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I tried to talk Liverpool out of signing my star striker – but were stunned by how much they paid

Roberto Firmino may be the centre-forward most synonymous with Jurgen Klopp’s time at Liverpool, but the German’s reign began and ended with a more traditional number nine.

The Brazilian is an Anfield legend, having won every major honor during his eight years at the club. Returning 111 goals and 72 assists from 362 appearances, he reinvented himself as a high-impact new fake as the central cog between Mohamed Salah and Sadio Mane in the Reds’ famous attacking triumvirate.




As he got older, he was no longer a guaranteed starter. Diogo Jota emerged as a much more prolific option, albeit less reliable in terms of availability due to injury, before Klopp brought in Darwin Nunez from Benfica in the summer of 2022 in a deal worth up to to a record £85 million.

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Although he is quick and capable of playing everywhere, profile-wise the Uruguayan is a more traditional number nine. Which is somewhat ironic considering Klopp dropped such a player shortly after taking charge at Anfield.

Firmino’s transition into a false nine only began after Klopp’s appointment in October 2015, having initially failed to impress under predecessor Brendan Rodgers. With the deadly Daniel Sturridge currently injury-prone, the German turned to Firmino after deciding that Liverpool’s traditional number nine at the time did not suit his preferred style.

That striker was Christian Benteke. While the Reds’ recruitment team wanted Firmino previously, Rodgers wanted the Belgian. FSG ended up signing both of them.

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