Xabi Alonso is unlikely to be on Liverpool’s shortlist to replace Jurgen Klopp as the Merseyside club do not believe he will be available this summer.
Alonso has long been considered the frontrunner to replace Klopp since the German’s shock announcement that he is quitting Anfield at the end of the season. But the club is pressing ahead in considering alternative candidates after it emerged that Alonso plans to remain at Bayer Leverkusen.
That means Sporting Lisbon’s Ruben Amorim and Brighton and Hove Albion’s Roberto de Zerbi are now the outstanding remaining candidates for the imminent vacancy at Anfield as Liverpool look to whittle down the contenders in the coming weeks.
De Zerbi will get his chance to impress this weekend when his Brighton side face Klopp’s in the Premier League. Amorim, meanwhile, has many admirers having ended Sporting’s 19-year wait to be Portuguese champions and having won three domestic cup competitions in an impressive start to his coaching career.
The prospect of Alonso, a former player and Champions League winner, returning to Anfield to build on Klopp’s work appealed to the romanticists who recall the elegant Spaniard pulling the strings in Liverpool’s midfield between 2004 and 2009.
Even Klopp seemed to be on board with that idea, giving the impression that Alonso was ‘the anointed one’ with his extravagant praise of the Leverkusen coach last month.
“The next generation is already there and I would say Xabi is the stand-out in that department,” Klopp said. “A former world-class player, obviously coaching family as well which helps a little bit. He was like a coach already when he was playing.
“The football he is playing, the teams he sets up, the transfers he did – it was absolutely exceptional. Obviously when you look through the Europa League, Leverkusen is one of the favourites there as well so that could be the season for Leverkusen. Really crazy.”
Liverpool compiling information about potential managers
From Liverpool’s perspective, the 42-year-old had frontrunner status thrust upon him externally immediately after Klopp announced that he will leave. Since Klopp’s statement, Liverpool have appointed a new sporting director, Richard Hughes, who will take over in June, while Fenway Sports Group have reunited with former sporting director Michael Edwards who is the American owners’ football chief executive.
They will have their own ideas on a successor, while the club’s data analysts, led by Will Spearman, have already been compiling dossiers on those most suitable for the post.
Alonso was under strong consideration alongside others, and would naturally have had a strong claim for the job if he felt the time was right to move to England.
His seeming lack of availability is undoubtedly a blow, especially to the supporters who made him their No 1 choice, but Liverpool are sure there are others capable of moving the squad forward in the full-throttle style which has become the norm under Klopp.
Bayern: ‘It will be difficult to sign Alonso’
Liverpool are not the only club anticipating that Alonso will stay at Leverkusen. Bayern Munich’s honorary president, Uli Hoeness, said his club had effectively given up trying to convince him to move to the Allianz Arena.
“I feel that it will be very difficult to sign Xabi Alonso, not to say probably impossible,” he said. “I can certainly imagine him staying at Bayer Leverkusen to continue his job.
“[Alonso] is more inclined to stay at Bayer Leverkusen in view of their current successes, because he would not want to leave them behind. Let’s say if he had two or three more years of success, it would probably be easier to bring him out of there.”
Alonso himself has remained tight-lipped despite being strongly linked with both stellar jobs. There are also suggestions Real Madrid see him as the natural heir to Carlo Ancelotti when the legendary Italian moves on.
A studious player, Alonso is evidently equally conscientious about how he will map out his coaching career.
He was patient in his first steps in management, rejecting several offers from big European clubs while learning his craft as Real Sociedad’s ‘B’ coach.
Despite incredible success at Leverkusen, where his side is still unbeaten in all competitions this season and is on the verge of winning the Bundesliga title, it would appear he is determined to work to his own timeline rather than jump into one of the world’s biggest clubs at the first opportunity.
As Liverpool consider alternatives, the only guarantee is that Klopp’s replacement will be obliged to play in the same attacking manner which has brought every major honour to Anfield since 2019.