Jurgen Klopp wants team to keep fans glued to their seats
Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp believes fans will continue to stream for an early exit at Anfield until the team give them something to stay for.
The German admitted he felt alone as he saw numbers leaving following Scott Dannâs 82nd-minute winner in Crystal Palaceâs 2-1 win, after Philippe Coutinhoâs third goal in two matches had cancelled out Yannick Bolasieâs opener.
âEighty-two minutes â game over,â said the German, who after his first home game against Southampton last month said he saw the team accepting they could not change the outcome after the visitorsâ 84th-minute equaliser.
âWe are responsible that nobody can leave the stadium a minute before the last whistle because everything can happen.
âBetween 82 and 94 (there were four minutes of added time) you can make eight goals, if you want, but you have to work for it.
âThat is what we have to show and we didnât and things are like they are.
âWe decide when it is over.â
It was a first defeat at Liverpool for Klopp, who is awaiting scans on Mamadou Sakhoâs knee injury to discover the extent of the damage, and the manager was disappointed with his sideâs slow start and then lacklustre finish.
âThis is not the first time I lose a game you donât have to lose,â he added.
âWith our start we opened the door a little bit for Palace and we were asking for this goal and we got it (when Bolasie scored).
âBetween the good game against Rubin Kazan and today there was only one thing to talk about â is it too much playing?
âOnce again â I decide if I am tired, nobody else.
âIf everyone thinks we gave everything we had then it is wrong. Of course we could do more.
âMaybe not more running but to be more awake from the beginning, to be more clear.â
Palace boss Alan Pardew praised the unheralded Dann for his all-round contribution.
âHis goal sums him up. You could see he was going to win that ball, no-one was going to stop him and he defends like that,â Pardew said.
âI really think he has been underestimated throughout his career and I wouldnât have said that until I manage him.
âNow I manage him I realise how good he is. He can be really proud of his performance. He was superb in everything he did.â



