Jurgen Klopp, the former Liverpool manager, has made it clear he avoids clubs where commercial priorities overshadow the sport. Now 58, Klopp stepped away from management after nearly nine years at Anfield, where he secured multiple trophies before a third-place Premier League finish prompted his 2024 exit. Arne Slot succeeded him, but speculation persists about Klopp’s potential return while he leads global soccer efforts at Red Bull.
Klopp’s Liverpool Choice and Past Overtures
Before joining Liverpool, major clubs including Manchester United and Real Madrid reportedly pursued Klopp without success. His decision hinged on a commitment to pure football focus. In 2018, Klopp explained his affinity for Liverpool: “I love the history. I really am a football romantic. I knew I probably can help. They maybe really need me, in this time. I know what I’m good at.”
He continued: “When they told me about the problems they had I thought, ‘OK, yeah, I am probably the really right manager for that club’. They took me like I am, they didn’t ask me to do anything else, so I could focus from the first day completely on football. It is a football club. A FOOTBALL club. I had talks with other clubs and they didn’t sound like a football club. It sounded like marketing, image, you need to sign this, you need to sign that. And I thought, ‘Wow, that’s not the game I love’.”
Revelations from Robbie Fowler
A year later, Robbie Fowler shared insights from a conversation with Klopp, highlighting rejections of wealthy suitors. Fowler stated: “I did an interview with him a couple of years ago and he told me he turned down a couple of super-rich clubs after Dortmund – one was definitely Manchester United and the other was probably Real Madrid. Because he hated how they were focused solely on commercial influences. He said he liked Liverpool because they had a balance between the money needed to reach the top and the history and identity of the club and their fans.”
No Return to English Rivals
These principles guide any future role for Klopp, who demands minimal interference and football primacy. In 2024, he firmly ruled out managing elsewhere in England: “What I know definitely – I will never, ever manage a different club in England than Liverpool, 100 per cent. That’s not possible. My love for this club, my respect for the people, is too big. I couldn’t. I couldn’t for a second think about it. There’s no chance. This is part of my life, we are part of the family, we feel at home here. There’s no chance to do that.”

