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Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
Sport
Paul Gorst

Jurgen Klopp has finally found his new Ilkay Gundogan after eight-year Liverpool wait

It's been quite the six months for Alexis Mac Allister.

Having starred alongside Lionel Messi to help Argentina win their first World Cup since 1986 in Qatar back in December, he then inspired Brighton & Hove Albion to their highest-ever Premier League finish of sixth last month.

After signing off from the Amex Stadium by securing Europa League football for the first time in the Seagulls' history, Mac Allister then became Liverpool's first signing of the summer when he officially completed his move to Anfield on Thursday.

The 24-year-old is viewed as the first block of a significant midfield rebuild for Jurgen Klopp's team in the summer transfer window but just what type of midfielder is Mac Allister?

READ MORE: Manchester United great may have unwittingly sent Alexis Mac Allister on road to Liverpool

READ MORE: Inside story of Alexis Mac Allister transfer as 'aggressive' Liverpool window starts and Jorg Schmadtke takes over

“Well, I’ve played almost in every position,” he told LFCTV upon his official unveiling. “I think the managers who work with me know I can do it everywhere that they need me.

“As a player, I’m a player who tries to play as simple as possible, to help my team-mates defensively or attacking, and that’s the most important thing. I’m a team player and I will try to bring that to this club.”

Something of a swiss-army knife of a midfielder, Mac Allister's best trait is perhaps the fact he does most things to a very high standard in the engine room, without truly excelling at one specific skill.

Capable of operating in the No.10 role, where the onus is on creativity and supplying the front line with key passes and assists, Mac Allister has also been tasked with performing in slightly more withdrawn midfield areas during his time at Brighton.

Liverpool have not played with a quintessential 'No.10' since the days of Philippe Coutinho, who departed in January of 2018, so reworking a more creative attacking midfielder into the system would be a tactical surprise from Klopp, but it is a certainly a possibility given Mac Allister's addition and Cody Gakpo's presence in the squad too.

What might be more likely, though, is the sight of Mac Allister working as one of the two 'No.8s' in Klopp's midfield system just further forward of Fabinho, who remains the club's only specialist senior defensive midfielder if we are not counting 18-year-old fledgling Stefan Bajcetic.

Thiago Alcantara, when fit, may be designated the left-hand side of that midfield area, so it could be argued that Mac Allister will be operating primarily on the right side, which is the more demanding of the two midfield positions in the Liverpool system given the need to overlap Mohamed Salah in wide areas while also covering for Trent Alexander-Arnold's natural and tactical inclination to drift further forward from right-back.

Neither Jordan Henderson nor Harvey Elliott managed to perform this job consistently at times last term as the Reds struggled until the final two months of the campaign, although there is plenty of scope for Klopp to think-up a tactical tweak or two over the pre-season weeks. Either way, it will be fascinating to see where Mac Allister will be asked to play.

“Alexis can play anywhere on the pitch,” his former manager Roberto De Zerbi told The Athletic in December. “I don’t know if he’s better as a [deep] playmaker or 20 metres further forward. I like him a lot in the other [deeper] position.”

During Mac Allister's 6,818 minutes in the Premier League with Brighton, he spent 37% of it as a deep-lying playmaker and 32% further forward as a central attacking midfielder. The adjustment of Alexander-Arnold's position in the last two months of the campaign, however, suggests that Mac Allister may yet be tasked with the No.10 role.

His tactical flexibility will be key to Klopp going forward as the manager goes about remodeling his team after dropping to their lowest finish of fifth in any of his seven full seasons last term.

“He’s a very good player, a very calming influence on the pitch," Arsenal legend Paul Merson said this week. "He keeps the ball and ticks it along, and reminds me a bit of an Ilkay Gundogan without the goals."

Mac Allister's 10 Brighton goals last season was actually two more than Gunodgan registered for champions Manchester City, although six of them were from the penalty spot. Nonetheless, the comparison with the Germany international is a valid one.

Gundogan, whose double in the FA Cup final last week helped City beat local rivals Manchester United, appears as number two in the list of 'similar players' to Mac Allister according to scouting tool FBREF.

Fiorentia's Giacomo Bonaventura is the closest comparison but the likeness to Gundogan will be well received by Reds fans given the City midfielder's enduring excellence across his glittering seven years at the Etihad.

Mac Allister, who is eight years his junior, played 509 minutes more than Gunodgan last season with both players matching up fairly similarly on the Opta statistics. Both are in the 93% percentile for goals scored from midfielders in Europe's top five leagues, while Mac Allister has greater percentages for defensive actions (28), aerial battles (46) and the amount times possession is won (73).

Liverpool's new No.10 is also comparable with the City star for touches (77% to 75%) and chances created (66 to 64), according to statistics supplied. According to the Opta figures, the pair also share similar numbers for passing accuracy between 87 and 88% as well as total carries over a minimum of five metres (390 and 387).

Mac Allister is in the 94 percentile for shots, which dwarfs Gunodgan's range of 81, although the City man has considerably more touches in the opposition's penalty area (89 to 67), which can be explained by the dominance of Pep Guardiola's side compared to Brighton, who finished sixth.

The similarities between the pair are striking and interesting given Klopp's history with Gunodgan. It was the Reds boss who helped make the 32-year-old a household name in European football during their time together at Borussia Dortmund prior to his 2016 switch to Manchester.

"With Kloppo everything really started for me," Gunodgan was quoted as saying in 2018. "Even though I won't forget Michael Oenning and Dieter Hecking (former coaches at Bochum and Nurnberg respectively), Kloppo was like a father to me and his speeches can be extremely motivating.

"I learned a lot and I managed to improve my game a lot, too. Those days left a mark on my career. Those were my first steps in European football, too, because it was an opportunity that I hadn't had before. So that's another thing I have to thank him for."

With a player this similar to Gunodgan now in his squad, it is not too hard to imagine Klopp moulding Mac Allister further into a more polished performer in the same way he did the City man. The German heads into Saturday's Champions League final as the in-form player for Pep Guardiola so the comparisons with Mac Allister are hugely complimentary for the new Reds man.

That bodes well for a team in need of restructuring their engine room ranks and the fact Liverpool have snared him for relatively modest fee could prove to be incredibly shrewd business given his pedigree in both the Premier League and on the world stage with Argentina.

The Argentina star shoots on sight and only James Maddison, of Leicester City, had more attempts-per-90 last season that Mac Allister's average of 2.68. That's more than Arsenal's Martin Odegaard and Bruno Fernandes of Manchester United, while his shots-on-target number of 1.06 is only bettered by four players in Phil Foden, Solly March, Harvey Barnes and Kai Havertz.

Having played in 68 of the last of the 76 Brighton games in the Premier League, Mac Allister will also have some much-needed availability to a midfield department that was besieged by injuries last term.

And after marking the last six months with some of the biggest achievements of his career, Mac Allister is now tasked with continuing that trajectory for the rest of the year and beyond at Liverpool.

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