Klopp, the Res win with fans around


LIVERPOOL, England—No handshakes were allowed but Anfield saw plenty of fist pumps from Jürgen Klopp.

The trademark celebration was back, and repeatedly, with added gusto. Such exuberance might seem surprising for the manager of a Liverpool side now 25 points in front at the top of the Premier League.

But when the pursuit of an invincible league season was so unexpectedly ended with its first loss, at Watford last Saturday, before being knocked out of the FA Cup by Chelsea, Klopp had good reason to be relieved.

Especially when Liverpool had to come from behind to beat Bournemouth, 2-1, on Saturday, with Sadio Mane setting up Mohamed Salah’s equalizer before grabbing the winner himself.

Relief, too, that games are still being played—and with fans—as the new coronavirus disrupts sports across the world.

The Premier League continued as planned on Saturday, including Arsenal beating West Ham 1-0 and Tottenham being held 1-1 at Burnley, albeit with a new league edict on reducing body contact coming into effect.

Fears over the spread of the COVID-19 disease, though, led to Liverpool players having to file past their awkwardly static Bournemouth counterparts rather than shaking hands prematch. In the Anfield stands, a few fans were wearing face masks.

The quicker Liverpool wrap up the title, to end a 30-year drought, the greater the prospect of their fans actually being able to join in the celebrations before they could be shut out of stadiums on government orders.

This victory keeps Liverpool on track to be the earliest winners yet, potentially with six games to spare, by winning at defending champion Manchester City on April 5.

Before then, on Wednesday, there is a Champions League defense to recover after losing the last-16 first leg 1-0 at Atletico Madrid.

“There’s nothing good in losing football games but it makes you aware of how special it is to win football games,” Klopp said. “That’s what we had in the last 10 days or two weeks when we lost games. So you appreciate it much more.

“Imagine we would have won against Watford, won in the FA Cup, won against Atletico and, in the end you become champion whenever it would happen, and everybody would have said, ‘Yeah, champion.’ If it will happen, it will feel really special. If it will happen.”

Klopp won’t jinx it, yet.

The German saw his team concede for a fifth consecutive game after nine minutes when Callum Wilson beat the offside trap to meet Jefferson Lerma’s cross.

A defensive lapse gifted Liverpool an equalizer in the 25th.

Mane dispossessed Jack Simpson, who had replaced injured Bournemouth captain Steve Cook, and fed Salah to take his tally to 20 goals for a third consecutive season.

It was Lewis Cook at fault for losing the ball before Virgil van Dijk passed through for Mane to net.

“We didn’t feel consistency in the last two weeks…we consistently lost football games and that’s not nice,” Klopp said. “That’s what I love about the boys—that they were really ready to work really hard today and play football. Not only play football, I liked a lot how we really were in the challenges.”

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