While speaking at an event hosted by Liverpool’s charitable arm, the LFC Foundation, Klopp made his stance crystal clear.
“I don’t miss the job, to be 100 percent honest,” he said. “Whatever you read in the newspapers for the next, at least, two to three years if there’s any football link to a coaching job you can be the first to say, ‘That’s bulls***!’ I’m not going to Rome. I got messages in the morning, ‘Roma is a nice city’, and I thought, ‘Yeah? But I heard that before’.”
When asked to elaborate on his timeline away from active coaching, Klopp didn’t mince words.
“The plan is forever. I’m not changing my mind now, now and now," he insisted. “What I’m doing now I really like. I create again a relationship with the people I work with and I want to build that, it’s cool. We kind of have a new life. It’s not three games a week, 12 press conferences and an interview every five minutes.
“Making a lineup is really difficult, telling this player he will not play, the doctor calls you and tells you he is injured, the doctor never calls and says, ‘By the way, just want to tell you they are all fit’. I don’t miss that, I had it long enough. I love the game, I still work in football and I do what I’m quite OK at and I want to do that and not just chasing the next thing. Maybe that grows in me, I don’t know. When I’m 70 and I say let’s go back, but I can’t see that.”