Thursday, April 18, 2024

Whatever b******t you say, no one forgets – Klopp defends spending comments

SoccerNews in English Premier League 21 Jul 2018

688 Views

Jurgen Klopp insists his 2016 comments criticising the eagerness to splash the cash in modern football are still true despite his own lavish spending in recent times at Liverpool.

When Manchester United signed Paul Pogba in 2016, Klopp was critical and adamant he would “even do it differently if I could spend that money”.

But since then, Liverpool have made Virgil van Dijk and Alisson the most expensive defender and goalkeeper of all time, while the club have also spent more than £40million each on Mohamed Salah, Naby Keita and Fabinho.

And following the signing of Alisson on Thursday, Klopp’s 2016 quotes resurfaced and were put to him in a news conference, drawing a fiery response.

“That’s a problem, whatever b******t you say, no one will forget it,” Klopp told reporters on Saturday.

“It’s still kind of true. I couldn’t have imagined the world could have changed. £100m [for Pogba] was a crazy number, but since then the world changed.

“We signed the most expensive goalkeeper, there will be a few nice transfers [made by other clubs]. It’s not about pushing through my thoughts on that and not paying big money, if Liverpool aren’t successful we have to work.

“To improve a squad like this costs money. So far it’s a really good year for us, pretty successful last year.

“Still we need to replace players – Emre Can left, good business bringing Fabinho in. [Xherdan] Shaqiri, we saw him play in the World Cup. I know Stoke were relegated, but he had a lot of good games.

“We don’t care what the world think, like Manchester United didn’t care what I thought.”

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

SoccerNews

Soccernews.com is news blog for soccer with comprehensive coverage of all the major leagues in Europe, as well as MLS in the United States. In addition we offer breaking news for transfers and transfer rumors, ticket sales, betting tips and offers, match previews, and in-depth editorials.

You can follow us on Facebook: Facebook.com/soccernews.com or Twitter: @soccernewsfeed.

SHARE OR COMMENT ON THIS ARTICLE

WE RECOMMEND

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This field is required *

Join the conversation!

or Register

Live Scores

advertisement

Betting Guide Advertisement

advertisement

Become a Writer
More More
Top