What you say is true though, FSG do not have the means to make us competitive at the top level. That's why I think we as fans have put so much faith in Klopp, because he showed that he can topple financially superior teams when he was with Dortmund. A chequebook manager like Mourinho would be doomed to fail at Anfield because we cannot blow other teams out of the water with transfer fees and wages like all of his previous clubs have been able to do.
Thats also a reason why Mourinho didn't want the Everton job. No money. Makes me laugh he gets so much credit for only managing teams where he has had plenty of money to spend and the club itself is at the top level so easier to get players. Cheque book manager at its finest.
Me just about Born in 75. Earliest memory was 81 for me. ****ing loved the eighties. Well the football. Music was ****e
I was old enough to have watched us in the 80's and was nominally a Liverpool fan back then (but only because my school was obsessed with "are you a red or a blue", I liked red more so became a Liverpool fan). I really didn't follow closely as a kid. I watched the occasional match, I remember Rush and the boys and that we usually won, but don't think I grasped how good we really were. Oddly, it was after not being able to watch anything but a rare highlight for a decade after moving to the US I started watching properly. As soon as I could watch again, I did. I was an F1 fan in the 80s/90s and only paid minimal attention to football. Houllier was boss when I started really appreciating the sport. So, I really missed most of our good days.
Afternoon getting Dortmund into the relegation zone, running away and having a meltdown...... Maybe he is the right man. He isn't a chequebook manager so will be safe under FSG
People will point to the fact that he got them back into the top half, they will conveniently ignore the fact that the revival started once he announced he was leaving. lost the dressing room because they were fed up of being run into the ground, when they knew he was going the players started to perform again.