I have witnessed this club go from doubters to believers, and from believers to champions. It took hard work and I always did everything I could to help the club get there. Nothing makes me prouder than that.
Us crumbling to yet another defeat this season was very painful and not what our fans deserve. I want to see Liverpool go back to being the heavy metal attacking team that opponents fear and back to being a team that wins trophies. That is the football I know how to play and that is the identity that needs to be recovered and kept for good. It cannot be negotiable and everyone that joins this club should adapt to it.
Winning some games here and there is not what Liverpool should be about. All teams win games.
Liverpool will always be a club that means a great deal to me and to my family. I want to see it succeed for long after I have moved on.
As I’ve always said, qualifying to next season’s Champions League is the bare minimum and I will do everything I can to make that happen.
🚨💣 BREAKING: Alexander Isak to Liverpool, here we go! Deal agreed now for £130m transfer fee. Record move for Premier League.
Isak, on his way today for medical tests as new Liverpool player after long term deal agreed months ago.
It was always ONLY Liverpool for Isak.
🟥 Klopp Remembers Trent’s Glory – The Fans Remember His Fall
Jurgen Klopp, with the candour only time grants a man departed, asked for grace. He reminded us of a boy who bent the world his way in Hoffenheim and bamboozled giants on an Anfield night that belonged to eternity. He asked us not to forget. But it is precisely because we remember that the booing rang out.
We remember Trent the teenager, yes, but we also remember the man who scored against West Ham and turned to scouring the very people who raised him. We remember a farewell 'party' more befitting a popstar than a footballer, curated not with humility but vanity. Klopp says the club is famed for not forgetting, and that is true, but it remembers all of it, not just the poetry.
Klopp’s appeal came from the heart, and perhaps from a place that still sees the lad in the number 66 shirt. But the fans see the man now. They see the training ground apathy whispered by Arne Slot, the orchestrated exit, the absence of dignity in departure. They see a player who has made his choice and expects applause as he walks out the door.
This is not about goals scored or assists delivered. It is about a bond broken in broad daylight. A player can leave, they always have, but how they leave matters; Jurgen himself has a famous quote about exactly this.
The boos are not for past dreams or European nights. They are for the sneer, the gesture, the self-indulgence, the deafening silence when clarity was owed.
Klopp reminded us that Trent gave everything. Perhaps he did, once upon a time. But giving everything is not just about what you did when you wore the shirt. It is also about how you carry its weight when it no longer suits you. And on that count, he is found wanting.
So no, this isn’t a case of fans forgetting. This is a case of a player forgetting them first. Klopp’s sentiment deserves respect, he’s earned it. But even he must know that respect is not unconditional. It is repaid, not assumed. And when it is withdrawn, it is not out of spite, but sorrow.
Because when you love something enough to feel betrayed by it, you don’t forget. You boo.
This is what we wanted to deliver to our fans more than anything. This is a club that should always compete for everything and be right at the top. No excuses. All teams win games but in the end there’s only one champion. That’s what history remembers and this applies to next season as well.