Dear Guest
Thank you for visiting! est189 will soon be closing its doors (do forums have doors?) please visit the following thread - (to wail & cry perhaps?)
https://www.est1892.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?p=4002484#post4002484
Thanjk you.
Paul.S
We won the CL and Gerrard put a transfer request to goto Chelsea of all places. I know he did a U-turn but I don't see any real difference between to the two situations. History could have turned out very differently. Wouldn't have been forgiven if it were any other player.
You don't see a difference between putting in a transfer request and refusing to play for the club?
Not a chance. I don't want him anywhere near the club.
I`m a bit thorn in cases like this. In one way I agree with you, but I`m a believer in giving people a second chance. If he comes back relatively soon, holds up his hands and says "Sorry, I was wrong" I would probably accept it.
Coutinho said he wanted to go to barca, wanted to get cuddles from uncle suarez and live in the sun, so he can ****in rot...
If he ever came back to the uk then hes even more of a ****in liar than he was before.
removing all the weak links makes us stronger
too many gutless players, no beef or desire. pussies everywhere... sack them all.
Coutinho said he wanted to go to barca, wanted to get cuddles from uncle suarez and live in the sun, so he can ****in rot...
If he ever came back to the uk then hes even more of a ****in liar than he was before.
There's no talk of him wanting to, barca wouldn't mind it though from the sounds of it.
He said the only club he'd ever leave us for was Barca, and to be fair there's the brazilian history there so i can see what it meant.
You'd be right if he went to the mancs it'd be treachery of the highest degree.
Personally, i'd take him back, he'd be amazing in our front four.
Klopp likes to have players who he feels he can improve further. Apparently, that's part of the reason why he never went for the likes of Aubameyang, Reus etc. I can't remember where I read that (was it the Honigstein book?) He'd already worked with them, and got what he could from them. Working with them again wouldn't have been right for him. I think it's the same with Coutinho.
Klopp likes to have players who he feels he can improve further. Apparently, that's part of the reason why he never went for the likes of Aubameyang, Reus etc. I can't remember where I read that (was it the Honigstein book?) He'd already worked with them, and got what he could from them. Working with them again wouldn't have been right for him. I think it's the same with Coutinho.
No idea what the thinking or lack of was, but Aubameyang would have excelled in our team. Silly money though IIRC.
Found the quotes. Make up your own minds on it (Regarding Mkhitaryan).
“I had that player,” Klopp said in July 2016. “If you have had players, you know more about them. You want to learn about other players. That's how it is.
“I knew quite early that he was going this way (to Old Trafford). There was absolutely no reason for me to jump in there. That isn’t how we work.
“We didn’t look for players we had already worked with. If you do that, you know their good, their bad and you wonder whether you will do it again.
“It’s not boring but you know everything about each other so how can you develop? Where is the next step? Where is the next push for development?
“We could have gone for a lot of players. But, first of all, you have to think: what do I need?”
This does not always stand up to scrutiny, of course. That same summer, Klopp tried to reunite with Mario Gotze, who ended up leaving Bayern Munich to return to Dortmund.
Talks were held with the Germany international but with the Reds unable to offer Champions League football, Gotze wouldn't commit and wanted to keep his options open until after Euro 2016.
Klopp ended the club's pursuit and completed a £30million deal for Sadio Mane instead.
Klopp is also a keen admirer of Christian Pulisic, although the American did not make his first-team debut at Dortmund until the season after Klopp's departure from Westfalenstadion.
Yet the Liverpool boss' words should be heeded. Familiarity might not necessarily breed contempt, but it certainly does not guarantee the desire to be reunited.
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