Jurgen Klopp is facing “real questions” for the first time in his Liverpool reign, says Jamie Carragher, with the Reds left sweating on a top-four finish as they struggle for form in 2021.
An untimely wobble is being endured by the men from Merseyside, with three successive defeats suffered at Anfield for the first time since 1963 – with Burnley, Brighton and Manchester City landing crushing blows on the reigning Premier League champions.
A fourth-place standing has been taken up as a result, with five sides within five points of Klopp’s title holders, and Carragher fears Champions League qualification is no longer guaranteed.
What has been said?
“This is threatening Liverpool's top-four hopes," Reds legend Carragher told Sky Sports during a demoralising 4-1 defeat to City. “They have to find something quickly. The top four places are massively up for grabs.
“It would have been unthinkable to say that at the start of the season about this Liverpool team but there are so many teams jostling for those positions.
“I think this is the first time under Jurgen Klopp when real questions are starting to be asked. There will be even more after this game. This is the first time in five-and-a-half years when it is not really going to plan.
“The next couple of games are Leicester away and Everton at home, two teams who are really in there fighting for those positions as well. There is so much up for grabs. Liverpool have to put this right.
“It's been the same players for the last four years. They probably could do with a couple of players to freshen up the starting line-up. This team has been together since the Champions League final in Kiev.”
The bigger picture
Klopp is tied to a contract through to 2024 and there is no suggestion that his position is coming under threat, given all that he has achieved at Anfield.
Liverpool do, however, need to find a spark from somewhere if they are to avoid seeing a testing season implode.
Injury struggles have hampered the Reds’ cause in 2020-21, with several key men ruled out, but there is enough quality at their disposal to remain competitive.
They need to start digging deep as, after bringing a 30-year wait for title glory to a close, missing out on the Champions League altogether would have been unthinkable when another coronavirus-impacted season got underway.
What is up next?
Liverpool will take in a trip to Leicester on Saturday with the Foxes sat one place and three points above them in the table.
A derby date with Merseyside neighbours Everton takes place a week after a visit to the King Power Stadium, with those domestic outings sandwiching the first leg of a crucial Champions League last-16 encounter with RB Leipzig.
Further reading
- Klopp's greatest challenge: How can Liverpool save their season? (Feb 8)
- 'Hit the stands' - Klopp reveals what he told Alisson after Liverpool goalkeeper's Manchester City nightmare (Feb 7)
- Klopp might be tempted by Bayern after transfer frustration at Liverpool, says Redknapp (Feb 7)