Klopp backs idea of Premier League sides helping struggling EFL teams

26 September 2020 - 09:55 By Reuters
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Liverpool Manager Jurgen Klopp ahead of the Caraboa Cup Third Round match between Lincoln City FC and Liverpool FC at LNER Stadium on September 24, 2020 in Lincoln, England.
Liverpool Manager Jurgen Klopp ahead of the Caraboa Cup Third Round match between Lincoln City FC and Liverpool FC at LNER Stadium on September 24, 2020 in Lincoln, England.
Image: Chloe Knott - Danehouse/Getty Images

Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp said Premier League teams should look to help England's lower division clubs that have taken huge financial hits amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

The English Football League (EFL) oversees the three tiers below the Premier League - the Championship, League One and League Two - and clubs in these divisions largely rely on matchday revenue to operate.

The British government this week postponed plans to allow a limited number of fans back into stadiums from October after a second wave of COVID-19 infections and the move is expected to have a massive impact.

"In general people in a better position should help people in a less good position, 100%," Klopp told a news conference ahead of Monday's league clash against Arsenal.

"I don't understand the structure 100% - in Germany you have Bundesliga and Bundesliga 2, so they have to share the problems so that makes things slightly easier.

"There isn't a general answer... the position in this moment for all clubs isn't really easy. I don't know how the government finds time to think about that, but I get it... football should try to help themselves, ourselves."

Chelsea boss Frank Lampard had said starting his career at the bottom of the soccer pyramid had helped him understand the challenges they face.

Sheffield United manager Chris Wilder said he had sympathy for the struggling teams.

"From a business point of view they've taken huge hits and hopefully everybody will come through it, but there has to be a concern about what's going off at the moment," Wilder said.

"Nobody wants any club to go by the wayside... If anything can be done by the Premier League and they make a decision collectively... to help, then we would." 

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