Football
Glenn Price, Liverpool correspondent 6y

Jurgen Klopp hits back at Gary Neville: Liverpool won't prioritise Premier League over Champions League

LIVERPOOL -- Jurgen Klopp has hit back at Gary Neville after the former Manchester United defender told The Times that Liverpool should "kick" the Champions League "into touch" in order to focus on winning the Premier League.

Liverpool are without a league title since 1990 and a domestic trophy since 2012, and Neville said that their pursuit of breaking this duck could be burdened by European commitments.

Despite Liverpool sitting top of the Premier League, Klopp said it is not possible for the five-time European Cup winners to put off their Champions League campaign, which begins on Tuesday when Paris Saint-Germain visit Anfield.

"How should that work? What do we do? We don't play Champions League or what?" Klopp told a news conference. "Gary should come over and tell me exactly how that would work. How do you prepare a game and not focus on it? You bring your kids in the Champions League? That would be funny!

"I don't know what he means with that, to be honest. We have to play football. A lot of people watch our games when we play Champions League and that's our job that we do the best we can do in all these games.

"That's what we try. I don't know exactly what it means but to focus on one competition can only be if maybe you are already out of the competition nearly.

"If it's late in the season that you see you have a chance to do that or do this and all that stuff.

"Last year, for example, we had no chance to focus on one competition because we had to qualify for the Champions League and I don't think that even Gary Neville would have said: 'Quarterfinals of the Champions League, let City win.'

"It doesn't work like this. I don't want to be too critical because I don't know exactly how he said it but sitting in an office and talking about football is completely different to doing the job, to be honest. But it's an opinion."

Meanwhile, Liverpool will be looking to extend their lead at the top of the league when they face Tottenham Hotspur at Wembley on Saturday.

It will mark the start of an extremely busy period for Klopp's side, with seven matches in 23 days on the horizon, and Klopp admits squad rotation will be required in the coming weeks, although Adam Lallana (groin) and Dejan Lovren (pelvis) remain sidelined.

"Of course we have to [rotate]. We have seen that we can do it," Klopp said. "We have to think about the game tomorrow, then we see who we can choose for the next game.

"You always try to have your best game, but it is clear with the number of games. We get so much information, we can see how the players react in different situations. We have to do that, to rotate.

"The first four weeks we had the same lineup and we changed one position, but it was to get a good start to create a base.

"We used the players who had the longest preseason, apart from Bobby [Roberto Firmino] who came pretty late. The others all had at least three weeks. They were the most stable players in the squad.

"Today we train, then we make a lineup for tomorrow. Mauricio [Pochettino] has the same issues, we all have to work with what we've got."

Liverpool were beaten 4-1 by Spurs in this fixture last season, which ended up sparking an 18-game unbeaten run for the Reds.

"It was a kind of a wake-up call, to be honest," Klopp said. "But it was more a wake-up for the players, that we cannot do it like this.

"After that we had pretty good results and I don't think we conceded a lot of goals. Yes, we learned, the experience was that one game can be completely different to another.

"But on the other side we still knew we had a good team. It was the moment where we could show that we are really convinced about what we are doing, we just had to do it more often and in a better way."

Liverpool also remain in talks with former Manchester United coach Jack Robinson about becoming an assistant goalkeeping coach at the club, sources have told ESPN FC.

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