Monday 27 November 2017

Jurgen Klopp now needs to decide how to deal with Sadio Mane’s public strop

JURGEN KLOPP faces the biggest test of his Liverpool reign this week and it has nothing to do with Wednesday’s trip to Stoke.
Boss Klopp must  work out how to deal with a public strop by one of his biggest stars which embarrassed him more than Chelsea’s fluke goal which robbed him of victory.


 Sadio Mane looked animated when talking to Jurgen Klopp after the game
Sadio Mane’s clear frustration at not getting more than the last three minutes did not go down well. And it will not be forgotten. Now Klopp needs to decide what to do with the act of petulance and insubordination live on TV. It immediately drew comparisons to the man in the opposition dugout on Saturday — Chelsea boss Antonio Conte.
Now there is a bloke who knows what to do when players step out of line. As Diego Costa and David Luiz will testify. Costa got lippy last summer and did not play for the club again. Luiz  questioned Conte’s methods in a  meeting and is now restricted to  playing against Azerbaijani nobodies in Champions League group games.
It takes a strong man to take on the modern-day superstar with all his mood swings, hangers on and direct lines to powers-that-be at the huge global corporation of a Premier League club. Klopp tried to play down the incident with Mane. He claims there was a tactical crossing of wires and the issue is now dealt with.
Not in Sane’s mind it’s not. Every ex-pro turned pundit queued up to tell the millions of armchair TV fans that top players want to play in the top games — and they don’t come bigger than champions Chelsea at the moment.
Will Klopp let the matter quietly drop? Will he do something different in private to what he told reporters after the game? Will Mane get a dressing down?
Klopp tried everything in the book to brush off dropping two points when Chelsea, having flown 5,000 miles in midweek, were there for the taking.
Digging out the ref is the oldest excuse there is. Claiming that had he been able to bring on sub Adam Lallana before  Willian’s 85th-minute equaliser  then  Liverpool would be toasting victory.
Brazilian Willian’s cross looped over keeper Simon Mignolet into the far corner of the net to cancel out Mo Salah’s 65th-minute opener against his old club.
Lallana had not played a single  minute of this season prior to Saturday’s cameo. Who really thinks the talented but clearly rusty midfielder was the man to save the game?
If he was then Klopp is even more exposed for relying on a player who has cobwebs on his boots to see off the English champions.
Klopp has a lot to learn about seeing out games as Liverpool manager — as recent results clearly confirm.
There is also a lot he could learn from Chelsea boss Conte.

From The Sun

No comments:

Post a Comment