The transfer incompetence of Liverpool’s rivals has left the door open to the possibility of Jadon Sancho



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Liverpool, lights out, everyone in bed at ten.

The world has been thrown into chaos. However, COVID-19 is exempt from yellow ties, car window microphones, and private jets. The bars closed before a good night’s encore, Eric Choupo-Moting somehow went from Paris Saint-Germain to Bayern Munich. Deadline on all of us.

Manchester United are busy buying from anyone, Raúl Meireles feels a bit, right? A guy who didn’t realize he signed or forgot to line up for his team the next time he plays. Edison Cavani? He is good. What, is he 34 years old? What do we play there?

United is an absolute disaster, a testament to how much their incompetence in the boardroom is somehow overcoming the amazing nature of a manager, so out of their reach that I’m not even sure Fulham would like it if they did. They kicked Scott Parker.

It’s no wonder United have completely sabotaged the Jadon Sancho deal, treating Borussia Dortmund’s August 10 deadline as a negotiating tactic. What’s surprising is how relaxed Sancho seems about staying in Germany for now.

It seemed stuck in a moment when the player would walk out the door. He was sometimes accused by Dortmund of lacking professionalism when returning late from duty in England. United seemed like a perfect move for everyone in the summer after nothing materialized in Liverpool or Manchester City, but Old Trafford’s hierarchy softened its lines.

The door is now open for Sancho and Liverpool again. We can scoff and say it won’t happen, but champions have two issues to solve right now: squad transition and different playstyle options. Answer both in the long run.

Georginio Wijnaldum has been linked with Barcelona

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The transfer window deadline has never been our concern and rightly so, it is not a wine that Michael Edwards likes to digest. It’s home, picked up, and ready for the day before others are up. United enters the night, burning the candle at both ends. They have nothing to show but short-term adventures and yesterday’s ramblings to cling to.

It’s been a strange few days, but be grateful that we are not that.

What I read on Liverpool.com

Do we need a Roberto Firmino chat? I think we could do it, you know. Fortunately, Joel has laid the groundwork with a great article written about the dilemma facing lack of goals from forwards here. Also, we’re building up to five years of Klopp at Liverpool.com, and Mark started us yesterday with what could have been and what eventually happened with Carlo Ancelotti at Stanley Park.

What i am reading

I’m trying, probably like many of us, to take time off the screens and not get too immersed in the news without being irresponsible about what is currently relevant. To refine the point, I am reading further. And I just started Ronan Hession’s Leonard and Hungry Paul. Majestic



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