 million plopped down in ’17 for Virgil van Dijk, a towering Dutch man-mountain of a center back (and the ’19 UEFA Player of the Year); or the $84 million handed over for Brazilian goalkeeper Alisson in ’18—it starts by identifying targets who fit Klopp’s playing style. He wants guys who can defend collectively all over the field, defenders who can play the ball, fullbacks who can join in the attack and front-liners who can win possession in the opposing end, punishing teams in transition. A transfer committee, led by Edwards, makes heavy use of data to narrow down a list of targets, from which Klopp gives a green light. Then it’s up to him to provide the environment for players to succeed.

      Among those who’ve thrived in that environment: Andy Robertson (purchased under Klopp for a paltry $10.5 million in 2017) and 21-year-old Trent Alexander-Arnold (homegrown), the best pair of attacking fullbacks in the world, as well as the balanced three-man midfield of Fabinho ($53 million in ’18), Wijnaldum ($36 million in ’16) and Jordan Henderson, a Liverpool veteran of a decade.

      It’s the front three of Salah, Firmino and Sadio Mané, though, that will define this era of Liverpool football. Klopp, who coached against Firmino with Dortmund and who nearly purchased Mané for his old German club, swears he predicted their remarkable chemistry.

      “I could see it coming,” he says.

      Still, it has taken some of his best management skills to make it work. Take a much played-up incident earlier this season, against Burnley, when Mané blew up at Salah for taking a difficult shot instead of passing to his open teammate. Klopp, says Wijnaldum, is “always trying to solve problems because he can understand why people are angry.” In the days after the game that meant bringing Salah and Mané into the manager’s office—separately, not together, Klopp emphasizes—for heart-to-hearts.

      “In the world of football, it looks so big; it’s like, 'Oh, my god, how can you do it?'” Klopp says of the mini-altercation. “But I just spoke to them.”

      Before the Champions League final last spring, journalist Raphael Honigstein (who wrote the Klopp biography Bring the Noise) visited Liverpool’s camp in Marbella, Spain.

      “The mood was so relaxed; there was none of the usual sort of paranoia,” says Honigstein. “It was like a holiday. Klopp and his staff every night had this long table, and you could hear them laughing and having an amazing time. And I think that mood has carried over into this season. ... They are supremely confident that they are going to be successful, and I think that breeds its own sort of reality. They go down a goal or two, and things don’t change.”

      All of this, says Gordon, can leave one thinking Klopp is 100% charisma and emotion, leaving his intelligence and attention to detail overlooked. This is the manager, after all, who hired a specialist throw-in coach, a rarity in soccer; who installed a cutting-edge head of nutrition in charge of team meals; who revolutionized Liverpool’s use of data and video technology, including analyzing in-game patterns to share with players at halftime. At a time when some of the world’s top managers from a decade ago—José Mourinho, Arsène Wenger, Carlo Ancelotti—have failed to evolve, Klopp has updated his approach. At Liverpool, that has meant more than just unleashing the chaos of his high press. Klopp’s Reds now exert control over games too.

      “He’s a polymathematical guy,” says Gordon, with whom Klopp is prone to chatter about the Fenway Group’s commercial dealings, for example. “I spent 30 years as an investor speaking to some of the best CEOs in the world, and Jürgen is right up there with them. If he wasn’t managing a football club, he could be managing a Fortune 500 company.”

      In December, when Liverpool announced it was extending Klopp’s contract for two more years, until 2024, Reds fans rejoiced, not least because many had assumed Klopp would move on to coach the national team of Germany, which is hosting Euro 2024. Liverpool is a working-class city, but it has bucked the national trend in the U.K., voting for Labour and against Brexit. In many ways Klopp’s extension—coming one day after conservatives had swept to victory in national elections—was seen by many supporters as a momentary balm in a bad-news week.

      Much like Rapinoe, Klopp has used football’s platform to call for social change. He is an unabashed lefty, and it’s by design that he has managed clubs, Liverpool and Dortmund, whose fan bases’ politics largely match his own. Each sings the global standard “You’ll Never Walk Alone” instead of any national anthem before games.

      Perhaps the greatest testament to Klopp’s charisma is the fact that even in tribal England, where fans tend to turn the most successful opposing coaches into villains, he’s viewed mostly positively. He remains a grinning unifier even as he destroys his foes, even as he wades into the politics of an increasingly polarized world.

      Liverpool’s most revered manager of all time, Bill Shankly, was renowned for saying, “Football is not a matter of life and death. It’s much more important than that.” Klopp would never agree. Popular but not a populist, he sees no easy answers in the world today.

      “I’m aware of a lot of problems we have,” he says, “and like every person with half a brain, I’m interested in solving them. But I really think we have to solve them together. So don’t separate yourself from the rest of the world.”

      “Populists”—and here he fingers Trump and U.K. prime minister Boris Johnson—“have historically proven they were never the right solution. They’re telling people the things they think we want to hear. ... As long as we work on our problems together, they are there to solve. We depend on each other, and that’s what we should not forget.”

      That could just as easily be Klopp’s soccer mission statement. In the most global of sports, one of the most popular figures has found a giant audience. And what if he can lead Liverpool to its first domestic title in three decades?

      “I think it would put him with the Holy Trinity of Liverpool managers,” says Honigstein, meaning Shankly, Bob Paisley and Kenny Dalglish. “He’s taken a club that was lost. To bring them back—to relieve those 30 years of disappointment, that loss of status—I think would be an achievement on par with theirs.”

      Liverpool seems destined to clinch its latest English title by late spring, but there’s more to Klopp’s appeal than just winning. The artist Dan Leydon recently designed a GIF that captures Klopp’s complete essence: the manager blasting light beams from a futuristic “good vibes” gun, flashing a toothy laugh. It’s the visual representation of a remarkable achievement, a man completely connected, both mythical and approachable.

      https://www.si.com/soccer/2020/01/16/Jürgen-klopp-liverpool-manager-aura-connection
      dunlop liddell shankly
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #399: Jan 19, 2020 07:16:43 pm
      166 Premier League games in charge;

      Overall 166 games, 107 wins, 39 draws, 20 defeats

      1st 83 games, 43 wins, 24 draws, 16 defeats

      2nd 83 games, 64 wins, 15 draws, 4 defeats

      Anyone else think we've improved a little?
      AussieRed
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #400: Jan 20, 2020 03:15:54 am
      5/5 out of the 6 massive games
      Post Christmas. Just F***ing wow!!!
      Jimsouse67
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #401: Jan 20, 2020 08:37:25 am
      Jürgen Klopp as Liverpool manager at Anfield in the Premier League;

      Played - 83
      Won - 58
      Drew - 21
      Lost - 4
      Points - 195 out of 249

      That is staggering!
      That is phenomenal ,mind you everything about our manager is phenomenal.
      GERNS
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #402: Jan 20, 2020 08:41:31 am

      Like Sir Bob once said, when questioned by a reporter about his continuing success.

      “There have been times when we’ve struggled as well. We came second once “

      Or words to that effect, the  humble genius. 😁
      Harrisimo
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #403: Jan 20, 2020 02:16:39 pm
      The Boss is looking at this AFCON situation and he's obviously concerned. The following season 2022-2023 sees the World cup staged in Qutar with the final on Dec 18th 2022. All this disruption to domestic football will play havoc with Klopp's World club domination plans.

      Going to have to make plans well in advance to manage the next two seasons. He's doing that as well as keeping us on track this season. Think the Boss is good at delagation, hope he is, as the pressures are immense, least winning the league this season will relieve the pressure. Might let him have a week off in the summer.
      HUYTON RED
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #404: Jan 20, 2020 08:28:51 pm
      Emlyn Hughes
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #405: Jan 21, 2020 06:12:05 am
      https://youtu.be/2MInlJMyGQM

      I love the fact that everyone always tries to make things about him and make him talk about himself, but he always refuses to make this about him or his person. He is so humble and I think he just knows the media circus around him is not real. He really is grounded in the real world!

      Aside from the competency as a manager he for sure is a incredible person! The best transfer Liverpool made in years!
      Klopps Snood
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #406: Jan 21, 2020 04:32:38 pm

      Love it  ;D
      bigbob75
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #407: Jan 21, 2020 04:52:16 pm
      Liverpool and Jürgen = a tighter fit than a dicks hatband  ;D
      HUYTON RED
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #408: Jan 21, 2020 05:23:14 pm
      Someone start commissioning a statue, after he's finished here he'll F***ing deserve one!
      ME2
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #409: Jan 22, 2020 02:50:50 pm
      Be half time before that song is completed..🥴

      Hi Shabs, Boston not la and Huyton Red,
      Firstly, we would like to congratulate you on your work and dedication for Liverpool FC.
      We appreciate that you have taken the time to listen to our song ''Liverpool FC, Heart to Heart Unity''.
      We do understand that is it not perfect and we agree with you that it is too long, but we have a short version, a Radio edit version in case you are interested.
      We understand that some may not like our song, while others like it or love it.
      If you like it or love it, please share it with friends.
      We would be honoured if fragments, a fragment and even a line from our song will be one day sung in the Kop by Liverpool FC fans, whichever part they choose.
      Thank you very much and best wishes to you and to all Liverpool FC fans all over the world, the fans of the best team in the world, that in 2020 will be Champions of England, of the best manager Klopp and club LFC!
      Yours sincerely, Me2
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G_mCxw9S2HI
      TameImpala
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #410: Jan 22, 2020 03:09:59 pm
      Hi Shabs, Boston not la and Huyton Red,
      Firstly, we would like to congratulate you on your work and dedication for Liverpool FC.
      We appreciate that you have taken the time to listen to our song ''Liverpool FC, Heart to Heart Unity''.
      We do understand that is it not perfect and we agree with you that it is too long, but we have a short version, a Radio edit version in case you are interested.
      We understand that some may not like our song, while others like it or love it.
      If you like it or love it, please share it with friends.
      We would be honoured if fragments, a fragment and even a line from our song will be one day sung in the Kop by Liverpool FC fans, whichever part they choose.
      Thank you very much and best wishes to you and to all Liverpool FC fans all over the world, the fans of the best team in the world, that in 2020 will be Champions of England, of the best manager Klopp and club LFC!
      Yours sincerely, Me2
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G_mCxw9S2HI

      Don't listen to Huyton Red, he's trying to act the big man online

      I saw him in the Sandon after the derby, he had his trademark red jester hat on singing all the words to it while doing the sturridge dance on a table. Wondered what he was talking about when he mentioned 'Me2', I thought he was on about that Harvey Wienstein
      « Last Edit: Jan 22, 2020 03:14:30 pm by TameImpala »
      shabbadoo
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #411: Jan 22, 2020 04:11:26 pm
      Don't listen to Huyton Red, he's trying to act the big man online

      I saw him in the Sandon after the derby, he had his trademark red jester hat on singing all the words to it while doing the sturridge dance on a table. Wondered what he was talking about when he mentioned 'Me2', I thought he was on about that Harvey Wienstein

      😂

      ‘Harvey Weinstein’
      Robby The Z
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #412: Jan 22, 2020 04:37:07 pm

      Is he that left back we are thinking of signing in the summer?
      Boston not la
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      Re: Jürgen Klopp - LFC Manager - 2019/20 Edition
      Reply #413: Jan 22, 2020 05:10:55 pm

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