‘Goal Machine’ Mohamed Salah as Good as Lewandowski, Says Jürgen Klopp

Mohamed Salah celebrates after scoring against Crystal Palace at Anfield on 18 September. Photograph: Xinhua/Shutterstock
Mohamed Salah celebrates after scoring against Crystal Palace at Anfield on 18 September. Photograph: Xinhua/Shutterstock
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‘Goal Machine’ Mohamed Salah as Good as Lewandowski, Says Jürgen Klopp

Mohamed Salah celebrates after scoring against Crystal Palace at Anfield on 18 September. Photograph: Xinhua/Shutterstock
Mohamed Salah celebrates after scoring against Crystal Palace at Anfield on 18 September. Photograph: Xinhua/Shutterstock

Jürgen Klopp has said Mohamed Salah ranks alongside Robert Lewandowski as the best goalscorer he has coached, with the Egypt international closing on 100 Premier League goals for Liverpool.

Salah, 29, requires one goal to reach a league century for Liverpool and his next goal in any competition will make him the 10th-highest scorer in the club’s history. With 99 goals from 150 appearances, he can be the third-fastest to reach the milestone in the league for Liverpool after Roger Hunt (148 games) and Jack Parkinson (149).

This week Lewandowski, whom Klopp brought to Borussia Dortmund in 2010, collected the Golden Shoe award for Europe’s top goalscorer in 2020-21. The Liverpool manager believes Salah’s numbers, professionalism and hunger bear comparison to the “absolutely exceptional” Bayern Munich striker as the Egyptian takes his prolific form – 17 goals in Liverpool’s past 21 away fixtures – to Brentford on Saturday.

“Mo Salah is absolutely up there with him, there is no doubt about that,” Kloppsaid. “Mo is a goal machine. His professionalism is absolutely second to none. He does everything to be always fit and stay on track. First in, last out, all these kind of things – that’s Mo. On top of that, apart from his technical skill set, he is desperate to score goals and that is helpful as well. That is exactly how it is with Lewi. That’s good and very helpful for a football player.

“Whatever you do on a pitch, whatever you create, you need somebody who brings the ball over the line and in the back of the net. Mo is absolutely there with the best I ever saw. He knows that. The numbers he has are insane. I’m obviously blessed to work with some good players.”

Klopp, meanwhile, has expressed dismay at the timing of his team’s trip to Watford after the next international break. Brazil have called up goalkeeper Alisson and midfielder Fabinho, along with six other Premier League players, for their next round of World Cup qualifiers. Klopp is awaiting a resolution to the quarantine issues that marred the last international break – and Brazil’s third game, against Uruguay, will finish in the early hours (GMT) of Friday 15 October. Liverpool kick off at Vicarage Road at 12.30pm the following day.

Klopp said: “Obviously nobody thought about that and it’s a Liverpool problem, not a problem for anybody else. Good for Watford and all these kind of things, but I just don’t know how you can do these things and nobody reacts on the schedule. The schedule is always a problem but it’s like the TV guys and the Premier League just say: ‘OK, that’s how it is, they have to play.’ Let’s have a look at how we can sort that. It’s another thing that’s not good for the players and not good for the clubs.”



Antonelli Becomes F1's Youngest Polesitter in Any Format

May 2, 2025; Miami Gardens, FL, USA; Mercedes driver Kimi Antonelli (12) during Sprint Race Qualifying for the F1 Miami Grand Prix at Miami International Autodrome. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images
May 2, 2025; Miami Gardens, FL, USA; Mercedes driver Kimi Antonelli (12) during Sprint Race Qualifying for the F1 Miami Grand Prix at Miami International Autodrome. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images
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Antonelli Becomes F1's Youngest Polesitter in Any Format

May 2, 2025; Miami Gardens, FL, USA; Mercedes driver Kimi Antonelli (12) during Sprint Race Qualifying for the F1 Miami Grand Prix at Miami International Autodrome. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images
May 2, 2025; Miami Gardens, FL, USA; Mercedes driver Kimi Antonelli (12) during Sprint Race Qualifying for the F1 Miami Grand Prix at Miami International Autodrome. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

Mercedes' Italian rookie Kimi Antonelli became Formula One's youngest polesitter in any format after a mighty final lap in Miami Grand Prix sprint qualifying on Friday.
The 18-year-old, preparing for only his sixth grand prix weekend, lapped with a best time of one minute 26.482 seconds to pip McLaren's championship leader Oscar Piastri by 0.045 seconds.
McLaren's Lando Norris was third fastest with Red Bull's four-times world champion Max Verstappen completing the second row on the day he announced he had become a father for the first time.
"I did not see that coming, to be honest. I thought the lap was good and I was happy with it," said a surprised Antonelli, who replaced seven-times world champion Lewis Hamilton at Mercedes in January.
"There were still a few bits where I could have done a bit better but I feel super happy with how I put all the sectors together."
The previous youngest ever pole sitter was Sebastian Vettel at the age of 21 years and 73 days in 2008 at the Italian Grand Prix with Toro Rosso, now Racing Bulls, before sprint races existed.
According to Reuters, Mercedes boss Toto Wolff said it did not matter what kind of pole it was.
"It's about the trajectory. It's not whether it's a pole in only the sprint, or a pole tomorrow or in the future, he's done it and he's quickest," said the Austrian.
HAMILTON SEVENTH
Hamilton, winner of the first sprint race of the season in China from pole position for Ferrari, qualified seventh with teammate Charles Leclerc sixth. Mercedes' George Russell will line up ahead of them in fifth.
Only the top eight places in Saturday's 100km race score points.
Williams had Alex Albon qualify eighth with French rookie Isack Hadjar ninth for Racing Bulls and Fernando Alonso completing the top 10 for Aston Martin.
Piastri leads closest rival Norris by 10 points and will be chasing his third grand prix win in a row in Sunday's main event, with qualifying for that race taking place after the Saturday sprint.
"We can still fight from there in the sprint tomorrow. All in all pretty happy," said the Australian.
"We've got a bit more pace to unlock hopefully, so I'm feeling positive still. I'll try to make up a spot in the sprint before we get stuck into where the big points are."
Norris, who took his first grand prix win in Miami last year said he was also happy to get a good lap in.
Russell and Antonelli were one-two in the first phase of qualifying at the Hard Rock Stadium complex, with Red Bull's Yuki Tsunoda the big casualty of the session in 18th place.
The Japanese locked up into turn 17, failing to complete the lap, and then lost out when he slowed to leave a gap to Verstappen and then failed to beat the clock.
Alpine's Australian Jack Doohan also went out at the first hurdle, venting at the team for a pitlane mess-up with teammate Pierre Gasly, who made contact with the wall in phase two and qualified 13th.
"That's not acceptable," Doohan, still with a question mark over his future, fumed over the radio. "You guys put me out of Q1. That's a joke."
Norris was fastest in the second phase, ahead of Verstappen and Piastri.
Russell and Verstappen were the only ones to set a lap time early in Q3, with the others waiting until two minutes from the end to go out on track.
Antonelli emerged as the quickest, the first Italian to take a pole of any sort since Giancarlo Fisichella in Belgium with the Mercedes-powered Force India team in 2009.
"Well done, lad," said Antonelli's race engineer Peter 'Bono' Bonnington. "I think we're getting somewhere."