Liverpool coach Jurgen Klopp surprised by Kyle Walker tweeting mocking draw against Leicester



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Jürgen Klopp reacted to Kyle Walker's tweet mocking Liverpool, claiming he had never lost any points.

Walker posted a tweet Thursday afternoon to mock Liverpool 's inability to score seven points ahead of the Premier League standings.

The league leaders for Klopp drew 1-1 with Leicester City at Anfield on Wednesday night, a day after Manchester City suffered a surprise loss to Newcastle United.


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Walker posted a photo of Harry Maguire, the scorer of Leicester's equalizer, talking to his partner Fern Hawkins with the caption: "So they thought they would be 7 points ahead …"

The message was then deleted. Pep Guardiola, the city manager, said Friday he had no problem with Walker's use of social media.

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1/25 25. Michael Carrick

Behind Ronaldo and Rooney, the next most important man of United's recovery in the second half of the 2000s. He was a stylish player for Tottenham, but over the past eleven seasons at Old Trafford he gave them the control that they were lacking in their difficult years of the early 2000s. And it was even more important for their resurgence in Europe.

Getty

2/25 24. Eden Hazard

The most decisive offensive player in the Premier League this decade, Hazard arrived at Chelsea in 2012 in Lille. He was then Chelsea's best player in his title wins in 2015 and 2017, combining an ability to shatter defensemen with an eye for goal and a muscular physicality that opponents often underestimate. And even then, we feel that his best football is still in front of him.

Getty

3/25 23. Didier Drogba

The most important signature of the Jose Mourinho era in Chelsea, Drogba left Marseille in 2004 and, once he was established, he was the ideal modern target man. His power, presence and goals were crucial for Chelsea de Mourinho, then for Carlo Ancelotti. He won three titles before coming back to help in the 2014-15 win.

Getty

4/25 22. Peter Schmeichel

With all due respect to Petr Cech, Schmeichel is the biggest goalkeeper in the Premier League, a man as important as Eric Cantona to give Manchester United the presence, the charisma and the quality they needed to reaffirmed as the country's best team in the 1990s. Won five titles at United and then played for Aston Villa and Manchester City.

Getty

5/25 21. Luis Suarez

He only played in the Premier League for three and a half years and yet he was so incredibly good during his brief stint in Liverpool that he asked for inclusion. His 2013-14 season remains the best season for a player in Premier League history, where he has scored 31 goals and is close to winning the first Liverpool title in a generation. I wonder what he could have done in a better team? In his first year in Barcelona, ​​he won the Champions League.

Getty

6/25 20. Sol Campbell

During his long summit, Campbell was a mixture of athleticism, bravery and intelligence, anchoring the Spurs' defense for six seasons, Arsenal for five and Portsmouth at their best for three more. He was one of the crucial players that helped Arsenal reach a higher level, and the 2001-02 and 2003-04 titles, even though this controversial free trade movement will never be forgiven by Tottenham fans.

Getty

7/25 19. Sergio Aguero

One of the greatest strikers of the Premier League era, and the man who provided his best moment. Aguero will always be known as the man whose 94th-minute winner won the 2011-2012 title for Manchester City. But that was just one of the 122 goals he had scored in the Premier League in his six seasons in England, including four in which he was over 20 years old. If he had stayed unscathed, he would have even more.

Getty

8/25 18. David Beckham

Another star of the triumphant Manchester United team, Beckham's fame has finally transcended United, the Premier League and football itself after his arrival at Real Madrid in 2003. But before that, he was a midfielder constant, dangerous and hard-working than anyone else at the six Premier League titles he won while at Old Trafford.

Getty

9/25 17. Andy Cole

Number three on the Premier League history scorers list with 187 goals, Cole was one of the stars of Kevin Keegan's first big team in Newcastle United. In 1995, he made a surprising transfer to Manchester United and, after a slow start, he finally became a great success: he joined brilliantly with Dwight Yorke during the triple season, before being sold to Blackburn in 2001.

Getty

10/25 16. Michael Owen

Like Rooney, an attacker who has suffered so much from having managed so early: Owen has won two Golden Boots of the Premier League in adolescence. It was electric between the first Liverpool team at 17 and his departure for Real Madrid at 24. He even won the Golden Ball. Finally got his medal, with Manchester United, but it's the first half of his career for which we will always remember him.

Getty

11/25 15. Paul Scholes

Perhaps underestimated at the height of his powers, Scholes was the specialist for the pbad and the move at the heart of United's big teams. After defeating an injury to one eye, he played some of his best football games in the last years of his career. He even came out of retirement in 2012, helping United win the 2012-13 Premier League title, the sixth of his career.

Getty

12/25 14. David Silva

Silva, the biggest player of Manchester City, was signed in Valencia in 2010 and offers them for seven years a highly qualified control in the middle of the field. City would never have won their two Premier League titles without Silva pulling the strings and he's shown more consistency than his two best colleagues, Yaya Toure and Sergio Aguero.

Getty

13/25 13. Dennis Bergkamp

As important as Thierry Henry in the style and success of Arsene Wenger's early years, Bergkamp preceded Wenger's arrival, but was his ideal representative on the field. Bergkamp was, in his own words, the "technical leader" of these Arsenal teams and those three Premier League titles before his retirement would have been unimaginable without him.

Getty

14/25 12. John Terry

Last great central defender to the old, Terry was one of the building blocks of the great Chelsea team in the 2000s and has survived all, leaving the club only in 2017. He was the captain and the defensive organizer of four Premier League matches. titles and was there for a fifth under Antonio Conte, although at that time he was in a partial role.

Getty

15/25 11. Wayne Rooney

Out of the prodigy of adolescence at Everton, he became the most important man at Manchester United before returning to Goodison with five Premier League titles and 198 league goals. Happy to play in front of the field or outside, always with the same audacity, conviction and talent. The questions he faces to know if he has realized his potential testify to his quality and achievements before the age of 25.

Getty

16/25 10. Eric Cantona

Not the best Manchester United player in the Premier League, but one of the most important. He gave United the extra edge he needed when he arrived in 1992, inspiring them with his charisma and imagination, as well as an elegant approach to the game that stood out in the early '90s. He played only four and a half seasons at United, but that was more than enough to make his mark.

Getty

17/25 9. Rio Ferdinand

The most accomplished defenseman of the time, he was promising at West Ham United and Leeds United, then brilliantly in his 12 seasons at Manchester United. He won the league six times, anchoring the defense of the greatest English team of this century. Neither United nor England have known what to do.

Getty

18/25 8. Alan Shearer

The biggest scorer in the Premier League, by far. Wayne Rooney, who has 260 goals, is 62 seconds. He is the result of defensive terror since the founding of the league in 1992 with Southampton until his retirement in 2006. He won only one title, Blackburn having joined Newcastle in 1996, but a hero out there, overcome knee injuries and stay dangerous.

Getty

19/25 7. Steven Gerrard

Although Gerrard is arguably the greatest Premier League player to ever win a medal, he has inspired nearly 15 years of Liverpool's team. He never had a midfielder that was as powerful as he, as spectacular as he was, but he was never able to find the team that would lead him to the title. He approached in 2009 and 2014, and unfortunately, he will always be badociated with this glorious failure.

Getty

20/25 6. Patrick Vieira

First and best sign of the reign of Arsene Wenger Arsenal, he arrived at 20 years, was not installed in Milan and left three times in the Premier League. He was as much a buzzword for leadership, tenacity, resilience and skill under pressure as his great rival Roy Keane. There was no player like him or Keane in the 12 years following their departure.

Getty

21/25 5. Frank Lampard

Incomparable as a midfielder consisting of goals: 10 consecutive seasons with twice the number of goals scored in the Premier League. He was the smart engine of the big Chelsea teams in the 2000s, winning three league titles as well as the Champions League in 2012. He retired with 177 goals in the Premier League, the fourth highest of all time, n & rsquo; Having never played before.

Getty

22/25 4. Ryan Giggs

No one can compete with Giggs for longevity, but it's even more than that. His total of 13 medals in the Premier League will surely never be equaled and he will be remembered as a man whose game has changed as his body has done, with more success than anyone else. He was an explosive winger in the first major United team in the mid-90s, in the late 2000s and early 2010s, ending as a thoughtful midfielder.

Getty

23/25 3. Roy Keane

Behind Sir Alex Ferguson, Roy Keane was the next most important man to establish Manchester United's Premier League hegemony. Arrived as a British record in 1993, he then inspired United for the double of 1994, the 1996 double and the best of all the triples of 1999. He was an imposing presence in the middle of the field and, after fainting in the 2000s, United spent years trying to replace him.

Getty

24/25 2. Thierry Henry

Unlike Ronaldo, Henry gave England the best years of his career, winning two Premier League titles and four Golden Boots during his long purple spell in the first half of the 2000s. Arsenal was at the forefront of technology and embodied his best qualities: speed, style, skill, imagination and clbad. He is the fifth-leading scorer in the history of the Premier League, a remarkable feat for a player who has only spent seven seasons here.

Getty

25/25 1. Cristiano Ronaldo

No player has ever dominated and decided the Premier League as Cristiano Ronaldo did for Manchester United between 2006 and 2009. Those three consecutive seasons, where he also won the title – he also won the 2008 Champions League – remain the culmination of his consistent performance in the history of this competition. And he was only 24 when he left for Real Madrid. Imagine what he could have achieved in England had he stayed.

Getty


1/25 25. Michael Carrick

Behind Ronaldo and Rooney, the next most important man of United's recovery in the second half of the 2000s. He was a stylish player for Tottenham, but over the past eleven seasons at Old Trafford he gave them the control that they were lacking in their difficult years of the early 2000s. And it was even more important for their resurgence in Europe.

Getty

2/25 24. Eden Hazard

The most decisive offensive player in the Premier League this decade, Hazard arrived at Chelsea in 2012 in Lille. He was then Chelsea's best player in his title wins in 2015 and 2017, combining an ability to shatter defensemen with an eye for goal and a muscular physicality that opponents often underestimate. And even then, we feel that his best football is still in front of him.

Getty

3/25 23. Didier Drogba

The most important signature of the Jose Mourinho era in Chelsea, Drogba left Marseille in 2004 and, once he was established, he was the ideal modern target man. His power, presence and goals were crucial for Chelsea de Mourinho, then for Carlo Ancelotti. He won three titles before coming back to help in the 2014-15 win.

Getty

4/25 22. Peter Schmeichel

With all due respect to Petr Cech, Schmeichel is the biggest goalkeeper in the Premier League, a man as important as Eric Cantona to give Manchester United the presence, the charisma and the quality they needed to reaffirmed as the country's best team in the 1990s. Won five titles at United and then played for Aston Villa and Manchester City.

Getty


5/25 21. Luis Suarez

He only played in the Premier League for three and a half years and yet he was so incredibly good during his brief stint in Liverpool that he asked for inclusion. His 2013-14 season remains the best season for a player in Premier League history, where he has scored 31 goals and is close to winning the first Liverpool title in a generation. I wonder what he could have done in a better team? In his first year in Barcelona, ​​he won the Champions League.

Getty

6/25 20. Sol Campbell

During his long summit, Campbell was a mixture of athleticism, bravery and intelligence, anchoring the Spurs' defense for six seasons, Arsenal for five and Portsmouth at their best for three more. He was one of the crucial players that helped Arsenal reach a higher level, and the 2001-02 and 2003-04 titles, even though this controversial free trade movement will never be forgiven by Tottenham fans.

Getty

7/25 19. Sergio Aguero

One of the greatest strikers of the Premier League era, and the man who provided his best moment. Aguero will always be known as the man whose 94th-minute winner won the 2011-2012 title for Manchester City. But that was just one of the 122 goals he had scored in the Premier League in his six seasons in England, including four in which he was over 20 years old. If he had stayed unscathed, he would have even more.

Getty

8/25 18. David Beckham

Another star of the triumphant Manchester United team, Beckham's fame has finally transcended United, the Premier League and football itself after his arrival at Real Madrid in 2003. But before that, he was a midfielder constant, dangerous and hard-working than anyone else at the six Premier League titles he won while at Old Trafford.

Getty


9/25 17. Andy Cole

Number three on the Premier League history scorers list with 187 goals, Cole was one of the stars of Kevin Keegan's first big team in Newcastle United. In 1995, he made a surprising transfer to Manchester United and, after a slow start, he finally became a great success: he joined brilliantly with Dwight Yorke during the triple season, before being sold to Blackburn in 2001.

Getty

10/25 16. Michael Owen

Like Rooney, an attacker who has suffered so much from having managed so early: Owen has won two Golden Boots of the Premier League in adolescence. It was electric between the first Liverpool team at 17 and his departure for Real Madrid at 24. He even won the Golden Ball. Finally got his medal, with Manchester United, but it's the first half of his career for which we will always remember him.

Getty

11/25 15. Paul Scholes

Perhaps underestimated at the height of his powers, Scholes was the specialist for the pbad and the move at the heart of United's big teams. After defeating an injury to one eye, he played some of his best football games in the last years of his career. He even came out of retirement in 2012, helping United win the 2012-13 Premier League title, the sixth of his career.

Getty

12/25 14. David Silva

Silva, the biggest player of Manchester City, was signed in Valencia in 2010 and offers them for seven years a highly qualified control in the middle of the field. City would never have won their two Premier League titles without Silva pulling the strings and he's shown more consistency than his two best colleagues, Yaya Toure and Sergio Aguero.

Getty


13/25 13. Dennis Bergkamp

As important as Thierry Henry in the style and success of Arsene Wenger's early years, Bergkamp preceded Wenger's arrival, but was his ideal representative on the field. Bergkamp was, in his own words, the "technical leader" of these Arsenal teams and those three Premier League titles before his retirement would have been unimaginable without him.

Getty

14/25 12. John Terry

Last great central defender to the old, Terry was one of the building blocks of the great Chelsea team in the 2000s and has survived all, leaving the club only in 2017. He was the captain and the defensive organizer of four Premier League matches. titles and was there for a fifth under Antonio Conte, although at that time he was in a partial role.

Getty

15/25 11. Wayne Rooney

Out of the prodigy of adolescence at Everton, he became the most important man at Manchester United before returning to Goodison with five Premier League titles and 198 league goals. Happy to play in front of the field or outside, always with the same audacity, conviction and talent. The questions he faces to know if he has realized his potential testify to his quality and achievements before the age of 25.

Getty

16/25 10. Eric Cantona

Not the best Manchester United player in the Premier League, but one of the most important. He gave United the extra edge he needed when he arrived in 1992, inspiring them with his charisma and imagination, as well as an elegant approach to the game that stood out in the early '90s. He played only four and a half seasons at United, but that was more than enough to make his mark.

Getty


17/25 9. Rio Ferdinand

The most accomplished defenseman of the time, he was promising at West Ham United and Leeds United, then brilliantly in his 12 seasons at Manchester United. He won the league six times, anchoring the defense of the greatest English team of this century. Neither United nor England have known what to do.

Getty

18/25 8. Alan Shearer

The biggest scorer in the Premier League, by far. Wayne Rooney, who has 260 goals, is 62 seconds. He is the result of defensive terror since the founding of the league in 1992 with Southampton until his retirement in 2006. He won only one title, Blackburn having joined Newcastle in 1996, but a hero out there, overcome knee injuries and stay dangerous.

Getty

19/25 7. Steven Gerrard

Although Gerrard is arguably the greatest Premier League player to ever win a medal, he has inspired nearly 15 years of Liverpool's team. He never had a midfielder that was as powerful as he, as spectacular as he was, but he was never able to find the team that would lead him to the title. He approached in 2009 and 2014, and unfortunately, he will always be badociated with this glorious failure.

Getty

20/25 6. Patrick Vieira

First and best sign of the reign of Arsene Wenger Arsenal, he arrived at 20 years, was not installed in Milan and left three times in the Premier League. He was as much a buzzword for leadership, tenacity, resilience and skill under pressure as his great rival Roy Keane. There was no player like him or Keane in the 12 years following their departure.

Getty


21/25 5. Frank Lampard

Incomparable as a midfielder consisting of goals: 10 consecutive seasons with twice the number of goals scored in the Premier League. He was the smart engine of the big Chelsea teams in the 2000s, winning three league titles as well as the Champions League in 2012. He retired with 177 goals in the Premier League, the fourth highest of all time, n & rsquo; Having never played before.

Getty

22/25 4. Ryan Giggs

No one can compete with Giggs for longevity, but it's even more than that. His total of 13 medals in the Premier League will surely never be equaled and he will be remembered as a man whose game has changed as his body has done, with more success than anyone else. He was an explosive winger in the first major United team in the mid-90s, in the late 2000s and early 2010s, ending as a thoughtful midfielder.

Getty

23/25 3. Roy Keane

Behind Sir Alex Ferguson, Roy Keane was the next most important man to establish Manchester United's Premier League hegemony. Arrived as a British record in 1993, he then inspired United for the double of 1994, the 1996 double and the best of all the triples of 1999. He was an imposing presence in the middle of the field and, after fainting in the 2000s, United spent years trying to replace him.

Getty

24/25 2. Thierry Henry

Unlike Ronaldo, Henry gave England the best years of his career, winning two Premier League titles and four Golden Boots during his long purple spell in the first half of the 2000s. Arsenal was at the forefront of technology and embodied his best qualities: speed, style, skill, imagination and clbad. He is the fifth-leading scorer in the history of the Premier League, a remarkable feat for a player who has only spent seven seasons here.

Getty


25/25 1. Cristiano Ronaldo

No player has ever dominated and decided the Premier League as Cristiano Ronaldo did for Manchester United between 2006 and 2009. Those three consecutive seasons, where he also won the title – he also won the 2008 Champions League this competition . And he was only 24 when he left for Real Madrid. Imagine what he could have achieved in England had he stayed.

Getty

Klopp was not aware of this message when he was questioned about it at the press conference on Friday before the match, but he was surprised.

"I can not help that," he said. "I'm not sure what that says about us, it says more about the other person.

"I've never celebrated the fact that another team lost points or lost a match. For me, it's not allowed.

"That's how I understand sport. You have to do your own things, work and show your best performance. I do not understand.

"For fans, it's a little different, for the people involved, I do not understand, but it's nothing to criticize because I do not understand, so how can I criticize it?

"There will always be a group of people who hope you win and another group who hopes you will lose.

"You must ignore both in your preparation, and in the end, hopefully, you celebrate with those who want you to earn something."

Keep up-to-date with the latest transfer news, rumors and offers throughout the January window

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