An interview with Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp in Hong Kong
by rick olivares
Jurgen Klopp’s brand of football
has been described as pedal-to-the-metal heavy metal. Incessant. Relentless.
And intense. Just like the man himself.
In Hong Kong for a few hours
Monday, the Liverpool manager, didn’t betray any signs of jetlag or tiredness.
His trademark laugh could be heard even outside the room where he met up with
select members of the Southeast Asian press in an event organized by Standard
Chartered.
“Good morning,” he boomed even if
it was 12:30 in the afternoon. “Sorry, I am still on Liverpool time.”
He smiled that toothy grin of
his.
“Hong Kong,” he postulated for a
moment. “It’s a lot like England except it’s warmer. I wish I could have a lot
more impressions but I’ve only been inside the airport to the bus and to the
hotel. That’s it.”
If that put a damper on local
media looking for a good quote or cheer, Klopp quickly made up for it. “It
doesn’t mean though that not being here doesn’t mean I know about it. It’s an
interesting and historical place to be in. I know the history of the place and
its role in the world. I am excited to be here but the little problem is we are
in the middle of the pre-season so we have to work here. I am afraid that I am
not going to see a lot of the things you should see when you are here.”
Then the boss settled down for
business.
“The only thing I want to say is…
no questions about transfers, no questions about football, no questions about
players. So start!”
Laughter. From the moment he
stepped into Liverpool, the German tactician has charmed media and fans with
his honesty, enthusiasm, Klopp-isms – if there is such a word. Quotable. Loquacious.
His pre-and post-match pressers have been interesting to say the least. One
thing is for sure. He has the few of us interested and locked in from “good
morning.”
Incredibly, he is far easier to
understand than previous managers Kenny Dalglish and Brendan Rodgers.
“The reason why I said, ‘good
morning’ is we are operating on Liverpool time. It’s 8:30 in the morning back
home. It’s complicated enough to do the things we have to do in a different
time zone. So we try to make it a little easier for our bio-rhythm.”
These pre-season matches far from
England; does he think they will help his side come Premier League (and
Champions League time)? The sojourn into the Far East is oft looked at
derisively by some as a money-making scheme; one to please the sponsors.
Maybe. Maybe not. The trip is
also used for the team to bond away from the comforts of home.
“I hope so,” he laughs. “In the
pre-season, you do things to make it more difficult than the season. During the
season, you play against good teams in difficult circumstances. So hopefully,
it helps. The camp is very intensive a day before, two days before. We train really
hard. When you feel fantastic. But it isn’t likely you will be fantastic 365
days a year. So we try to learn from it. To bring out best performance on the
pitch. It will be difficult. I can tell you whatever I want but I have no idea
because it will be my first time in Asia. I don’t play games here. I’m really
interested in what happens after the games to see how we can make it work.”
The German has obviously revitalized
Liverpool Football Club, its massive fan base, and even put rivals on notice.
The man has been an agent of change. I am curious though… is Liverpool – the
club and the city changing him.
Jurgen nods. Maybe a tad
perplexed. He mulls his answer then slowly says, “I turned 50 a few weeks ago.”
He paused for effect.
“A lot of things and people have
tried to change me in the last 50 years but I am who I am. It’s too late to
change me. I am quite happy.”
“Liverpool is a wonderful city.
It much nicer than you imagine. If you hear about Liverpool, you think about
the music and football. And of course, it is very famous for its music. But if
you go there, there is more to the music and football. You should really see
the city. There is a nice mood to it. But for me. Maybe because of my face and
being a manager in England it is not really easy to go out and feel the city
even if I work there.”
Then he pauses, like telling an
anecdote to some friends. “Two days ago, we tried to go out with my coaches. So
after dinner, we went to another bar, not a party but have a few drinks because
the next day we’re going to Hong Kong so we can sleep on the plane if we want.
At the end of it, we needed security around us and that’s not how we wanted
things. But that’s life.”
“That’s the last of it,” he said
of his unannounced jaunt in the city proper. “Promise.”
“But, I liked the city even
before I came there but it is easy to like there because of the people --- they
are easy to deal with, they are funny – maybe not all of them but a big percentage.
And I am completely fine. Nothing can change me now. Neither me or change
Liverpool.”
Is there a time table to winning
the Premiership?
“Hopefully, soon. It’s not that I
say this year is too early, or next year is too early. It is what we do during
the season. We know the quality of the other teams. If we can improve the kind
of play last year – and what was already good in a lot of things -- then we can
have more points. If we have more points, then it is more likely. It is only
twice in my life that I have been a champion and I can say that in the season
(we won) we have no idea if we can get it. We (in Liverpool) are really
ambitious but we aren’t naive.”
It is the same approach when it
comes to a spot on his first eleven. “I am performance based; that’s all.”
Pragmatic the man is.
Yet as quotable as he is, Klopp
surprisingly doesn’t have any social media platform.
“I would have never thought I’d
feel like young -- like I am 20 -- when I am 50. I am 50 but I am not old. But
I am definitely too old for social media.”
Hammering in his final point,
Klopp doesn’t mince his words, “I am nil-point-nil interested in telling people
what I am doing every second. I cannot imagine people sitting in the toilet and
sending a picture. I will never understand this until the end of my hopefully
long life. I have nothing to say.”
As usual, Jurgen Klopp does his
talking on the pitch.
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