Jurgen Klopp has cursed Liverpool’s injury luck this season and issued a passionate rallying cry for the whole club to become unified in the fight to finish inside the Champions League places. Klopp bemoaned the litany of problems across the campaign but said he was refusing to make excuses as he called on everyone involved to stick together in the battle to get back into the top four.
Jurgen Klopp said: “We had a similar situation two years ago [with injuries], I’m sorry. The year after that, we had a completely different situation, we could use them all. Sometimes it happens. Could anybody know how the last season of 63 games could influence this season? I don’t think anybody could know. We had a holiday, not too much, but we had a holiday, there were games here and normally the boys are used to these kinds of things. They all looked fine and then it started with Diogo Jota coming back from international duty and getting injured and then bam, bam, bam. So that’s how it starts. Luis Diaz [was injured] twice and now Darwin’s suspension and now [injured]. These kinds of things offensively. Earlier in the season midfielders were not available so that is why we brought in Arthur, who then got injured. That’s the situation. There is a lot of bad luck, I know. Bad luck is only a reasonable point when you have it yourself. For everybody else bad luck is ‘yeah, so what?’. Maybe we are but would I do anything different? I wouldn’t go in the first week [of pre-season] to Asia, not because Asia is not great but I would go in the third week to Asia or something like that. It was not really in our hands. Things get decided and we deal with it. Is that the reason? No, I don’t think so. Would it be better to have done it differently? Yes. These kinds of things we learn from. In the end we have to deal with them. We played until the last match day [last season]. We planned the pre-season long before that. We were in a super positive mood, we could have won everything and then all of a sudden we don’t win everything. That’s how it is. It can happen. That’s the situation now.”
Liverpool head to Brighton in seventh place and seven points adrift of Manchester United in fourth, but could cut that down sizably at the Amex with the Red Devils hosting city rivals Man City in Saturday’s lunchtime kick-off.
Jurgen Klopp added: “Just because we are Liverpool doesn’t mean we are not allowed to have problems. No, we have to deal with it. That’s how it is. Other teams have problems as well. In some situations, some things are easy to explain with that, other things not really but they are still influenced by it. That’s how it is. That’s why we are where we are and we discuss it like we are bottom of the table but we are not. When you are Liverpool and the distance to the Champions League gets bigger then it feels like you are bottom of the table but thank god we are not. There are a lot of games to come and players come back. For this weekend maybe not a lot, maybe two come back which is great. Now we have to fight this game and from there we go on. Every player will fight on Tuesday against Wolves, then Chelsea then maybe the FA Cup again against Brighton again or not we will see. That’s the situation. I really think with all the stuff, nobody has to think ‘Klopp did a great job in the past’. I couldn’t care a little bit about what we did in the past. But just think about what we did in the past together. I mean everybody together. All of us, supporters, everybody together. What we had. Now it is tough and I’m sorry for that but we try to work on solutions, believe me, really believe me. With all we have. The whole season is obviously not a free flowing one. It’s not easy for one second in the whole season but we always found a way back because we stuck together. Internally no problem at all, and I’m not even in a little bit of doubt about our supporters but of course the words I have now are not as fancy as they were when we win football games. If you have to explain a not so good situation, life is like this, nobody wants to listen and it’s like ‘Come on shut up and sort it’. Now I spoke quite a lot about something nobody wants to hear anything about but that’s it.”