Jurgen Klopp was voted the League Managers’ Association
Manager of the Year on Monday after ending Liverpool’s 30-year wait to win the
Premier League.
Klopp led Liverpool to the Premier League title in the
same season they were FIFA Club World champions.
The German’s award was announced by former Manchester
United boss Alex Ferguson, after whom the trophy is now named.
“Jurgen, fantastic,” Ferguson said on Sky
Sports. “We speak about Leeds spending 16 years in the Championship, but
Liverpool 30 years since winning that league, incredible.
“You thoroughly deserved it. The performance level of
your team was outstanding. Your personality runs right throughout the whole
club. It was a marvellous performance.
“I’ll forgive you for waking me up at 3.30am to tell
me you have won the league! Thank you, but anyway, you thoroughly deserved it.
Well done.”
Former Borussia Dortmund boss Klopp said of Ferguson:
“I know it’s not 100 percent appropriate as a Liverpool manager but I
admire him. I remember he was the first British manager I met.
“We had breakfast. I’m not sure how much he remembers
but I remember because for me this moment was like meeting the Pope. It was
absolutely great and from that first season we clicked.
“I didn’t think at this moment I would have a trophy
in my hands named after him.”
Chris Wilder, last year’s winner of the award, settled for
the runner-up spot this time after Sheffield United’s impressive first season
back in the Premier League.
Meanwhile, Klopp wants to retain a lean squad to ensure Liverpool
remain competitive next season.
The Reds boss used 24 players in the Premier League this
term.
Klopp gave chances to some of the club’s academy players
in the FA and League Cups to cope with fixture congestion.
But he believes keeping as small a core as possible keeps
the players on their toes.
“The solution cannot be to have a much bigger squad
for the specific moment and then realise you cannot use all the players,”
Klopp said.
“These players can only play the football they play
because they know they are needed.
“They are all human beings and nobody can be held
back for a year and then on the last day of the year be told, ‘Now we need
you’.
“In between now and then there must be a lot of
training and support and challenges stuff like this.
“The
size of the squad is not that important to me, the quality of the squad is very
much so.”