Liverpool FC: Controversial book by Klopp’s assistant Pep Lijnders

Liverpool FC: Controversial book by Klopp’s assistant Pep Lijnders

Pep Lijnders, Jürgen Klopp’s assistant, gives an insight into the inner workings of Liverpool FC with a diary. The book has already made waves – in Germany it is unfortunately being published with some delay.

He already bears the name of a famous coach. In the case of Pep Lijnders, however, the first name does not stand for Josep, but for Pepijn – Lijnders is Dutch. And unlike colleague Pep Guardiola, he rarely pushes himself to the fore.

Pep Lijnders has been assistant coach at Liverpool FC since 2014 (with a short break), first under Brendan Rodgers and for the past eight years under Jürgen Klopp. Together they have celebrated great successes, including winning the Premier League and the Champions League.

Pep Lijnders  "Inside Liverpool FC: Intensity is our identity"  384 pages Edel Sports 19.95 euros

Lijnders always does the work in the background: he takes over training sessions or works out the tactics for the next game. In this respect it is rather atypical for the Dutchman that he has now published a diary. “Inside Liverpool FC” tells of the 2021/22 season in which Liverpool reached the final of the Champions League.

Did Lijnders’ book help opponents disenchant Liverpool FC?

Diaries are seldom a great blessing in football; on the contrary, they sometimes lead to serious scandals – Toni Schumacher and Lothar Matthäus, for example, know that. And Pep Lijnders also got headwind for his publication. Mainly because things didn’t go so smoothly at Liverpool in the following season: The Reds got off to a bad start in the Premier League and were taken apart by Real Madrid in the Champions League round of 16.

There was immediate criticism of Lijnders: TV expert Dietmar Hamann, himself a former Liverpool player, saw the book as a “Indication that something is wrong internally”. Media speculated whether the diary even helped opponents decode the Liverpool game. What Lijnders vehemently defended himself against: he regrets it “nothing”the book contains “not much inside information that could harm us”.

Now is “Inside Liverpool FC” also appeared in German – and if you leaf through it, you will actually find little that even fans have not long known. There’s talk of “Defend in triangles”, “pressing dynamics” and “neuroscientific training methods”. Commercially available tactical talk that reveals nothing that simple video analysis cannot reveal. It probably didn’t take this book to disenchant Liverpool FC.

The topics in the football business have long been different

The mood on Anfield Road was very different at the time that Pep Lijnders describes. Liverpool won the FA Cup, beat Manchester City (with the other Pep) twice and made it to the Champions League final (0-1 vs Real Madrid). All of that feels like a long time ago, in the fast-moving football business hardly anyone is interested in the topics from back then – and so it’s a shame that the book is only now being published in German. At one point, the rumors about a move from Sadio Mané to FC Bayern are mentioned. In the meantime, Mané is already on the move again with the Munich team.

It gets interesting, however, when Lijnders allows an insight into the everyday life of one of the largest football clubs in the world. The little jokes in the dressing room, the constant pressure to succeed, the cooperation in the coaching team. You learn, for example, that Jürgen Klopp had 20 trees planted in a nature reserve as a Christmas present for every employee. And how much mutual respect there is between Klopp and Lijnders.

Press conference with Jurgen Klopp

The 40-year-old Dutchman writes about Klopp, among other things: “In football you have to be very strong to be able to withstand everything that comes at you from the outside. And no one can do that better than Jürgen.” And the boss in the foreword about his assistant: “Pep is unique. I’ve never met anyone like him. He’s a workaholic and obsessed with football practice.” With a letter of recommendation like that, it’s really only a matter of time before you see Pep Lijnders in the foreground on the big football stage.

Further information are available here.

Source: Stern

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