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15th December 2016
09:47am GMT

According to football statistics website Squawka, Karius has made two errors in his 10 games that led to opposition goals. Simon Mignolet, Liverpool's number one last year, made four errors that led to goals last season.
Neither are exactly exemplary records, but Mignolet may just be a steadier option for the moment, and kept a clean sheet against Middlesbrough in Liverpool's 3-0 win on Wednesday night.
Karius looked less than pleased on the bench, which is perfectly understandable. When you find yourself sat next to Alberto Moreno at a football match, things probably aren't going great.
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Via The Daily Mail.[/caption]
Following the game, Jurgen Klopp backed his 'keeper, despite dropping him for the game against the Premier League's lowest scorers.
"I'm not interested in public pressure, I'm interested in the boy," Klopp said.
"There's no reason to push him through the situation, he loses confidence."Alex Ferguson took a similar measure with David de Gea when the Spanish 'keeper struggled during his first season at Manchester United, and that worked out well for all parties. The Liverpool manager appears to be taking a long-term view with Karius. https://twitter.com/SportsJOEdotie/status/808357115601580032 "Karius has a lot of things that other goalkeepers want to have," Klopp said.
"We want to develop the players, we don't want to convince people that he's not bad. I know him really well and he's much better than he has been in the last two games. It's a situation which Liverpool have as a long-term project."Klopp also added to his comments earlier this week about Gary and Phil Neville and their criticism of his 'keeper. https://twitter.com/SportsJOEdotie/status/808335193790681088 The Liverpool manager took the pair to task over their heavy criticism of his player, but stressed following the game on Wednesday that his comments were made tongue-in-cheek. "Maybe I can say it clearly: my criticism of pundits was not for one second serious," Klopp said.
"I only wanted to show how it feels to get criticised without having anything wrong, only with doing or saying for one second the wrong thing. "The pundits need to know how it feels, so that is why I said it."
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