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Revealed: First look at Liverpool and Jurgen Klopp documentary

Daily Mail Online 2025/2/17

A first look at the new Liverpool and Jurgen Klopp documentary has been unveiled by Prime Video, who will exclusively premiere the four-part series on February 28.

Klopp, who waved farewell to Anfield after nine memorable years last summer, will long be regarded as one of the greatest managers in Liverpool's history, having restored a winning culture to the historic club after a barren spell without silverware.

A series documenting the German's final season at Anfield, which saw the Reds lift the Carabao Cup and lay the foundations for a successful campaign under new boss Arne Slot this term, will be aired on Prime Video next month despite initial complications with finding a major streaming platform.

Filming for the series, which has been produced by Lorton Entertainment and is titled 'Doubters to Believers: Liverpool FC: Klopp's Era', began in December just one month before the manager publicly announced that he would be leaving Anfield at the end of the season.

The title references a key quote Klopp uttered during a press conference in his first few weeks at Anfield back in 2015: 'We have to change from doubters to believers'. 

In the trailer dropped by Prime Video on Tuesday, fans have been given a glimpse into the four-part series, which appears to capture the highs and lows of Klopp's long farewell on Merseyside.

Prime Video has unveiled a trailer for the new Liverpool and Jurgen Klopp documentary
Prime Video has unveiled a trailer for the new Liverpool and Jurgen Klopp documentary
The series, which premieres on February 28, will document Klopp's final months at Liverpool
The series, which premieres on February 28, will document Klopp's final months at Liverpool
Klopp, who now works for Red Bull, announced his exit from Liverpool in January of last year
Klopp, who now works for Red Bull, announced his exit from Liverpool in January of last year

The trailer begins with Klopp walking out of Anfield's iconic tunnel and on to the pitch, dressed in a Liverpool scarf.

The documentary vows to take fans behind the scenes to watch Klopp's final season in unprecedented detail, with an action-packed campaign seeing Liverpool finish third in the Premier League, reach the quarter finals of the FA Cup and Europa League and lift the Carabao Cup.

A highlight of the series is said to be the full access that the camera crew had to Liverpool’s dressing room celebrations following their triumphant victory in the final against Chelsea. 

Virgil van Dijk netted the winner in added time on a night where a handful of Klopp's regular starters, including Mohamed Salah, Darwin Nunez, Dominik Szoboszlai, Joel Matip, Trent Alexander-Arnold, Alisson Becker and Curtis Jones were all unavailable.

It led to Klopp putting his faith in several Liverpool youngsters during the match, with the likes Conor Bradley, Jarell Quansah, James McConnell, Bobby Clark and Jayden Danns either starting on appearing off the substitutes' bench.

The trailer ended with a short remark from Liverpool's star goalkeeper Alisson, who poignantly says: 'This is football, everything has a beginning and everything has an end.'

Since his exit from Anfield, Klopp has taken on a new role at Red Bull as the company's Global Head of Soccer, officially starting the position in January.

He opened up on his Liverpool exit for the very first time after taking part in a press conference last Tuesday.

Behind-the-scenes dressing room footage will be a key aspect of the four-part documentary
Behind-the-scenes dressing room footage will be a key aspect of the four-part documentary
Klopp hugs youngster Jayden Danns after the Reds lift the Carabao Cup during his final season
Klopp hugs youngster Jayden Danns after the Reds lift the Carabao Cup during his final season

'When you are in the job for 25 years, it's super intense,' Klopp explained. 'The only thing is that I am a very curious person and I couldn't feed that anymore.

'It was just game after game after game after game. You keep a specific level and I wasn't extremely happy with that to be honest. I always want to try to learn new stuff and I felt when I heard about the role that's what I would do.

'I no longer have to improve the game in individual places, but I want to make football better all over the world. 

'No longer prepare a new game every week, but work on the bigger picture.'

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