As Julien approached David Dein's office, he could hear the murmur of conversation coming through the partially open door.
When he pushed it fully open, he found David rising from behind his desk while a middle-aged white man in a gray suit occupied the single-seater sofa near the window.
The visitor had a lean build, wore thin-frad glasses perched on his nose, and held a cup of unfinished tea. The mont Julien entered, he imdiately set down the cup and stood, his smile carrying professional warmth without the distance that sotis accompanied business formality.
"Julien, co in." Dein beckoned with a welcoming gesture, guiding Julien toward the visitor. "This is Marc Kosicke, Jürgen's agent. He made a special trip to lwood specifically to et you."
Kosicke extended his hand first, his grip was firm and confident.
"Julien, finally getting to et you in person. I've heard Jürgen ntion your na quite frequently over recent months." His English carried a subtle German accent.
"Last year when you were still playing in Ligue 1, Jürgen specifically requested match footage to study. He told afterward, 'This kid is absolutely destined for superstardom.' Though I must admit, he certainly didn't anticipate you'd already be on the Ballon d'Or's twenty-three-player shortlist by this year. Julien, you've exceeded our expectations dramatically!"
Julien returned the handshake politely. "Mr. Kosicke, thank you for the kind words. Please convey my appreciation to Coach Klopp for his recognition."
Dein settled into a nearby chair, adding with amusent, "Marc just spent the better part of an hour telling that Jürgen had been trying to bring you to Dortmund for ages."
Kosicke responded with a regretful smile, spreading his hands in a gesture of helpless resignation.
"It's absolutely true. Last year Jürgen specifically approached Dortmund's managent about securing Julien's transfer from Bastia. But as you both understand, Dortmund's financial situation simply couldn't support that kind of expenditure. The numbers didn't work regardless of how badly Jürgen wanted to make it happen."
He paused intentionally, his expression was growing more earnest as his eyes t Julien's directly. "Jürgen was disappointed about that missed opportunity for quite so ti. He kept saying things like, 'With talent like that, if I could work with him personally, he'd develop even faster. What a waste that we can't make it happen.'"
Julien responded with delicacy. "Receiving such an evaluation from him is genuinely humbling. I'm honored that he thinks so highly of my potential."
Kosicke leaned forward slightly. "Actually, beyond coming here on Jürgen's behalf to et you personally, I also wanted to give you so insight into his thinking. He's extrely interested in the Liverpool opportunity, more than just professionally interested, genuinely excited about the possibilities."
He glanced toward Dein, receiving an implicit nod of permission before continuing.
"Liverpool possesses deep heritage, exceptional players like yourself and Suárez already in place, and now ownership demonstrating genuine commitnt to investing in success. For Jürgen, this isn't rely another coaching position. This represents a special project, the opportunity to build sothing truly distinctive, a team with unique identity and character."
Kosicke's intensity increased as he delivered his next statent. "He's even discussed with how he might structure attacking tactics specifically around you and Suárez as the central crucial points."
Then ca the question that seed to carry particular importance, delivered while maintaining unwavering eye contact:
"Jürgen specifically asked to ask this question to you directly: Do you truly understand the extent of your own talent? Do you genuinely understand what you're capable of achieving?"
The unexpected nature of the question caught Julien slightly off-guard, his expression revealed slight confusion.
Kosicke didn't explain imdiately, instead gave a mysterious smile.
"I'm rely the ssenger delivering his words exactly as spoken. I suspect Jürgen has identified sothing in you that others haven't recognized yet. I've learned to trust his judgnt completely. From the very beginning of our professional relationship, his eye for talent has been proven remarkably accurate."
Julien nodded slowly, processing the cryptic ssage while Kosicke turned to address Dein, launching into the story of how their professional partnership had begun.
Marc Kosicke hadn't started his career as a football agent. His professional background was corporate, specifically, he'd worked for Nike's German division in a marketing capacity, nowhere near the world of player representation or managerial negotiations.
The year 2005 marked the beginning of everything.
Jürgen Klopp had already been managing Mainz for four years at that point, launching himself as a promising young German coach but hardly a household na beyond Bundesliga circles.
This Black Forest native was clearly ascending professionally, building his reputation through consistent overachievent with limited resources.
Kosicke's first encounter with Klopp occurred in Frankfurt's suburbs, the eting was arranged with a straightforward comrcial objective:
Nike wanted Klopp to wear their footwear on the touchline during matches, it was a standard sponsorship arrangent that would provide brand visibility during Bundesliga broadcasts.
The agreed eting location sat about forty minutes' drive from Mainz.
When Klopp arrived for the appointnt, he'd brought along a lawyer friend—soone who regularly handled his legal affairs and contract reviews.
Klopp's reason for including legal counsel was simple: he didn't yet have a dedicated agent, and was relying instead on this lawyer friend to vet comrcial agreents and protect his interests during negotiations.
Kosicke's initial impression of Klopp was that he seed utterly unlike conventional football managers.
Instead of the expected formal business attire with tailored suits and polished shoes that defined the traditional managerial image, Klopp arrived wearing jeans and a hoodie, looking more like a university student than soone leading a professional football team.
But as their conversation deepened, Kosicke gradually recognized sothing special beneath that casual face.
This Mainz coach who wigwagged intensely while speaking and occasionally delivered surprisingly sharp observations possessed a rare combination of fairness and rationality at his core.
His understanding of football ran deep and sophisticated, his vision for team developnt was sparkling in its clarity, and he displayed none of the impatient rashness that typically characterized young managers trying to prove themselves.
Following that initial eting, Kosicke found himself genuinely impressed by Klopp's approach to both football and life. He suggested they et again for more discussion when schedules permitted.
Not long afterward, the two n convened at a small countryside pub for their second eting.
Over drinks and casual conversation, their discussion ranged from tactical philosophy to daily life, from afternoon sunlight streaming through windows to evening darkness falling outside.
The distance between them dissolved gradually through hours of relaxed dialogue, and the professional relationship transford into genuine friendship.
At one point during the evening, Klopp excused himself to use the restroom. When he returned to their table, Kosicke initiated the conversation he'd been building toward all evening, preparing to make his pitch about formal representation.
Before Kosicke could give his proposal, Klopp spoke first with typical directness, laughing as he delivered his terms: "I don't particularly care about money for myself, but my lawyer friend..."
He paused for effect before explaining. That lawyer had recently purchased a rust-covered barge that required renovation work. The entire restoration project would cost approximately twelve thousand euros to complete properly.
Kosicke couldn't suppress his laughter at this unconventional negotiation tactic.
The proposal struck him as simultaneously practical and endearing, so perfectly aligned with Klopp's personality that it imdiately crystallized his impression of what working with this man would involve.
Thus he beca Jürgen Klopp's agent, a relationship that had endured from that countryside pub eting straight through to this very mont at lwood.
Shortly after formalizing their professional relationship, Kosicke resigned from his Nike position and established his own agency, dedicating himself fully to football representation and player managent.
The first major initiative Kosicke undertook as Klopp's agent was facilitating the connection to Borussia Dortmund.
At that mont, Dortmund existed in a deep gorge, they were financially devastated, competitively irrelevant, their glorious past was seemingly unrecoverable.
Klopp arrived with his heavy tal football philosophy and proceeded to construct an entirely new empire from those ruins, building the yellow-and-black fortress that would dominate German football.
Under Klopp's guidance, Dortmund claid the Bundesliga championship, the DFB-Pokal (German Cup), and the DFL-Supercup (German Super Cup). More remarkably, he'd guided them back to the Champions League final stage after sixteen years of absence from European football's pinnacle, nearly capturing the ultimate prize before falling just short against Bayern Munich.
"I can honestly say I've witnessed Jürgen's complete Dortmund journey from beginning to what's approaching its end," Kosicke stated with conviction.
"He absolutely possesses the capability to transform a club fundantally, to elevate it to heights that seed impossible before his arrival. That's not exaggeration, that's known fact based on what I've observed personally."
After completing his story, Kosicke returned attention to present circumstances and future possibilities.
David hardly required this background information—he'd already conducted wide research on Klopp's career, studying match footage and reading tactical analysis until he could recite Klopp's philosophy from mory.
He believed absolutely that Klopp's style would prove ideal for Liverpool's needs and culture. The fit seed almost destined.
Kosicke continued outlining the tiline and Klopp's current thinking.
"Naturally, we're still waiting for Dortmund to finalize their new manager appointnt before Jürgen can formally depart. But he's already begun contemplating Liverpool's squad composition and tactical possibilities, which demonstrates how seriously he's taking this opportunity. The ntal preparation has already started even while contractual obligations keep him in Germany temporarily."
Julien interjected at this point, his tone carrying both enthusiasm and pragmatic focus.
"Whether we're discussing Jürgen's tactical plans or Liverpool's broader future trajectory, I'm genuinely excited about the possibilities ahead. But the most important thing right now, the only thing I can actually control, is this afternoon's match against Norwich and every subsequent fixture that follows.
I want to help this team accumulate victories, to build montum through performance. That represents the best possible response to everyone's expectations, proving through results that their faith is justified. And at this mont, my teammates need to join them for final preparations."
Dein had been listening quietly throughout this exchange, but before he could respond, Kosicke was already nodding his approval.
He reached out to clasp Julien's arm briefly. "Well said. If Jürgen were here right now, he'd absolutely appreciate that grounded ntality, that focus on what's imdiately in front of you rather than getting lost in future speculation. I'm genuinely looking forward to eventually watching you and him work together on the training pitch, seeing how that partnership develops."
Kosicke produced a business card and handed it to Julien with formality. "If you ever want to discuss anything, please don't hesitate to contact directly. But for now, I shouldn't monopolize more of your preparation ti. I'll be watching today's match from the stands, cheering for you and the team."
Julien accepted the card, tucking it into his pocket before rising and offering thanks for Kosicke's ti and Klopp's interest.
As he exited the office and walked down the corridor toward the training pitches, the sound of Dein and Kosicke's continued conversation gradually faded behind him.
But Julien's mind remained occupied with contemplating what Klopp's arrival would actually an for Liverpool and for his own developnt.
As soone who'd traveled through ti with knowledge of future events, Julien understood Klopp's significance to Liverpool better than anyone else in possibly could.
He knew what this appointnt would eventually produce, the heights Liverpool would reach under his managent, the trophies that would arrive after years of drought.
His mind filled with images of high-intensity pressing, rapid transitions between defense and attack, inverted wingers cutting inside to combine with central strikers, the organized chaos that defined Klopp's approach.
These were things he'd watched countless tis in his previous life, studying matches on screens without ever imagining he'd personally experience that system as a player within it.
That philosophy of extracting maximum potential from every player, of systematically elevating individuals beyond what they'd previously believed possible, wasn't that essentially custom-designed for soone with his attributes and abilities?
Then there was Klopp's cryptic question, delivered through Kosicke with obvious intentionality.
"Do you truly understand the extent of your own talent?"
Why ask that specific question? What was Klopp actually asking?
Did it an capabilities Julien hadn't fully recognized or developed yet? Potential lying dormant, waiting for the right tactical system and coaching approach to unlock it?
He recalled from his previous life how Klopp had transford Mohad Salah, repositioning him from a more central role to the right wing, amplifying his ability to cut inside and shoot while adjusting the entire team's attacking rhythm to maximize Salah's strengths.
That tactical evolution had turned a good player into a genuine superstar, soone capable of winning individual awards and carrying Liverpool's attacking burden.
Had Klopp identified similar untapped potential in his ga? Were there qualities and capabilities that current tactical systems hadn't properly utilized, characteristics that Klopp's expert eye had spotted as being underexploited?
The realization struck suddenly, clarifying Klopp's actual aning.
He wasn't asking what talent Julien possessed. He was asking whether Julien understood how far that talent could be pushed, what absolute ceiling existed if every capability was maximized through optimal tactical deploynt.
Just like Mario Götze during Dortmund's peak years who was originally just a suprely gifted youngster who'd been transford under Klopp's guidance into a dynamic playmaker capable of connecting midfield and attack, becoming the "little rocket" who could ignite offensive sequences through movent and vision.
Or Virgil van Dijk later at Liverpool, where Klopp had activated the commanding defensive presence and leadership qualities that turned him from excellent center-back into genuinely dominant force.
Perhaps Klopp had already formulated specific ideas about deploying Julien, tactical concepts that Klopp understood more clearly than Julien understood about himself.
Maybe Klopp could already envision precisely how much Julien's talent would be amplified within the proper system, what heights beca achievable when individual quality t systematic excellence.
Julien exhaled deeply, consciously setting aside these swirling thoughts for later contemplation. Speculation about future possibilities couldn't be allowed to distract from imdiate responsibilities.
Regardless of whatever deeper aning Klopp's question contained, at least one certainty existed beyond doubt.
The manager who'd lifted Dortmund from ruins and would eventually restore Liverpool to European prominence was coming.
That transformation was approaching rapidly, becoming more concrete with each passing day.
And Julien might genuinely be capable of producing football that would surprise even himself once Klopp's tactical vision was fully implented.
He anticipated that future eagerly, almost impatiently.
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