da doce: Jurgen Klopp has vehemently denied allegations that Trent Alexander-Arnold was ‘forced back' from injury by the Liverpool medical staff.
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Alexander-Arnold subbed off early against Burnley Klopp informed that injury was in "same area" in knee Staring at a lengthy spell on the sidelines Getty ImagesWHAT HAPPENED?
The England international has managed just two starts since he returned from a knee problem that he picked up against Arsenal in the FA Cup in January. Although Alexander-Arnold bossed in the first half against Burnley duringLiverpool's 3-1 win over the Clarets, Klopp had to take him off at half-time after he complained of having discomfort in the "same area."
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It was speculated that Alexander-Arnold was hurried back into action to bolster Liverpool's campaign as they fight for silverware on multiple fronts. However, Klopp dismissed these claims and said: "I got the news that there was a discussion that we might have forced Trent back because [he had] two setbacks.
“It’s really unfortunate, nobody wants that and nobody’s doing that (forcing the player back). [There are] different cases, different scenarios, and, as long as I am here, we never forced anybody back and never will."
THE BIGGER PICTURE
Kopp insisted that the players were given the green signal only because they were "fit" and the medical staff is now working to get both Dominik Szoboszlai, who is nursing a hamstring injury, and Alexander-Arnold back on the pitch as quickly as possible.
"We work in a high-performance area where, if you had the same injury, you are fit after three days and [the player] is fit after four weeks because they have to sprint and stuff like this," he said.
“We always try to catch the earliest moment but unfortunately when we catch that moment, nobody speaks about it. Like with Macca (Alexis MacAllister), or recently with Diogo (Diogo Jota), that’s a job we have to do. But the last decision is then always by the player and if we always listen only to the player then they would play after two weeks and then it’s a real problem.
"So the boys were, at the moment when they played, they were fit. But the situation told us then differently because it happened again. We will never know if it would have happened anyway or if it just happened because there was something before. Very, very unlucky and unfortunate, absolutely, but I had that a couple of times in my time as a manager, not only here. It is not great, but nothing else.
"It says nothing about the quality of anybody but in the world we are living in there is always [talk about] the medical department. We have to bring the boys as back as soon as possible but never sooner than they are ready.”
GettyWHAT NEXT?
Alexander-Arnold's injury might force him to miss key fixtures, including the Carabao Cup final against Chelsea and subsequent Premier League clashes against Nottingham Forest and Manchester City. Similarly, Szoboszlai's hamstring problem raises doubts about his availability for the cup final at Wembley on February 25. However, the Reds have been handed a major boost ahead of their clash against Brentford as Mohamed Salah is "back in full training" and will be available for selection.