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    Originally posted by Slinky Skills View Post
    It's not about being happy

    It's about making the most out of a player that wants to go

    £137m (€150m) is a good price (provided it's not mental add ons and ****)

    He's a great player I would prefer to keep him but if he's hell bent on going we should get top money for him

    Personally £120m+ is an agreeable figure for me
    Bob Paisley - "This club has been my life. I'd go out and sweep the street and be proud to do it for Liverpool if they asked me to."

    Comment


      Originally posted by cream View Post
      We can't sell him, that midfield of Henderson, Can and Gini is ****ing terrible.
      it's such a samey midfield and everything was all to slow yesterday. Needs to be more dynamic.

      Comment


        Originally posted by Lecter View Post
        It's not about being happy

        It's about making the most out of a player that wants to go

        £137m (€150m) is a good price (provided it's not mental add ons and ****)

        He's a great player I would prefer to keep him but if he's hell bent on going we should get top money for him

        Personally £120m+ is an agreeable figure for me
        I know mate, I was only messing around.

        I meant happy as in the fee, it's around what you said you'd like to see and I feel the same.

        I don't want to lose him but I'd want upwards of 120 million if he does go.
        Klopp on LFC vs MUFC (March 9th 2016) - "This is why I love football. This is why we watched it when we were young. I can still not have enough of it."


        Always, keep your face to the sun, and shadows will fall behind you.

        Comment


          Originally posted by danperkins View Post
          it's such a samey midfield and everything was all to slow yesterday. Needs to be more dynamic.
          We created loads of chances yesterday hit the bar, Wijnaldum should have scored. Salad missed the target 1v1 with the keeper. There will be a bit of rust first game of the season so I don't think the midfield was too bad (clearly Lallana and Phil offer more creativity).

          The biggest issue is defence and the lack of a leader. What ever VVD costs he is worth it. We need someone to organise and lead us when we defend corners. 2 goals from corners is unforgivable, sort that out and it's a 1-3 win yesterday.
          Modifying post.

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            If we sell him we need to bring in quality players and we have been unable to do that so far this summer. Also if we were really planning on bringing in Keita and VVD before we knew Continho would leave we now need 3 players and the prices of all of them will go up because of the Continho money, whereas if we had got those deals sorted before we could have saved ourselves money.
            The only gracious way to accept an insult is to ignore it; if you can't ignore it, top it; if you can't top it, laugh at it; if you can't laugh at it, it's probably deserved.

            Comment


              Originally posted by Exiled_red View Post
              If we sell him we need to bring in quality players and we have been unable to do that so far this summer. Also if we were really planning on bringing in Keita and VVD before we knew Continho would leave we now need 3 players and the prices of all of them will go up because of the Continho money, whereas if we had got those deals sorted before we could have saved ourselves money.

              Comment


                Originally posted by Buzzo View Post
                We created loads of chances yesterday hit the bar, Wijnaldum should have scored. Salad missed the target 1v1 with the keeper. There will be a bit of rust first game of the season so I don't think the midfield was too bad (clearly Lallana and Phil offer more creativity).

                The biggest issue is defence and the lack of a leader. What ever VVD costs he is worth it. We need someone to organise and lead us when we defend corners. 2 goals from corners is unforgivable, sort that out and it's a 1-3 win yesterday.
                I dunno mate, VVD is clearly a good player but even if he signs he will still be surrounded by utter ****e. You can't marshal dross like that no matter how good you are and how good a leader one is.
                Klopp on LFC vs MUFC (March 9th 2016) - "This is why I love football. This is why we watched it when we were young. I can still not have enough of it."


                Always, keep your face to the sun, and shadows will fall behind you.

                Comment


                  We finished fourth last season, we are not utter ****e.
                  Modifying post.

                  Comment


                    It was despite our defence tho, not cos of it. They weren't even a neutral factor.
                    3rd place. Worst champions ever.

                    Comment


                      Originally posted by danperkins View Post
                      it's such a samey midfield and everything was all to slow yesterday. Needs to be more dynamic.
                      I also agree. **** me what was klopp thinking? You only need two if them at any one time. Sometimes even just the one.

                      Would have been much more productive with solanke on and firmino dropping in a bit like he does anyway
                      YNWA

                      Comment


                        INSIDE LIVERPOOL'S FIGHT TO KEEP COUTINHO AGAINST HOSTILE BARCELONA

                        Melissa Reddy
                        Liverpool FC Correspondent
                        12:58

                        It was not the statement from the owners that forced the 25-year-old to submit a transfer request to the Reds, but endless external pressure

                        During three hours on the eve of their first competitive 90 minutes of 2017-18, Liverpool were already having to transition quickly with Barcelona's Philippe Coutinho chase intensifying.

                        Friday had begun with the club in an assertive position, through two emphatic sentences from their owners, Fenway Sports Group.

                        “We wish to offer clarity as regards our position on a possible transfer of Coutinho,” read a statement published on the official website at 10am, two days after a second offer totalling little over £90 million for the Brazil international was rejected.

                        “The club’s definitive stance is that no offers for Philippe will be considered and he will remain a member of Liverpool football club when the summer window closes.”

                        Those 44 words, with characters that could comfortably fit into two tweets, allowed Jurgen Klopp to start his press conference an hour later on the front foot.

                        The 'what's happening with Phil?' question had already been answered, and all the manager needed to do was reference FSG’s message - a mirror of his repeated quotes - when the playmaker became a topic.

                        Then just after noon, Sky Sports broke that Coutinho, who reported to Melwood as normal, had submitted a formal transfer request. That news perplexed those within the training complex as one hadn’t been received.

                        Calls to the club to ascertain the veracity of the claim were thus met with a “not true” response, but it didn’t take long to conclude the 25-year-old’s camp had leaked their intentions in advance.

                        Sporting director Michael Edwards was sent an email from Coutinho at around 1pm, spelling out the player’s will to breach the five-year contract sans a release clause he signed in January.

                        By then, a ‘close family member’ had already detailed Coutinho's frustrations and, apart from the annoyance that the development came the day before their season opener at Watford that ended in a 3-3 draw, the Reds were vexed that they had to first read about the request before actually fielding it.

                        Timing, quite clearly, is instructive throughout this whole situation.

                        The theory that Coutinho's hand was forced by FSG's statement is flawed. Their "definitive stance" was long communicated to both him and Barca, and was made public so there could be no confusion or speculation over where they stood.

                        In Hong Kong, following the rejection of the first bid from the Catalans of £72m, Klopp informed Liverpool’s highest earner he would not be allowed to exit as their planning for the season, already at an intensive stage, involved him as a core element. In Munich, FSG president Mike Gordon made this clear again.

                        Liverpool’s position has never altered, and so to suggest the statement underpinned Coutinho’s action would be to ignore the full picture.

                        A day before the afternoon of back and forths at Melwood, Klopp’s former club Borussia Dortmund were coping with the destabilising effects of Barca turning a transfer target’s head.

                        Ousmane Dembele had not reported for training, never provided any reason for his absence, and could not be reached by the Bundesliga side.

                        BVB revealed they had rebuffed an offer - thought to be around £90m - for the 20-year-old as it did “not match the extraordinary footballing and off-pitch status of the player” as well as “the current market situation”.

                        Barca, unwilling to pay top price and having struggled to twist Dortmund’s arm, put the onus on the Frenchman to break it.

                        Another example of similar tactics from Barcelona is Marco Verratti. However, in that transfer war, Paris Saint-Germain eventually outmanoeuvred them and ended up retaliating by activating Neymar’s €222m (£198m) release clause to set the current state of affairs in motion.

                        Barca did not believe they could actually lose their Brazilian superstar and, knowing they could not negotiate for Liverpool’s, have pressured Coutinho - through a media offensive, ‘now-or-never’ threats and a swell of voices in his ear - into taking the antagonist route he wanted to avoid.

                        The player, of course, is not passive in all of this - it is his signature on the letter emailed through, it is his decision.

                        Coutinho’s transfer request could have been made in West Kowloon, or in Rottach-Egern, or when he first returned to Merseyside following the pre-season tour, or after any of the multiple times Klopp insisted he is not on the market this summer, or when either proposal from Barca was rejected.

                        It came, by design, as a distraction in a crucial period for Liverpool. Forcing your way out of a club has to be, well, forceful.

                        The transfer request will undoubtedly be painted as a result of the Brazilian’s long-standing unhappiness at Liverpool with the rewriting of history already in effect.

                        The suggestion that Klopp and Coutinho have had have a strained relationship for six months is not only a convenient time frame as it just excludes the latter’s happiness to ink fresh terms without an exit strategy, but also crumbles under the flimsiest investigation.

                        The manager has, on more than one occasion, told his star performer that he is the main catalyst to Liverpool’s rebirth as a force domestically and in Europe. He has unshackled him from the ‘all-on-my-shoulders’ responsibility that often clouded Coutinho’s decision-making on the pitch, and has geared the team around his creative strengths.

                        The former Inter man's most productive campaigns have come under the German, who gave him positional freedom as a ‘wing 10’ and recruited two more forwards in Mohamed Salah and Dominic Solanke this summer to allow him to dictate their offensive game from deeper.

                        Brazil’s coaching staff, meanwhile, have been in contact with Klopp over Liverpool’s assertive approach, which they wanted to replicate, as well as the 50-year-old’s use of Coutinho and Roberto Firmino to ascertain how to get the best out of both.

                        The former has become key to his national team as a consequence of his advancement at club level.

                        The idea that Coutinho has been substituted too much is also interesting given he was replaced 19 times in 29 Premier League starts last season - 64 per cent of the time - with Eden Hazard, for comparative purposes, brought off by Antonio Conte 69% of the time.

                        The manufactured unhappiness, in contrast to Coutinho’s own words when he returned to Melwood for pre-season on July 11, is all part of the poker game.

                        The tactic of making it personal to Klopp is a miscalculated move, though, as it will only galvanise Liverpool’s owners.

                        Keeping the Rio-born talent is not an issue of pride for the manager - who has previously said what the Reds require is players “pushing the train, not jumping on a running train” - it is about the circumstances for the club.

                        Having realised that being willing to overpay in this window is no guarantee of recruiting a priority target as was the case with RB Leipzig midfielder Naby Keita, more money to spend with little time is not going to help Liverpool advance this season.

                        They need to build on the core they already have, with difficult work still to be done in the market and adding to their to-buy list now would be unwise given their struggles.

                        "Maybe everybody has a price – in the right moment,” as Klopp explained. “In the wrong moment? No price.”

                        How hostile Coutinho chooses to go remains to be seen, but with a World Cup year on the horizon, Barca’s base offers laughable in the current climate plus too late, and Liverpool’s statement as strong as it could possibly be, he has no space to manipulate.

                        For once around Anfield, there will be crossed fingers that Coutinho can’t find his way out of a tight spot.

                        http://www.goal.com/en/news/inside-l...v1dpvbsynam9ya

                        Comment


                          On one hand if I were Klopp I'd force a season out of him. Although we need the wee ****ehouse on Tuesday but I'm inclined to believe if FSG are offered 120m they'll take it.

                          Comment


                            Originally posted by kingfunk View Post
                            [ame="https://twitter.com/lovefutebol/status/896695994041208834"]https://twitter.com/lovefutebol/status/896695994041208834[/ame]

                            Comment


                              Aye, it's the autumn winter range being launched. Some comic timing.

                              Comment


                                According to a poster on ynwa who has some contacts

                                "We won't sign a direct replacement for Coutinho I think they are too few a far between heard nothing today but all parties are meeting today to discuss sale. Phil wants move (the now or never has him shook) board want £130m and Klopp simply wants to know WTF is happening, he's pissed because the season has started and now this happens.

                                It takes time to find, sign and bed in a new signing Klopp wanted all signing done by August 1st and the board f***ed up. "

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