Out-of-favour striker Christian Benteke admits he would never have
joined Liverpool if he felt he was not going to be a
"priority".
The £32.5million summer signing feels he has suffered from
the Reds' decision to sack Brendan Rodgers in
October and bring in Jurgen Klopp.
Rodgers made the Belgium international his number one summer
transfer target, persuading the club's transfer committee to go well beyond
their valuation of the player, in order to add a different dimension to the
team.
Benteke started the first six Premier League
matches of the season but then picked up an injury and by the time he was fit
again Rodgers had been replaced.
He has struggled to retain a regular place under Klopp and
since the turn of the year he has managed just five starts in 16 appearances,
scoring just once.
"I was obviously happy [with the move to Liverpool], I
joined a great club," Benteke told Belgium's Sport/Voetbalmagazine.
"I thought that finally I could find stability, settle
for a duration at a big club. I knew I could face difficult months but, in the
long run, it would work.
"I played two full matches in a row since Klopp
[arrived]. I went up against Leicester, I scored, I followed up with a game and
a goal against Sunderland and then we
lost to West Ham and since then I have been discarded.
"Even my father was annoyed at first by my status as a
reservist and told me that I can do nothing.
"I spoke with [Belgium team-mates] Eden
[Hazard] and with Marouane [Fellaini], they all gave me the same answer:
when a coach does not count on you, you cannot change anything.
"The thing that is annoying is that I had prepared to
transfer to Liverpool. I never would have signed if I had not been the priority
of the coach."
Benteke has scored just eight goals in 35 appearances with
his only goal in 2016 coming from the penalty spot.
His apparent unsuitability for Klopp's intensive,
high-pressing tactics has been debated for some time but the player rejects
accusations he cannot fit in.
"Despite the situation I am in, I am second top scorer
behind [Roberto] Firmino, with eight goals: this is not so bad although I
would have hoped to score more," he added.
"I am the first to say that I have not shown enough of
my worth for a club like Liverpool but on the other hand, when I arrived under
Brendan Rodgers I knew I would have the opportunity to show my qualities, I was
worth all that money, I deserved to wear the Liverpool shirt. But now...
"I knew that the new coach might have a different
opinion on me and that's what happened.
"He [Klopp] told me he wanted me to be more
involved in the game and yet it seems to me that this is one of my qualities.
"I have considered his remarks, I told myself that I
had to adapt and change my style of play and then I remembered that Liverpool
bought me for my qualities.
"The ideal situation is to keep my identity while
trying to adapt to the style of the coach. And if it does not work, it does not
work."
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