Klopp seeks private life, encourages Liverpool fans to embrace the future

20 May 2024 - 11:30 By Lori Ewing and Shifa Jahan
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Liverpool manager Juergen Klopp reacts after his last match as Liverpool manager in Sunday's Premier League game against Wolverhampton Wanderers at Anfield in Liverpool.
Liverpool manager Juergen Klopp reacts after his last match as Liverpool manager in Sunday's Premier League game against Wolverhampton Wanderers at Anfield in Liverpool.
Image: Reuters/Phil Noble

Moments after the final whistle blew on Juergen Klopp's managerial career at Liverpool, the much-loved German encouraged the Anfield faithful to celebrate the moment, but embrace the future.

Klopp said he plans to retreat into a private life after his departure from the Reds and has no immediate plans to return to management.

The German flashed his huge smile throughout a long address to fans after Liverpool's 2-0 victory over Wolverhampton Wanderers in Sunday's emotional Premier League season finale, and even led the crowd in a song for incoming manager Arne Slot, who has enormous shoes to fill.

"Change is good," the 56-year-old Klopp told the crowd. "And you never know exactly what to expect, but if you go with the right attitude into that, then everything will be fine.

"What I want you to sing, I have an idea," he added, then launched loudly into: "Arne Slot! Na, na, na, na, na!" The crowd sang along.

On a day Liverpool fans had been dreading since Klopp announced in late January he would leave at season's end, the manager sounded genuinely happy rather than heartbroken.

“It doesn't feel like an end. It just feels like the start, because I saw today a football team playing full of talent, youth, creativity, desire, greed.

“In these few weeks where I have had too much attention, I realised a lot of things. People say I turned them from doubters into believers. That's not true.

“I just said we have to. You did it. Nobody tells you to stop believing.

“This club is in a better moment than a long time. We have this wonderful stadium, training centre and you — the superpower of world football. Wow.”

Klopp's team, who were on course to give their manager a fairy-tale ending before a string of bad results last month derailed their title challenge, finished the season third in the table on 82 points, nine behind winners Manchester City and seven behind second-placed Arsenal.

Klopp bade farewell to the Anfield faithful having won 305 matches, including penalty shoot-outs, since joining the Reds in 2015, plus seven trophies including the Champions League in 2019 and a first English League title in three decades in 2020.

But he was loved as much for his charisma and passion as his on-field success and it was on full display on Sunday. He was saluted with a guard of honour in the postgame celebrations, and after pausing to wrap an emotional captain Virgil van Dijk in a bear hug, he turned and ran through it again.

“It's a very emotional day,” Van Dijk told Sky Sports. "[Klopp] deserves every bit of love he's getting.”

Tears rolled down defender Trent Alexander-Arnold's cheeks while the team stood arm-in-arm and the fans serenaded them with You'll Never Walk Alone.

“I've never seen or experienced someone who can inspire or motivate with a click of his fingers,” Alexander-Arnold told Sky. “If he told me today it was snowing outside, I'd believe him — that's probably the best way of putting it.”

Klopp famously introduced himself as “the normal one” in his first Liverpool press conference after his hiring, “but he's definitely a special one for us for the players who played under his leadership”, the team's Brazilian keeper Alisson Becker said.

“His passion, his desire to win things, to achieve things ... but he thinks about the personal side too — he wanted to do everything to make the players feel good to play for his team. I have so many good memories.”

While Klopp's departure announcement sent shock waves through the football world, the manager said he felt a sense of relief around his decision. His energy for the job was waning, he said. He could not do it on “three wheels.”

He looks forward, he told Sunday's crowd, to throwing his energy into being a fan.

Klopp indicated he is taking a break from football management, perhaps indefinitely. The manager said he was glad to leave the club in a good position after enjoying a trophy laden career.

“But look, it's not burning behind me and that gives me a good feeling,” Klopp said in his last post-match press conference, adding that he will return to Anfield some day as a spectator.

The German packs his bags after a few emotional weeks in the city after his announcement he would leave after nine years at the helm due to draining energy levels.

“A private life must be planned and I didn't plan anything yet because I was here. Probably Ulla [Sandrock, his wife] will update me where we go but I follow happily.

“I don't know exactly why nobody believes I probably will not be a manager again but I understand because obviously it seems to be a drug, because everybody comes back and everyone works until they are 70-something.

“Other people can do it in different ways, I have to be all-in; I have to be the spark, I have to be the energy, I have to be all these kind of things and I'm empty.

“You only have to look outside at which clubs are obviously available. There will be opportunities, but I don't sit here and think, 'Maybe in a year's time I take that.'” 

And before the final curtain came down on his time with the Merseyside club, Klopp ran the length of the Anfield pitch for one final round of fist pumps with the crowd, and then pointed with two thumbs to the back of his shirt, which read, “I'll never walk alone again”.

Reuters


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