Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp has insisted he is charge of transfer policy at Anfield after sacked predecessor Brendan Rodgers revealed players were forced upon him.
Last weekend, Rogers gave an interview in which he said Mario Balotelli, now on loan at AC Milan after a poor debut season on Merseyside, was an example of a signing over whom he had no control.
Liverpool’s transfer committee, comprising the manager, representatives of the scouting department and senior management staff, has been widely criticised after several poor signings.
But Klopp was adamant he had the last word on signings, although he accepted there were limits to his authority.
“If I say, for example, we take Zlatan Ibrahimovic, who is 35, and we would have to pay £100 million ($142 million, 130 million euros) then maybe I should ask before I sign him,” Klopp said Tuesday.
“But it is as it is when I said on the first day I came here; it is like I used to work.
“Sometimes my staff and myself have an idea with a player we know or heard about and we collect some information about this.
“If I don’t want the player to come here he will not come and if the player I want does not fit our budget then he will not come too. That is absolutely normal.”
Klopp has, however, shown faith in his existing squad by giving goalkeeper Simon Mignolet a new long-term contract.
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