The whispers have started already. Six months into life after Jurgen Klopp and some are wondering when he might come back.
It's natural, isn't it? The man gave us everything for nine years, transformed this club from also-rans to champions, and left a void that feels impossible to fill. The romantic in every Liverpool supporter wants to believe this isn't goodbye forever.
But here's the thing about comebacks. They rarely work the way we imagine them in our heads.
Klopp left for a reason. He was spent, emotionally drained, running on fumes after nearly a decade of intensity that would break most mortals. The man who gave us our sixth European Cup and first league title in 30 years walked away because he had nothing left to give.
So when fans dream of his return, what exactly are they hoping for? The energetic touchline presence who punched the air after every goal? The tactical innovator who revolutionised how we pressed? Or a different version, older, perhaps more measured, carrying the weight of expectation that comes with being the man who 'came back'?
The brutal truth is this: if Klopp does return one day, he won't be the same manager who left. Neither will Liverpool be the same club. And that gap between memory and reality could be painful for everyone involved.
Football history is littered with returns that tarnished legacies rather than enhanced them. The question isn't whether Klopp could come back, but whether he should risk what he's already built at Anfield.
Inspired by reporting from Ian Doyle, Liverpool Echo.
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