I was being a little flippant, but a lot of people would think that it is.
Graham Taylor has managed England. Argument over.
I was being a little flippant, but a lot of people would think that it is.
That doesn't fit with the reports in the media last summer about Klopp wanting total control if he came to Liverpool. Maybe Klopp's realised that that attitude will guarantee FSG won't appoint him, and has decided to change tack (or at least say he's changed tack) in order to get the gig.
Honigstein said that Liverpool did not approach Klopp in the summer, despite rumours to the contrary, but they approached him twice since then
I think Ancelotti is the better manager, hes done it all, consistently in a number of different leagues but I dont think he would necessarily be a good fit for us. Leaving aside the issue of his massive wages, he is well known as a manager who burns through money pretty quickly and where ever he has done well he has been at an elite big spending club. Hes devoid of ego for a manager of his accomplishment and his talents are really in forming a team out of superstars and getting them to play in a cohesive way, thats no mean feat but its also not a problem hes likely to have at Liverpool. He seems to be almost impervious to the politics of football and hes highly regarded pretty much every where, hes a prestige manager who has seen and done it all.
Klopp on the other hand is almost too on the nose in terms of what we need, hes younger, cheaper, hungrier and has a point to prove after the way things ended at Dortmund. He seems to rage against the elite rather than aspiring to join them. I dont think he could succeed anywhere in the way some managers can but I think in the right situation he can be spectacular. Hes more of an ego but hes also more of a fighter than Ancelotti, a fighter is what this club needs, that sort of mentality is infectious. The Liverpool job is a huge challenge psychologically, it comes with a weight of expectation without the means to achieve those expectations. A historically poorly run club, a set of owners who dont seem to know what the want and a fanbase that is desperate for success. Thats a pressure cooker for managers and I dont think thats the right challenge for Ancelotti, I think hes been too successful for too long to want to roll up his sleeves and take on the basic task of rebuilding the club ground up. Klopp seems like the sort of manager who wouldnt have it any other way, hes a big personality and he wants a club that reflects that.