skip to main content

Klopp ready to put faith in young gun Brewster

Teenager Rhian Brewster could be in line for his Liverpool debut against Barcelona tonight as injury problems have forced manager Jurgen Klopp to accelerate his promotion to the first team.

The 19-year-old, an Under-17 World Cup winner with England less than two years ago, was scheduled to join Klopp's squad full-time for pre-season training after ankle and knee ligament problems curtailed his progress.

He was injured in a club under-23 match in January 2018 and has been edging his way back to fitness in the last couple of months, but injuries to Roberto Firmino and Mohamed Salah has left Klopp short of options up front for the Champions League semi-final second leg at home to Barcelona.

Brewster will be named in the matchday squad for only the second time, the first being as an unused substitute in the home defeat to Crystal Palace in April 2017 when Klopp's side was again ravaged by injury.

He travelled with the squad for Saturday's win at Newcastle as part of his on-going integration and will be on the bench at Anfield as Liverpool seek to overturn a 3-0 deficit against Barca on Tuesday night.

"Yes, there is a big chance. It's nearly sure. It's guaranteed," said Klopp when asked about Brewster's inclusion in the squad.

"And he's ready. The situations are always like this. In an ideal world, in a season you always have much more players than you can involve in a squad.

"Rhian has now arrived with us after being heavily injured. Day by day, he has got better and better and he has been in just outstanding shape for the last three or four weeks, but the other players were there as well.

"But next season he will be playing 100 per cent and he knows that. I have told him already.

"It's just good so now it's really nice in a difficult situation that we can give him that spot in the squad and have him there to bring on as a striker.

"When you're on the bench, you are an option to play."

Brewster, signed from Chelsea at the age of 15, is very highly-rated at the club and agreed his first professional, five-year, contract last summer after interest from Borussia Monchengladbach.

With Daniel Sturridge set to leave Liverpool at the end of the season when his contract expires and the future of Divock Origi - despite scoring some crucial goals in their title challenge this season - in doubt, the teenager has been pencilled in for the senior squad for some time and has been training with them at Melwood as a result.

It is hoped if he can maintain the progress showed moving through the youth team ranks at the club's Kirkby academy he could save the club millions in the transfer market as Klopp looks to freshen up his forward line.

Many are comparing Tuesday's task to the comeback Liverpool pulled off three years ago against, coincidentally, Dortmund in a Europa League quarter-final at Anfield when they won in added time from 4-2 down on aggregate with 25 minutes remaining.

Klopp, however, has another story about his former club he feels is more relevant ahead of the semi-final second leg.

"I don't think too much about Dortmund. My own personal little story is about Real Madrid, years ago with Dortmund," he said.

"We lost 3-0 there but then at home we changed seven or eight positions and we won 2-0 and we should have won 5-0 without a shadow of a doubt. We were clearly the better side.

"But it was Madrid then and it's Barcelona now. It's a big difference. I don't want to talk too much, but I have told the players that story.

"It doesn't mean that it will happen again but it is enough for me to believe. That is what we do, not more."

Klopp, outwardly at least, insists the job against Ernesto Valverde's side is not an insurmountable one even without the injured pair of Mohamed Salah (concussion) and Roberto Firmino (muscle tear).

His team have proved many times this season - they lead the Premier League statistics in terms of winning goals scored in the final 15 minutes - that no cause is ever lost.

"I had these games quite a couple of times," he added. "In my experience, it's not that before the game you think: 'Yeah, I believe we will do it.' I'm completely fine with the chance. I don't think we have more, but I don't think we have less.

"We believe in the chance, we believe in the opportunity, not in the result.

"A lot of things are possible. It's about how much. Can we believe at the beginning in the opportunity? Then we have to do the right things on the right pitch and then you need a bit of luck, which we didn't have in Barcelona.

"That is clear. We need a little bit more (luck) at home. Then we need a fantastic atmosphere. We have two of the best strikers in the world not involved, so of course we need the crowd involved.

"Some things will be new, 100 per cent, with not really any time to train. That's how it is but I am still looking forward to it. It's all good.

"It's the Champions League and you want to be a part of it. We were so happy when we came through the quarter-final and now we are in the semi and we have to use the second leg."

Follow Liverpool v Barcelona with our live blog on RTÉ.ie and the RTÉ News Now App or watch it live on RTÉ2 and the RTÉ Player from 7pm.

Read Next