Klopp, Pellegrini cross paths in League Cup showdown
Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp will be bidding to secure his first
trophy for the club and Manchester City counterpart Manuel Pellegrini
potentially his last in Sunday’s League Cup final.
Klopp, 48, is less than five months into his mission to restore
Liverpool to former glories, whereas Pellegrini, 62, has only three
months left in the City saddle before handing the reins to Pep
Guardiola.
City are the favourites, but former Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard
has claimed that the nous Klopp demonstrated by leading Borussia
Dortmund to five trophies will give the underdogs the edge at Wembley.
Responding to Gerrard’s prediction, made in the Daily Telegraph,
Klopp said: “I am not sure I am the difference, but I know the way.
There is absolutely no reason at this moment to have a doubt.
“I have to show it as clear as possible so there is no misunderstanding between my mouth and the ears of the players.
“We do this job in professional football. We only want to win things: titles, cups, whatever.
“A lot of managers work their whole lives and can be really
successful, but have never the chance to win something. Now, everything
is possible.”
Having fallen nine points below fourth-place City in the Premier
League, Liverpool’s hopes of Champions League qualification are fading
and they were recently eliminated from the FA Cup by West Ham United.
They will face Manchester United in a tantalising last-16 Europa
League tie, but it is Sunday’s game that offers Klopp the best chance to
make a mark in his maiden campaign.
With eight trophies, Liverpool are the League Cup’s most successful
club, but they have not procured any silverware since they last won the
tournament in 2012.
Klopp’s tenure to date has been a tale of feast and famine, with
dreary displays interspersed by stunning results such as slick away wins
at City and Chelsea, a breathless 5-4 victory at Norwich City and
six-goal thrashings of both Southampton and Aston Villa.
[naviga:h2]- Big guns return -[/naviga:h2]
Liverpool won 4-1 at the
Etihad Stadium in November when they last faced City, but Klopp and
Pellegrini have attempted to play down the significance of that result.
Perhaps significantly, both teams have since recovered key personnel
— notably captain Vincent Kompany and playmaker David Silva for City
and skipper Jordan Henderson and striker Daniel Sturridge for Liverpool.
Liverpool’s starting XI has been largely unchanged since the 6-0
Valentine’s Day demolition of Villa, with Klopp making just one change
across that game and the two-legged Europa League win over German side
Augsburg.
His key decision regards his centre-back pairing, with fit-again duo
Martin Skrtel and Dejan Lovren back in contention along with Mamadou
Sakho, Kolo Toure and converted midfielder Lucas Leiva.
Pellegrini is hopeful that Kompany, Liverpool old boy Raheem Sterling
and right-back Bacary Sagna will be fit despite training away from the
main group on Friday.
Eliaquim Mangala, Jesus Navas and Wilfried Bony are all available for
selection again, while cup goalkeeper Willy Caballero is expected to
take over from Joe Hart.
City’s fans have experienced a week of extremes, having seen a
second-string team trounced 5-1 by Chelsea in the FA Cup last weekend
before the big guns, including Sergio Aguero and Yaya Toure, returned in
an impressive 3-1 win at Dynamo Kiev in the Champions League last 16.
With City nine points below league leaders Leicester City, albeit
with a game in hand, French left-back Gael Clichy knows that Sunday’s
game represents a golden opportunity to give Pellegrini a fitting
send-off.
“We have been together for three years now and we have to live in the
present — and the present is with Manuel Pellegrini,” Clichy said.
“I think for this game he will be exactly the same. He will want us
to play the way we want to play. With the quality we have, if we start
the game well, there is no reason why we should not have a great game.”