Abject Liverpool get nothing in Naples after one of the worst performances of Klopp’s reign

Maybe the “smart fox” got it wrong for once?

Before this game, Napoli boss Carlo Ancelotti suggested that Liverpool had “gone up a level” since last season; that they represented an even more formidable foe than the one which had gone so close to Champions League glory back in May.

If they have, they hid it well in Naples.

It looked as if the Reds would escape Stadio San Paolo with a draw they didn’t merit, but Lorenzo Insigne’s 90th-minute strike ensured justice was done. Not even Jurgen Klopp could argue his side were worth a result here.

The damage need not be huge in the grand scheme of things. Liverpool still have a handle on Group C, and have back-to-back games with its weakest team, Red Star Belgrade, to come.

They’ll need to improve quickly, though, and drastically. If Pep Guardiola was watching this performance, he’ll have been licking his lips. Liverpool were abject. They started slowly and got worse. “Not good enough,” admitted Klopp.

The last time they came here, eight years ago, they drew 0-0. It wasn’t a memorable night, but it could be excused by the fact that Roy Hodgson was in charge and the team featured such luminaries as Milan Jovanovic, David Ngog, Paul Konchesky and Christian Poulsen.

This was just as bad, if not worse. Liverpool failed to muster a single shot on target in the 90 minutes, playing with a lethargy and a sloppiness that we rarely see from this side. Maybe Hodgson gave the pre-match team talk?!

They could have been put away long before Insigne’s dramatic finale. Dries Mertens hit the bar from close range, Alisson Becker made a couple of smart saves from Arkadiusz Milik and Liverpool played with fire throughout, their passing risky and inaccurate, their threat on the counter-attack non-existent.

Lorenzo Insigne Napoli Liverpool Champions League

Sadio Mane struggled, Roberto Firmino was swamped, Mo Salah, at times triple-teamed by Napoli defenders, was as anonymous as the callers to Pete Price’s local radio show. “We weren’t good enough,” Klopp said. “And  normally when you are not good enough you lose football games.”

It felt it could be ‘one of those nights’ from very early on. Naby Keita’s injury, 19 minutes in, represents a further blow to Klopp’s side. It looks a bad one, a back problem according to Klopp. For the second time in three Champions League games, Liverpool lost a big player before half-time – Keita, like Salah before him, left the field in tears.

A headache, no doubt, for Klopp, who was far from amused by what he saw from his players. “It did not look like it should have looked,” he said of the performance.

He described his last trip to Napoli as “one of my bad experiences” and he can file this one right alongside it. This was a sixth defeat in nine games for the German against Italian opposition. Insigne scored the last time he was here, too. Painful.

He’s a naturally positive man, Klopp, but he’ll have had to look hard to find the plus points here.

“It’s always a bad sign when you have to say your goalkeeper was your best player, but it was obvious tonight,” he said. Alisson Becker was overworked; in front of him, there were too many errors, too little energy, not enough quality.

City’s presence at Anfield on Sunday should prompt a reaction, and it is needed. Those Liverpool fans who made the trip here deserved more than they got. Imagine being kept behind after a performance and a result like that!

“I have kind of a filter in my brain where I forget bad stuff immediately,” Klopp said pre-match, so we can assume this game will never be talked about again.

No wonder. It might just be the worst display Liverpool have delivered on his watch. They’ll need to improve immeasurably against Guardiola & Co.

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