Liverpool and Klopp are at the time when they are bloodied Array. .

Release date: Friday, November 20, 2020 10:00 a. m.

T means “Terrible”; that is, horrible to play, that feeling that feels after seeing a replay of Alberto Moreno’s eruptions at Liverpool. The “M” was synonymous with mentally strong machines. They weren’t “mental monsters” yet.

When the Reds beat West Ham last month, they matched their record beyond 63 undefeated home league games under Bob Paisley between 1978 and 1981. The thoroughbred brain to cross the line, over-my-dead-body syndrome or – as Fergie once called it: the attitude of “abandoning when you’re dead” anything else. Liverpool have fought manifestly to feel at home for the past 12 months, moving to West Ham (twice) and once to Bournemouth, Newcastle, Tottenham, Arsenal Sheffield United. However, they came out of the jam each time with a victory. They have enjoyed a point of trust that repels any given negative circumstances.

Liverpool simply will not yield its own castle to the invaders, no matter how many arrows and casualties suffer, when in spite of everything the loss occurs, as will happen, one suspects that they will yield as Macbeth: bloodied, besathed and enraged. . Think of Atletico’s defeat: a hundred minutes of unilateral football savagery where the walls were undone by the howl of a goalkeeper.

– The Tactical Times (@Tactical_Times) March 11, 2020

One of the main reasons Klopp was assigned the task at the expense of Carlo Ancelotti, his project to convert Anfield, is the ace in the Liverpool sky, a flying castle that has bombed so many teams, but also has a floor force capable of fighting melee opponents.

During his tenure, Brendan Rodgers did his best with the environment by making sure that red nets were restored to evoke memories of glory days, while insisting that the original 1974 panel “This is Anfield” be put back in place. SAS, of course. But Klopp didn’t need the story’s “backpack” to be a burden to him or his players. Anfield’s electricity was still dormant; now functions as the National Network, even without the roar of the Kop. This takes time, given the inconvenience in the house that have affected so many other people since the assignment was restarted.

When Jose Mourinho kept his record for undefeated at home during his first sting at Chelsea, the Portuguese boasted: “Everyone knows that Mourinho does not lose at Stamford Bridge. My record is unbeatable. It’s unbelievable, we’ve been so strong about it. “Long.

Look at me in TEAM.

When he was at the time at The Bridge, the tone had changed a little bit: “It’s hard for us to play at home, because betting here is like betting on an empty stadium. “

Compare that to when Klopp’s accusations beat Crystal Palace 4-0 in June with a lavum a day before winning the Premier League title. The German radied positively.

“I don’t think the game was any better because my boys played like everyone else in the stadium. The atmosphere in the countryside is amazing,” he said. It’s a relentless quest to locate the ball.

Liverpool have the most productive control of the league’s anger, its technique to the setbacks imbued with controlling defeats through their coach. Apart from Atletico, where he unnecessarily tied up to Simeone’s grace, Klopp kidnapped the total concept of ‘failure’, calling it ‘information’ to use next time.

It is interesting to note that they only won one of their first 4 games away from home, after the 3-loss mini-fall towards the end of last season. This makes it even more imperative that the mooring base switch to the red alert at every opportunity Only Burnley has controlled to take a point at Anfield since Leicester controlled a selective snow removal at ground level in January 2019 to win a 1–1 draw.

Of course, as fate would have liked, it is high-end Leicester, who moves on to the L4 nearly 40 years after the Foxes ended Paisley’s undefeated streak in the former first division. Can lightning strike twice? There is a compelling argument to recommend that now is the time for Rodgers to give his successor his first blow to Liverpool concerned about so many sick people. Then don’t forget that Klopp was at his most productive time when he was bloodied. Mike Tyson, 54, might say, “Everyone has a plan until they get punched in the mouth. “

Anfield is waiting.

Tim Ellis – him on Twitter

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