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“We cannot suddenly decide to behave like Chelsea”- Klopp mocks Blues’ transfer bash

Liverpool manager, Jurgen Klopp, has thrown his weight behind the club’s transfer policy, insisting the club cannot suddenly decide to behave like free-spending Chelsea after gradually putting together a title-winning team.

Liverpool eased to its first league title in three decades last season, finishing an astonishing 18 points clear of Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City, winning the title with a record 7 games to spare.

The Reds have invested heavily in the likes of Sadio Mane, Mohamed Salah, Virgil van Dijk and Alisson along the way, but have been able to balance the books consistently through player sales and a staggered, thoughtful approach to recruitment. 

With the exception of Kostas Tsimikas, who moved to Merseyside from Olympiacos for £11 million ($14m) last month, Liverpool has been deliberately absent from the transfer market-place, while fellow heavyweights, particularly in West London, have been shopping uninhibitedly in a bid to give the reds a run for the title next term.

Speaking to BBC Radio Five Live, Klopp said: “Clubs are in different situations and we are living in uncertainty in the world. For some clubs, it seems to be less important how uncertain the future is because they are owned by countries, owned by oligarchs and that is the truth. We are a different kind of club.

“We reached the Champions League final two years ago, won it the following year and won the Premier League by being the club we are, we cannot change that overnight and say ‘now we want to behave like Chelsea’.

“We always want to improve the squad but there are different ways – one way is to sign new players and the other way is to work together, improve the things you were good in and try to nullify the things you are not good in. That is football. No one wants to talk about training and only about signings.”

Asked if there will be any further new arrivals at Anfield this summer, Klopp responded: “I have been at Liverpool for nearly five years and if something is going to happen it will happen. There are so many rumours in the newspapers and it is funny when we read our name.

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“We were quite good with this in the past by staying calm and we made the right decisions, whether that be keeping the same group or bringing someone in for a specific position.”

Liverpool will kick off the newly-promoted Leeds United who have been tipped to present the reds a considerable challenge, but the gaffer was fairly confident that the lads would brush aside the competition despite the lack of rest caused by the coronavirus pandemic, which altered the conventional course of the fixtures.

“It was a short summer and pre-season is important and so far it has been all good. A few players are still on international duty, so hopefully they come back healthy. The games are coming thick and fast and we have to be ready for them,” he added.

“There is not too much change and people say ‘everybody wants to beat us now because we are champions’ but I did not see a team last year who did not want to beat us with all they had.

“We won the Champions League the year before so everybody wanted to beat us then. It is about us and to prove that we have to be ready for a fight in each game.

“We have a tough start against Leeds United, who have waited 16 years to get back into the top flight. They have a world-class manager and it is a historical game so it will be very, very tough.

“Then we go to Chelsea, then Arsenal is coming, so it is a tough start.”

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