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Soccer

Klopp's exit leaves a huge hole at Liverpool. Who will step in to fill it?

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As fans and pundits reflect fondly on Jurgen Klopp’s transformative eight-year spell as Liverpool manager, work begins on finding a replacement who can keep the good times rolling at Anfield.

Here are five candidates with the strongest claims to one of the most desirable vacancies in world football:

Xabi Alonso

Lars Baron / Getty Images Sport / Getty

This one’s a slam dunk. Alonso is a former Liverpool player and fan favorite who’s establishing himself as one of the game’s most exciting managers at Bayer Leverkusen. He commands a similar brand of heavy-metal football in the Bundesliga, with an emphasis on lightning-quick counterattacks, and as a 42-year-old at the beginning of his managerial career, he has the energy to carry on what Klopp can’t.

Alonso understands what it means to play for Liverpool and handle big nights at Anfield. There’s still an attachment to the club – his biggest regret is not winning the Premier League as a Liverpool player – but a return wouldn’t be a premature or desperate maneuver. It wouldn’t feel like it did when Manchester United hired Ole Gunnar Solskjaer or when Chelsea appointed, and then reappointed, Frank Lampard. Those were purely emotional decisions seemingly preordained by their previous affiliations with their clubs.

Alonso would be a good fit even without his history at Liverpool. He has Leverkusen competing for their first Bundesliga title since 2011 and playing some of the most irresistible football in Europe. “He is an example of a new generation of coaching,” Leverkusen midfielder Granit Xhaka said recently.

Roberto De Zerbi

James Gill – Danehouse / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Every time there’s an opening at a top European club, De Zerbi invariably ends up on the list of potential candidates. He’s shown in such a short time at Brighton & Hove Albion how quickly he can transform a group of players and get them to execute his vision of attacking football.

But the links to Liverpool are credible. De Zerbi has already coached one of the fulcrums of Liverpool’s midfield, Alexis Mac Allister, and his coaching philosophy is similar to Klopp’s. De Zerbi’s Brighton press as a unit and counter-press when they lose possession, and they have the patience to play from back to front. Despite their abundance of talent, Liverpool operate similarly, moving as an organism rather than individual parts.

The only question about De Zerbi is whether he can provide consistent results. As exciting as his reign on the south coast has been, Brighton can be unpredictable, winning by multiple goals or losing by five. The Seagulls haven’t won more than three consecutive games with De Zerbi in the dugout, and that’s a concern. If he were to get the job on Merseyside, he may have to compromise his risky style of play to establish firmer footing.

Unai Emery

GEOFF CADDICK / AFP / Getty

A short time ago, Emery would’ve been a Hail Mary for any club looking for a manager. He left Arsenal with his reputation in tatters and with nothing but memes as his legacy. But he rebuilt his career at Villarreal, winning the Europa League in 2021 before leading the club on a Cinderella run in the Champions League. He leveraged his success there into a move to Aston Villa.

In just a year and a half, Emery has taken Villa from 14th place to the upper echelons of the Premier League, doing so with many of the players he inherited. Though he focuses more on the defensive aspect of the game, Emery’s teams thrive on energy, just as Liverpool have under Klopp. Villa play with a high line and rely heavily on wide players to do work on and off the ball. Emery would find a similar group of hard workers at Liverpool and could even find a way to use the 4-4-2 formation that has brought him so much success.

But would Liverpool hire him to be a coach or architect? One of the reasons his spell at Arsenal ended badly was because he neglected to do the kind of diplomatic work Arsene Wenger had before his departure in 2018. Emery walked into a club that needed a spokesperson as much as it needed a coach. All he wanted to do was focus on the weekend’s tactical matchup. Liverpool have a hierarchy in place that can delegate that specific task to him, but they’re still a massive club with the same politics at play. Whether he’s ready for that is unclear.

Thomas Tuchel

Richard Sellers/Allstar / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Everywhere Klopp goes, Tuchel seems to follow. Tuchel replaced Klopp at Mainz in 2009 before stepping into his forerunner’s shoes at Dortmund in 2015. While he’s forged his own path since then, making stops at Paris Saint-Germain, Chelsea, and Bayern Munich, he remains Klopp’s closest body double.

But it may prove difficult to attract him to Liverpool. Though his Bayern side has disappointed at times, he wields a lot of power and has one of the most prolific strikers in the game at his disposal in Harry Kane. Tuchel hasn’t always had the best time dealing with boards and executives – high-level disputes led to his departures from Dortmund and PSG – and he could find himself arguing with the various committees and owners at Liverpool. Bayern have given him a significant say in transfers, and he’d have to give that up.

That doesn’t necessarily mean the 50-year-old won’t ever coach Liverpool. It’s a job that could make sense for him a few years down the line. He’ll continue to get offers from Premier League clubs, and given the way Chelsea unceremoniously axed him, he likely feels he has unfinished business in England.

Antonio Conte

DeFodi Images / DeFodi Images / Getty

Though Conte is the most unlikely of the quintet to land the gig, he remains an intriguing option for Fenway Sports Group to consider. The Italian is the only one on this list who’s free of contractual obligations, and he has a plethora of experience at top European clubs. If Liverpool want to establish domestic supremacy, Conte, who’s won league titles with Juventus, Chelsea, and Inter Milan, is perhaps the best positioned to deliver that.

However, like Tuchel, Conte is a difficult manager to please. He wants the players he wants and prefers water carriers and soldiers over up-and-coming talent. Conte’s style of play is also not the prettiest, and it would be easy to envision a revolt in the stands if the ends failed to justify the means. Despite his experience, he’d be a hard sell for supporters who’ve become accustomed to a certain way of playing.

But he’s a winner. That’s what counts. He’s one of just three managers to have snatched a league title ahead of a side managed by Pep Guardiola. With Guardiola’s Manchester City vying for a fourth straight Premier League title and sixth in seven years, that’s important intel to have. He can forge incredible relationships with players and create the kind of togetherness Klopp has established during his eight years in charge. Conte is emotional, and so are Liverpool. He can charge up the crowd like Klopp can, and that’s worth something.

Soccer

Women's Champions League roundup: Brann reach quarters, Lyon score 7

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Norwegian side Brann qualified for the quarter-finals of the Women’s Champions League after their 1-0 win at Slavia Prague on Thursday.

Benfica could only draw at Rosengard but Eintracht Frankfurt’s defeat by Barcelona later in the evening allowed them also to join Chelsea, Lyon and holders Barcelona in the last eight.

Brann made it through thanks to a second half own goal from Slavia goalkeeper Olivie Lukasova who could only parry a fierce drive from Signe Gaupset into her own net.

“It is incredible. I do not think it has sunk in yet,” said Brann captain Cecilie Kvamme.

“We’ve had quite a journey in the past 12 months and I am just so proud of all the girls for the way we’ve played in the Champions League.

“We are really excited to qualify for the quarter-finals.”

Brann are second in Group B behind Lyon who hammered St Polten 7-0 in Austria with Ada Hegerberg and Sara Dabritz both scoring twice.

Vanessa Gilles, Dzsenifer Marozsan and substitute Kadidiatou Diani also found the back of the net.

Lyon will take top spot in the group whatever their result against Slavia Prague in the final round of games next week due to their superior head-to-head record against Brann.

Benfica also qualified for the last eight but were made to wait after a late goal from Rosengard’s Japanese striker Mai Kadowaki denied them outright victory in Sweden.

Olivia Schough put the Swedes ahead early on, but goals from Jessica Silva and Marie-Yasmine Alidou appeared to have given Benfica the win they needed to stamp their ticket alongside Barcelona in Group A.

Kadowaki’s late goal, however, meant it finished 2-2, leaving Benfica needing the Catalans to beat Eintracht Frankfurt in the later game.

Barcelona duly delivered against some gutsy German pressing.

Patricia Guijarro netted the opener after 19 minutes and Norwegian winger Caroline Graham Hansen sealed the 2-0 win after 73 minutes, finding some space on the edge of the area before firing the ball into the net.

Three places remain to be settled in the final round of group matches next week.

Soccer

Sancho gets 2nd chance as BVB re-sign Man Utd reject on loan

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Jadon Sancho is going back to Germany in a bid to revive his career.

Manchester United finalized a deal on Thursday that allows the English winger to rejoin Borussia Dortmund on loan until the end of the season, the Premier League club announced.

“When I walked into the changing room today, it felt like coming home,” Sancho said, according to Dortmund’s website.

“I know the club inside out, I’ve always been very close to the fans here, and I’ve never lost contact with the people in charge. I can’t wait to see my teammates again, get out on the pitch, play football with a smile on my face, get assists, score goals, and help the club qualify for the Champions League.”

? JADON SANCHO ? pic.twitter.com/zomaniz09q

— Borussia Dortmund (@BVB) January 11, 2024

Sancho’s departure from Old Trafford – less than three years after his arrival for a reported €85-million fee in 2021 – is the conclusion of a months-long public fallout with United head coach Erik ten Hag.

The 23-year-old hadn’t played for the Red Devils since August. He criticizing Ten Hag for dropping him against Arsenal in early September and was forced to train away from the first team after refusing to issue a private and public apology to the Dutch manager.

The six-month loan agreement includes a €3.5-million fee, as well as Dortmund’s commitment to contributing a portion of Sancho’s wages, according to The Athletic’s David Ornstein. Manchester United could also potentially receive performance-related bonuses.

Sancho recently expressed a desire to return to his former club, where he developed into a star during his four-year spell in Germany, after it became clear that he had no immediate future at United.

Sancho scored 12 goals in 82 appearances for the Red Devils. During his first spell in Germany, he had 50 goals and 64 assists in 137 games.

Meanwhile, Dortmund’s poor run of form before the Bundesliga winter break heightened the club’s urgency to improve during the January transfer window. The German side sits in fifth place, 15 points back of leaders Bayer Leverkusen, after failing to win its six games in all competitions in December.

Dortmund will likely assess Sancho’s fitness level to determine when he’ll be available after he was forced to spend four months on the sidelines without playing meaningful football. Their first game back after the winter break is Jan. 13 against Darmstadt.

Soccer

Report: Madrid target Mbappe near decision, open to EPL

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The mystery over Kylian Mbappe’s future club could be resolved soon.

The French striker will choose which team he’ll play for in the next few weeks after his Paris Saint-Germain contract expires this summer, Julien Laurens of ESPN reports.

Real Madrid and Liverpool are reportedly considered the favorites to sign the 25-year-old if he opts to leave PSG.

Mbappe is free to negotiate with interested clubs now that he’s in the final six months of his deal after deciding not to trigger the one-year extension in his PSG contract last summer.

Mbappe reportedly waived bonuses last week amounting to around €70 million in what’s been described as a maneuver designed to ease the financial burden for PSG if he leaves the Ligue 1 club for free this summer.

However, amid growing speculation suggesting he’s made up his mind, Mbappe told reporters last week that he hasn’t decided anything yet.

Mbappe’s representatives echoed his sentiment Monday, saying there was still no decision after a new report out of France said he’d agreed to join Real Madrid.

“There’s no agreement on Kylian’s future,” read a statement, according to transfer insider Fabrizio Romano. “There have been no discussions about his future.”

Mbappe’s camp added: “No type of influence could dictate the timing of Kylian’s discussions, reflections, decisions.”

Although Real Madrid are widely considered the front-runners to sign Mbappe, the World Cup winner is understood to be open to playing in the Premier League.

A move to Liverpool is one possibility, as Mbappe is reportedly fond of the Reds and head coach Jurgen Klopp. But his massive contract – worth around €650,000 per week – could ultimately prevent Liverpool from completing the biggest signing in club and Premier League history.

Joining Liverpool could also hinge on Reds legend Mohamed Salah, as the Egyptian striker could possibly leave if he’s courted to join the Saudi Pro League in 2024 like he reportedly was last summer.

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