Jürgen Klopp’s substitute crusade goes wrong, but James Milner reinforces Liverpool’s point



[ad_1]

They are dropping like flies.

It’s good for the game, it makes it more exciting.

They are in danger of having exhausted squads.

They get paid a lot of money, they should be able to be cops me

They are in physical danger with every game.

The clubs agreed on the schedule

This is getting tiring, to the point where pubs don’t have to be open to have to listen to people who see the world as a simple equation. There is always an easy answer, two plus two equals four. Jürgen Klopp should stop complaining and move on. Am I right guys? Who is round?

But unfortunately for the growing minority, it is not that simple. I only learned after the game after Liverpool’s draw with Brighton that Chris Wilder had labeled Klopp “selfish.” I like Wilder, but he has adopted the personality of a man in a pub and some here with this. The points that I will not work again are the following:

– It’s about the player’s well-being.

– Liverpool can barely name a bench in the minute (two goalkeepers against Atalanta during the week).

– This is not about money, unfair advantages or television contracts.

In fact, the point is perfectly summed up by James Milner. Milner’s hamstring injury is another cruel blow to Liverpool, and they are running out of right-back options beyond Neco Williams until Trent Alexander-Arnold returns.

But use Milner and Brighton as an excellent example of why this is now so flawed. Liverpool could have made three changes at half-time, that’s how bad they were in the first half. No one would have been surprised to see Jordan Henderson, Sadio Mané and Curtis Jones, for example.

However, Klopp rightly did not, and Milner emphasized why. He had to restrain himself due to the risk of injury, and indeed an injury occurred. Adam Lallana spent eight minutes on the pitch and was injured. Brighton is playing well and their number nine is injured. Now it is about fighting fires from the bank, more than the application of strategies or tactics.

Klopp made the point after the game that he would have eliminated Andy Robertson for Kostas Tsimikas if he had the chance. Not to try and help win the game, but to “protect Robbo” as he put it. How soon, then, before all of our coaches are doing substitutes for injury risk and fitness instead of trying to impact a match?

If broadcasters want to take out the Liverpool manager for his complaints about kick-off times, do so, but don’t be so obtuse as to overlook the fact that the product they are becoming so sensitive and possessive about is being decimated by the same point they are defending.

By choosing fights in interviews that they had clearly rehearsed while boxing in the mirror that morning, they are actually overlooking the fact that you won’t see the best players in the world at their physical peak at 12:30 in one day. Saturday noon. What does that say about the value of the television offerings you are so quickly referring to?

Another game, another Liverpool injury and a greater risk for others. If only just keep going that simple.



[ad_2]