Stamford Bridge's dia room was packed to capacity by 6:00 PM—caras lined three-deep along the back wall, photographers were jostling for optimal angles, journalists from every major outlet cramd into seats designed for modest crowds.
This wasn't just another December fixture. This was top-four Title race.
Klopp entered looking noticeably more composed than he'd been previous morning in lwood's treatnt room. The brief rest during the coach journey, the ntal shift toward match mode, the armor of public responsibility—all of it had smoothed so of the raw edges, toned down the panic into manageable levels.
He settled into his seat behind the Liverpool-branded backdrop, adjusted the microphone, and observed the dia pack with wary amusent.
The first question ca imdiately as predictable as sunrise: How do you manage the fixture congestion?
Klopp leaned forward, forearms on the table, fingers laced together. His English was accented but precise.
"I'll be completely honest with you all, this schedule is absolutely brutal. Two away fixtures within seventy-two hours, both against teams currently sitting in the top four—it tests everything we have. Physical capacity, obviously, but also ntal resilience, squad depth, tactical flexibility. Everything."
He paused, seeming to choose his next words.
"The Manchester City match drained us. We gave everything in that ga—especially in the final thirty minutes when we ca back from 3-1 down. That kind of intensity, that kind of physical output... it cos with costs.
Several players are carrying muscular fatigue into this fixture. So won't be available. Others are playing through discomfort, managing soreness, doing everything possible to get their bodies ready. We know exactly what's at stake in this match—every point matters when you're talking about the top of the table. We'll give everything we have."
A follow-up question ca: Specifically which players are out?
Klopp's smile was tight. "You'll see the team sheet tomorrow. I won't give Jose any advantages he doesn't already have."
There was scattered laughter ringing across the hall.
Another journalist jumped in: How do you approach Chelsea tactically, especially their attacking threat through Hazard and Oscar?
Klopp sat back slightly, considering. "Chelsea are a top-level side. World-class individuals, very well-drilled system, difficult to break down or break through. Mourinho's teams are always organized, always dangerous on transitions."
His fingers drumd briefly on the table. "We'll set up to be compact defensively first. Make ourselves difficult to hurt. Force them to break us down rather than giving them easy chances. Then we look to exploit monts in transition—when we can win the ball and hurt them quickly on the counter. Away fixtures against top sides, you have to be smart, patient. Take your chances when they co, because you won't get many."
The questions continued for another fifteen minutes before Klopp wrapped it up and departed.
The adjacent dia room, where Chelsea's press conference would follow, was similarly packed. If anything, the energy was more charged—Mourinho's pressers were theater, and everyone knew it.
He entered with his typical swagger—expensive suit, confidence radiating from every movent with that faint smile playing on his face. "The Special One" hadn't just been a nickna; it was a brand ruthlessly maintained.
He settled into his seat, waved off the opening pleasantries, and waited for the first question with amusent.
Liverpool seem to be struggling with fixture congestion. How does that affect tomorrow's match?
Mourinho's smile widened slightly. "Struggling? I hear people saying Liverpool are tired, Liverpool are struggling with the schedule..."
He gestured with one hand, almost lazily. "But let's be very clear about sothing—they don't have European football. No Champions League matches on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. No Europa League. Just the dostic competitions."
He leaned forward, emphasizing the point. "That's a massive advantage that nobody seems to want to discuss honestly. Liverpool can rest players in midweek, have full recovery between league matches and start preparation without the distraction of European campaigns. They have luxury that clubs like Chelsea, Manchester City, Arsenal don't enjoy."
The room buzzed. Journalists were typing heatedly.
"anwhile," Mourinho continued, "clubs competing on multiple fronts have to rotate squads constantly, manage fatigue across competitions, balance dostic and European priorities. Liverpool's position at the top of the table—yes, credit to them for taking advantage—but let's not pretend they haven't benefited enormously from having only one competition to focus on."
A journalist near the front raised his hand: What about Julien De Rocca? He's been exceptional recently. How do you plan to handle him?
Mourinho's expression shifted subtly—the playful dismissiveness was placed by sharpness. "De Rocca is a talented player. Very talented. His goal-scoring record this season speaks for itself—clinical finishing, intelligent movent, composure in big monts. He's having an excellent season by any asure."
He paused and the room waited.
"But we have Eden Hazard. Hazard is also world-class. His dribbling ability, his vision, his capacity to unlock defenses with a single pass or run—elite level. Among the best players in Europe when he's performing at his peak.
I don't accept that Hazard is any less of a player than De Rocca. Not for one second. Tomorrow you'll see why."
A journalist from The Guardian tried to change the subject: De Rocca spent ti in Chelsea's academy as a youth and senior player before being released. Does that history add any extra dinsion to tomorrow's match?
Mourinho cut him off with a sharp wave of his hand, the playfulness vanished completely.
"That's Ancient history and completely irrelevant." His voice hardened. "That's got nothing to do with the match tomorrow. I don't care what happened five years ago, ten years ago. I don't care if De Rocca has hurt feelings about Chelsea, grudges against anyone, emotional baggage. None of that matters in professional football."
He leaned forward, his eyes were intense. "What matters is three points tomorrow at Stamford Bridge. That's all I'm focused on. Three points to close the gap at the top of the table. Everything else is dia noise."
He stood abruptly, signaling the end of the session. "We're done here."
And he left without another word while the room was still buzzing with questions left unanswered.
By 9:30 PM, most of Liverpool's squad had retreated to their rooms—either sprawled in ice baths, enduring deep tissue massage, or simply lying horizontal with compression boots rhythmically squeezing their legs, trying to force fresh blood through exhausted muscles.
Julien had just finished a light team dinner with grilled chicken, stead vegetables, complex carbohydrates carefully portioned by the club nutritionist—when his phone buzzed. It was his sister Clénce.
"We're outside," the text read. "Co down when you can."
He grabbed his jacket and headed for the lifts, then through the lobby and out into London's cold December night. His breath misted in the air. Traffic sounds echoed off surrounding buildings.
Clénce and Pauline stood near the curb, both wrapped in winter coats that looked expensive and Parisian. Clénce saw him first and waved with a smile.
"Julien!" Pauline's voice ca simultaneously.
Julien crossed to them quickly, instinctively taking the small overnight bag from Clénce's hand. She imdiately reached up ruffling his hair the way she'd done since he was six years old and she was the bossy ten-year-old in charge.
"This English fixture schedule is barbaric," Clénce said, half-laughing but with genuine irritation underneath. "French clubs are on winter break right now. Players are resting, recovering, spending ti with family, recharging. And here you are, playing two brutal away matches in three days. How is your body even holding together?"
They moved back inside, finding a quiet corner of the lobby away from lingering staff and late-arriving hotel guests.
They chatted easily after that about family updates, Clénce's recent fashion work in Paris, how Julien was adjusting to the intensity of a genuine title race. Pauline was quieter than usual, chiming in occasionally but mostly listening, her gaze was drifting to Julien more often than she probably realized or intended.
Eventually, she spoke with concern.
"Tomorrow... against Chelsea. Just—" She hesitated, choosing words carefully. "Be careful, okay? I know you want to win. I know how important this match is. But don't push yourself too hard. Not to the point where..." She trailed off, but the worry was clear in her eyes. "I don't want you getting hurt."
Julien reached across, briefly squeezing her hand. "I'll be fine. Really. The club has a professional physio team. They'll help us manage our condition. You don't need to stress. And I know my limits."
They talked for nearly half an hour—mostly Clénce asking about Julien's life and training, while Pauline sat quietly beside her, chiming in now and then, though her gaze kept drifting back to Julien.
Clénce checked her watch—it was nearly 10:00 PM. "We should let you rest. You need sleep before tomorrow." She stood, pulling on her coat, then leaned down to squeeze his shoulder. "Play well. Play smart. we'll be up in the stands cheering for you."
Julien walked them back to the entrance, watched their taxi pull away into London traffic, then turned back toward the lifts.
He made it perhaps ten steps before noticing Steven leaning casually against the corridor wall, arms crossed, wearing a knowing grin that showed he'd been there for several minutes.
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