Jurgen Klopp is staying on at Liverpool for an extra two years after signing a new contract that keeps him at Anfield until June 2026.
Rumours had started to circulate suggesting the German and his coaching staff agreed fresh terms, and the club made it official on Thursday.
The announcement came as Liverpool chase an unprecedented quadruple. Having already won the EFL Cup this season, they are into the FA Cup final, sit just one point behind leaders Manchester City in the Premier League and hold a 2-0 lead over Villarreal ahead of the second leg of their Champions League semi-final.
Injury-ravaged Liverpool finished 2020-21 third in the Premier League, 17 points behind Pep Guardiola s City, but Klopp has proven that to be a minor blip with the Reds back in devastating form this term.
Following confirmation of his new contract, Stats Perform looks back at some of the best and most notable victories from Klopp s five and a half years at the helm…
Excited for the future
— Liverpool FC (@LFC)
Liverpool 4-3 Borussia Dortmund, April 2016
Klopp surely felt he had a point to prove when going up against his former club in the Europa League quarter-finals, though it all looked to be going horribly wrong. After drawing 1-1 in the first leg, the Reds then trailed by two goals twice at Anfield and found themselves needing at least three goals in the final 25 minutes – somehow, they managed it. Philippe Coutinho, Mamadou Sakho and Dejan Lovren all struck, with Liverpool incredibly netting with all four of their shots on target in the game.
“LOVREN! WOOOOOOW!” three years ago, Anfield witnessed that amazing win over Dortmund
— Liverpool FC (@LFC)
Liverpool 4-3 Manchester City, January 2018
Although Liverpool still trailed leaders City by 15 points in the Premier League after this victory, in hindsight, there is a degree of this win being a watershed moment for Klopp s Liverpool. City were unbeaten in the league at this point, yet for much of the game Liverpool looked every inch their equal. While two late goals from City ensured a tense finish, the Reds were well worth the three points in what went down as a modern classic.
Liverpool 4-0 Barcelona, May 2019
The Reds seemed to have little hope here. Lionel Messi inspired a 3-0 dismantling of Liverpool in Camp Nou in the first leg of their Champions League semi-final clash, seemingly putting one foot in the final. But Klopp s side were in sensational form for the return at Anfield, with Divock Origi providing some early hope with a seventh-minute opener. Georginio Wijnaldum then laid on a second-half brace to restore parity, before Origi completed the turnaround 11 minutes from time. It was the first time since 1986 that a team wiped out a three-goal first-leg deficit to win a Champions League/European Cup semi-final.
Back from the brink against Barcelona.
Unique and unrivalled insight from the players, as they look back at a night that Anfield will never forget.
— Liverpool FC (@LFC)
Tottenham 0-2 Liverpool, June 2019
It may not have been a classic as a spectacle, but Liverpool fans – and Klopp – won t have cared. After falling at the final hurdle the year before, the Reds were European champions for a sixth time in 2019 as they beat Tottenham 2-0 in Madrid, with Mohamed Salah and Origi getting the goals.
Liverpool 2-0 Manchester United, January 2020
The 2019-20 title triumph was Liverpool s first league championship in 30 years – in that time, their bitter rivals United had won it 13 times to become the most successful club in the English top flight. While Klopp s side were already well clear at the Premier League summit when the ailing United came to Anfield in January 2020, there was a sense that their procession began with this 2-0 victory that left them 16 points clear at the top with a game in hand.
Manchester United 0-5 Liverpool, October 2021
Liverpool heaped the misery on United and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer again in October. Paul Pogba s sending off certainly helped the visitors, but even before then the gulf was clear. This was the Red Devils biggest losing margin to their fierce rivals since 1895 (Liverpool won 7-1 at Anfield), and worst ever at home. Mohamed Salah led the way with a hat-trick, in the process becoming the highest-scoring African player in Premier League history. The Reds went on to hammer United again six months later, winning 4-0 on Merseyside.
9 Manchester United have lost 0-9 on aggregate in their Premier League meetings with Liverpool this season. In their league history, they’ve only suffered a combined heavier defeat once – 0-11 vs Sunderland in 1892-93. Trounced.
— OptaJoe (@OptaJoe)