Chapter 370 - 44: The Liverpool Meeting I
Chapter 370 - 44: The Liverpool Meeting I
Thursday, June 22, 2023
Demien’s Hotel Room — Kings Cross
7:00 AM
The alarm went off at seven and Demien’s eyes opened immediately while nervous energy sat in his chest before his feet touched the floor.
Liverpool. Two PM. Jürgen Klopp.
He showered and dressed in casual clothes because the meeting wasn’t until the afternoon, and by seven-thirty he was forcing down room service breakfast—eggs, toast, fruit, coffee—while his appetite fought against the nerves.
His phone buzzed with overnight messages and he opened them one by one.
De Roon: Good luck with whatever’s happening today. You’ll make the right choice.
Sophia: Thinking of you. You’ve got this. Te amo.
Luca: Kill it today fratello. Call me after if you want to talk.
He responded briefly to each—thanks, appreciate it, will do—without engaging in extended conversations.
At noon he put on the suit—navy blue with white shirt and conservative red tie—and checked his appearance in the mirror while his reflection showed a nineteen-year-old trying to look professional without trying too hard.
He ordered light lunch from room service—grilled chicken salad—and forced himself to eat while reviewing his prepared questions one final time.
Where do you see me fitting tactically in your system?
What’s the development pathway you envision for me in year one?
Who am I competing with for the position you see me in?
What happens if I’m not getting minutes after six months?
What made you specifically want to sign me?
His phone buzzed at one twenty-five with Marco’s text: Downstairs. Car is waiting.
1:30 PM — Car to Rosewood Hotel
The car pulled away from Kings Cross and merged into London traffic heading toward Holborn while Marco used the ten-minute drive for final coaching.
"Remember everything we practiced," Marco said, and his voice was low and professional. "Let them finish their pitch before asking questions. Don’t interrupt Klopp even if you want to respond. Make eye contact with whoever’s speaking. Lean forward slightly to show engagement. Don’t check your phone even if it buzzes."
Demien nodded and the instructions were familiar from yesterday’s preparation.
"When they ask what you think of their offer," Marco continued, "your answer is: I’m impressed by Liverpool’s vision and grateful for the interest. I need to complete all meetings and discuss with my family before making any decision. Nothing more specific than that."
"Understood," Demien said.
"If they pressure for timeline, I’ll handle it," Marco said. "If they ask about Manchester United’s offer, decline politely and say you’re treating each meeting independently. Never compare the clubs while sitting in the meeting."
The car moved through traffic and London passed outside the windows.
"Are you ready?" Marco asked.
"Yeah," Demien said.
"Good," Marco said. "Remember—this is a conversation, not an interrogation. They want you. You have the power here even if it doesn’t feel like it. Trust your preparation."
The car pulled up to the Rosewood Hotel at one fifty-five and they walked into the lobby where reception directed them to a private conference room on the second floor.
Marco knocked at exactly two PM and Julian Ward opened the door with a professional smile and his hand extended.
Conference Room 3 — Rosewood Hotel
2:00 PM
Julian Ward welcomed them inside and the conference room was well-appointed with a long table surrounded by leather chairs and water bottles positioned at each seat, and a Liverpool FC folder sat at the head of the table while a large window overlooked London’s afternoon traffic.
Three people were already inside and Demien’s attention went to them immediately.
Jürgen Klopp sat at the table reviewing notes and his glasses were perched on his nose, and when Demien entered he stood and walked over with his hand extended while the charisma that made him one of football’s most successful managers was immediately evident.
"Demien, great to finally meet you," Klopp said, and his German accent was exactly as it sounded in interviews while his handshake was firm without being aggressive. "Monday night at Old Trafford was special. Two goals, fantastic performance."
"Thank you," Demien said, and he kept the response brief and professional.
The other man was introduced by Ward as Mike Gordon, Liverpool’s president, and his presence indicated Liverpool was treating this recruitment seriously at the highest level.
Everyone sat and the arrangement was deliberate—Ward at the head of the table with Klopp to his right and Gordon to his left, while Demien and Marco sat across from them.
Ward started with brief pleasantries about the journey from Manchester and settling into London, and Demien answered politely without giving extended responses because they weren’t here for conversation about travel logistics.
Klopp jumped in with compliments about the England performances and his tone shifted the energy from pleasantries to football substance.
"I watched both matches," Klopp said. "Malta and North Macedonia. The assist to Saka showed exactly the kind of vision we value in midfielders at Liverpool. Through ball, perfect weight, perfect timing. The goals from distance showed confidence and technical quality. I’ve been impressed all season watching Atalanta matches when we’ve scouted you."
"Thank you," Demien said. "Atalanta and Gasperini taught me a lot. England camp has been incredible experience."
Ward checked his watch and the gesture signaled transition to business.
"We should get started properly since everyone’s time is valuable," Ward said, and he opened the Liverpool FC folder and slid documents across the table—one to Marco, one to Demien. "Let’s talk about why you’re here and what Liverpool can offer."
The pitch began.
Ward led the presentation and his approach was structured and professional without unnecessary flourish.
"Liverpool is currently transitioning our midfield generation," he said. "Fabinho, Henderson, Thiago—all incredible players, all vital to what we’ve achieved in recent years. But they’re all in their thirties now. We need young, talented players who can grow into starting roles as this generation moves on."
He paused and let that register before continuing.
"We finished fifth last season," Ward said, and there was no defensiveness in stating the fact. "Missed Champions League qualification. That’s unacceptable for Liverpool Football Club. We’re rebuilding to get back to challenging for titles, and midfield is the priority area for recruitment."
Mike Gordon spoke next and his tone was measured and deliberate.
"Liverpool’s ownership is committed to success," Gordon said. "We’ve appointed Jörg Schmadtke as our new sporting director to oversee recruitment. Financial backing is available for the right players. This isn’t a crisis situation—we’re in transition. There’s a big difference."
Then Klopp took over and the energy in the room shifted immediately, and he leaned forward with his forearms on the table and spoke directly to Demien.
"Our system requires specific profile in midfield," Klopp said, and his passion was evident without being excessive. "High intensity pressing. Quick transitions from defense to attack. Creativity in final third when we break teams down. Your performance against North Macedonia showed all three qualities."
He pulled an iPad from beside his chair and set it on the table while the screen showed Liverpool’s tactical setup with the eights positioned in the half-spaces.
"The way you pressed Bardhi when you first came on," Klopp said. "The way you recovered after losing the ball early. The through ball to Saka. The goals from distance. That’s what I need from my eights."
He showed video clips—Liverpool’s system in matches against various opponents, highlighting where the eights operated and how they contributed in both phases, and then he showed clips of Demien at Atalanta and with England with specific moments highlighted.
"You see here," Klopp said, and he pointed at the screen showing Demien’s assist versus North Macedonia. "This is Gerrard-esque. The vision to see the run early, the execution to weight the pass perfectly. We haven’t had this kind of passing from midfield since Gini Wijnaldum left. You can be that player for us."
Demien listened without interrupting and everything Klopp said made tactical sense because the analysis was accurate and the system did suit his profile, but he noticed the language Klopp was using—"can be that player" was different from "will be that player."
Klopp finished his tactical presentation after ten minutes and leaned back in his chair.
"Questions so far?" Klopp asked.
Demien shook his head. "I’d like to hear everything first, then ask questions at the end if that’s okay."
"Of course," Klopp said. "Smart approach."
Ward took over again and his presentation shifted to squad composition.
"Current midfield situation," Ward said. "We’re signing Alexis Mac Allister from Brighton—deal is basically done, announcement coming next week. We’re in advanced talks with RB Leipzig for Dominik Szoboszlai. Curtis Jones and Harvey Elliott are established squad players who’ll continue developing. You’d be competing with all of them for the two number eight positions."
He paused and his expression was neutral while delivering information that wasn’t necessarily favorable.
"Healthy competition," Ward said. "Everyone pushes each other. That’s how we maintain standards at Liverpool."
Demien absorbed this without reacting visibly and the information meant four other midfielders in his age bracket or slightly older would all be fighting for two starting positions.
Ward transitioned to contract specifics and slid the revised offer document across the table with the pages opened to the financial sections.
"Base salary one hundred ninety thousand pounds per week in year one," Ward said. "Rising to two hundred five thousand in year three and two hundred twenty thousand in year five. Signing bonus nine point five million. Performance bonuses tied to appearances, goals, and assists. We’ve revised the image rights language based on feedback from Marco. Buyout clause at seventy-five million pounds activating after eighteen months."
Marco took over and his tone was polite but firm.
"The image rights revision is appreciated," Marco said. "Moving from the narrow definition in the original offer to something more inclusive was necessary. The buyout clause reduction and earlier activation is also closer to what we discussed. But there’s still the matter of playing time protections."
Ward nodded and his expression showed he’d expected this point to be raised.
"We’ve added conditional language," Ward said. "If Demien isn’t receiving regular first-team minutes after twelve months, we’ll engage in mutual discussions about loan options or development pathway adjustments."
Marco’s expression didn’t change and his response came without emotional reaction.
"Mutual discussions is vague," Marco said. "What constitutes ’regular first-team minutes’? What’s the threshold that triggers these discussions?"
Ward glanced at Klopp and the brief exchange suggested they’d prepared for this question, and Klopp leaned forward to address it directly.
"Football isn’t contract law," Klopp said, and his tone was reasonable without being dismissive. "I can’t sit here and guarantee a nineteen-year-old starts thirty matches in the Premier League. But I can guarantee that if he trains at the level I know he’s capable of, he plays. That’s how my squad works. Performance determines selection."
Marco continued without acknowledging Klopp’s emotional appeal.
"I understand football isn’t predictable and I’m not asking for guaranteed starts," Marco said. "But conditional language needs thresholds or it’s meaningless. If Demien makes fewer than fifteen starts across all competitions by month twelve, does the loan discussion activate automatically at his request?"
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