Believe Us. Melissa Reddy

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Liverpool’s 5-3 victory over Chelsea means they joined the Blues, Man Utd and Man City in winning 18 home matches in a Premier League season.

      8. With the 3-1 victory in their final match at Newcastle United, Liverpool equalled the 32 victories claimed by Man City in 2017/18 and in 2018/19.

       JÜRGEN KLOPP’S RECORDS

      1. He reached 50 games in charge (in all competitions) in fewer days than any other Liverpool manager in history (217 days).

      2. Klopp won 26 of his opening 50 league games — only Kenny Dalglish and Bill Shankly had a better win ratio.

      3. He was unbeaten in his first 6 games in all competitions — the longest run without defeat since Bob Paisley and the third longest ever at the helm of Liverpool as a football league club.

      4. Liverpool took 48 league games to reach the milestone of 100 goals under the German. It was achieved in the joint fewest number of top-flight matches, shared with Kenny Dalglish in 1986.

      5. Klopp’s first goalscorer as a Reds manager was also a German — Emre Can against Rubin Kazan in the Europa League in October 2015.

      6. He became the first Liverpool manager in history ever to win his first 3 derby matches in charge.

      7. His team took 197 games to record 400 goals — faster than any other Reds boss.

      8. Liverpool accumulated 300 league points in 146 games — the fewest games required by any Reds boss to reach the landmark.

      9. Klopp oversaw more victories (92) in his first 150 league games in charge than any other Liverpool manager in history.

      10. In 2019 he became the 5th German coach to win the European Cup/Champions League after Dettmar Cramer, Jupp Heynckes, Ottmar Hitzfeld and Udo Lattek

      11. He was the 1st manager ever to take an English team to three European finals in his first three seasons of European competition.

      12. Games Liverpool came from behind to win under Klopp (all competitions):

      2015-16 6 of 22 (27%)

      2016-17 5 of 11 (45%)

      2017-18 3 of 14 (21%)

      2018-19 5 of 8 (63%)

      2019-20 6 of 11 (55%)

       1

       A Club Divided

      ‘We are still in the process of reversing the errors of previous regimes. It will not happen overnight.’

       John W Henry

      Football was no longer enjoyable, no longer an escape. Liverpool Football Club were once ‘the greatest team the world has ever seen’, but they hadn’t been for a while. For 25 years, the club watched as others — chiefly Manchester United — displaced them as the cream of England. The obsessive desire to win the league increasingly began to wear on players and staff, while disillusionment enveloped the fanbase. Near misses were followed by complete fall offs. There were triumphs in cup competitions and moments to eternally savour, but it was never enough. By September 2015, according to one long-serving employee at their Melwood training facility, Liverpool had been reduced to a ‘bunch of parts that didn’t feel like they belonged together. It was a miserable place to be. You knew the fans were fed up, you knew the players were drowning and there was bickering among the coaching staff. Nothing felt right’.

      Liverpool had entered the month on the back of a demoralising 3–0 defeat by West Ham at Anfield, closely followed by a meek surrender and 3–1 defeat at Old Trafford to Manchester United. When manager Brendan Rodgers was quizzed about what was needed to change the team’s fortunes, his words were empty football-speak — ‘we need to want the ball more, we need to train harder’ — heightening the concerns of Liverpool’s owners.

      Fenway Sports Group feared the stench of the 2014–15 season, which featured an abysmal non-performance in an FA Cup semi-final exit at the hands of Aston Villa and ended with a 6–1 humiliation at Stoke City, would linger well into the new campaign. They circled the October international break as the perfect window to shred the script and start afresh. With the exception of the Merseyside derby at Goodison Park, which was the final fixture before the hiatus, there was a list of very winnable games coming up — with four at home — for Rodgers to earn a stay of execution.

      But Liverpool stumbled to a 1–1 draw at Bordeaux in the Europa League, before the same result at Anfield against Norwich City in the top flight later that week. Lowly Carlisle United came to Merseyside in the League Cup third round, with the hosts only scraping through on penalties after a torrid display. Toxicity filled the terraces at Anfield and it showed no signs of dissipating, especially not with supporters witnessing an unconvincing 3–2 win at home over Aston Villa, before yet another 1–1 draw in Europe, this time against little-known FC Sion.

      While events on the pitch could be filed under certified disasters, soundtracked by boos from the Kop, decisive action was being taken in the boardroom. Liverpool’s chief executive at the time, Ian Ayre, made a call in mid-September that would alter the course of Liverpool’s history. He dialled Marc Kosicke, the agent of Jürgen Klopp, which led to a Skype call between the men. A face-to-face meeting between the German, who was on holiday having resigned from Borussia Dortmund four months earlier, and Liverpool’s hierarchy was pencilled in for 1 October 2015 in New York — the day of the club’s lethargic showing against FC Sion. But more on that later.

      At Melwood, it was hard to escape the growing sense that Brendan Rodgers was on borrowed time. For some, it was surprise that the Northern Irishman was still in the job after the horror show at Stoke, which coincided with Steven Gerrard’s farewell game for Liverpool. Managers rarely climb out of the debris of such abominations unscathed, especially when large swathes of that 2014–15 season were best forgotten.

      Supporters, too, were shocked. As Neil Atkinson, host of the award-winning fan media collective The Anfield Wrap wrote, ‘If Rodgers wasn’t a man fighting with himself at the start of 2014–15, he most definitely was by the end — and the thing about fighting with yourself is that you will always lose.

      ‘Liverpool lost. They lost and lost and lost. And then Stoke. Stoke was the final straw – how can you trust the man who oversees losing 6–1? For those who were there, Stoke would live long in the memory. What do you do about that? How do you rebuild those bridges? To have kept him beyond that point now feels tougher on him than on us.’

      Deciding whether to stick or twist after the calamity at the Britannia Stadium was not straightforward. The owners had anticipated teething problems after the exhilarating but failed title tilt of 2013–14, which was followed by Luis Suarez’s departure to Barcelona. Despite the many controversies that surrounded him, Suarez had been the

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