Introduction
Liverpoolâs modern identity, especially under JĂŒrgen Klopp, is built on winning the ball quickly and then attacking at speed. Many fans in India know the famous âgegenpress,â but an equally important detail is how Liverpoolâs press often looks âverticalâ: instead of simply squeezing the pitch side-to-side, they hunt forward through central lanes and force play into areas where the next challenge is already set. This matters because most mistakes in elite football come when players receive the ball facing their own goal, with limited passing options and pressure arriving from their blind side. In the Premier League and UEFA Champions League, Liverpool repeatedly creates those moments by coordinating the front line, midfield, and back line so that the opponentâs next pass is predictable. This article breaks down what âvertical pressâ means in clear terms, how the structure works, and why it reliably generates turnovers that turn into high-quality chances.
How It Works
Liverpoolâs vertical press is about denying comfortable progression through the middle and forcing the opponent to play into âpre-pressedâ zones. The first principle is the forward screen: the striker (often Roberto Firmino in Kloppâs peak years, later other profiles) blocks the easiest pass into the opponentâs defensive midfielder. At the same time, the wide forwardsâthink Mohamed Salah and Sadio ManĂ©âpress in curved runs. A curved run is important because it closes one passing lane while pressing the ball-carrier, like shutting a door while walking toward someone. The second principle is the midfield jump. Liverpoolâs No.8s step forward aggressively when the opponentâs centre-back takes a heavy touch or plays a slow pass into a full-back. This âjumpâ is the vertical element: the press travels forward in straight lines, not just sideways. Behind them, Liverpoolâs defensive line holds a high position to compress space, so the opponent cannot simply drop a midfielder to escape. The result is a trap: if the centre-back cannot find the central midfielder, he goes wide; when he goes wide, Liverpoolâs winger arrives, the full-back is pinned, and the near-side midfielder closes the inside passing option. The opponent then plays a risky ball down the line or back to the goalkeeperâboth are triggers for another wave of pressure and potential mistakes.
Match Examples
A clear reference point is the 2018â19 UEFA Champions League semi-final second leg: Liverpool vs Barcelona at Anfield. Barcelona tries to play out to Jordi Alba and through Sergio Busquets, but Liverpoolâs front line blocks central access and forces wide passes that become predictable. Liverpoolâs midfield then steps in to contest second balls, turning defensive pressure into immediate attacks. Another strong example is the 2019â20 Premier League season, where Liverpoolâs press often creates goals from forced errors; the structure around Firminoâs screening and the wingersâ curved runs repeatedly denies the opponentâs pivot and invites risky wide circulation. Also look at Liverpool vs Manchester City in the 2019â20 Premier League at Anfield. Pep Guardiolaâs City usually excels at playing through pressure, yet Liverpoolâs vertical jumpsâespecially when the ball goes into a full-back under a closed body shape (receiving while facing the touchline)âcreate moments where City is rushed into back-passes and clipped clearances. These are not random: they are rehearsed patterns that aim to make the opponent take one extra touch, then strike. For Indian fans, the key learning is to watch the passing lanes, not only the player who presses: Liverpoolâs best pressing actions succeed because they remove the âsafeâ pass before the tackle even happens.
Related Concepts & Skills
Training Implications
To train a vertical press, start with small-sided games that reward forward pressure and lane-blocking, not just tackling. Drill 1 (6v6 + 2 neutral midfielders): mark a central âpivot zoneâ (a small rectangle in front of goal). The defending team scores a point if it wins the ball or forces a backwards pass after blocking entry into the pivot zone for 5 seconds. Coach the striker to stand slightly off-centre so he can press one centre-back while his body blocks the pass into the pivot (cover shadow). Drill 2 (build-up trap on the wing): set up 7v5 in one half. The attacking team must play out from goalkeeper to full-back. The defending winger presses with a curved run to force the ball down the line; the near-side No.8 jumps to block the inside pass; the full-back steps to lock the touchline. The coaching point is timing: if the No.8 jumps too early, the opponent slips a pass inside; too late, the full-back turns. Drill 3 (transition finishing): play 5v5 with two mini-goals plus a big goal. When a team wins the ball in the attacking half, it has 6 seconds to shoot. This teaches the ârewardâ of vertical pressingâturnovers must become chances. Finally, add video tasks: ask players to clip 5 examples where they press but fail to block the pivot, then correct their run angle. The goal is to make pressing a coordinated, repeatable team action.
Apply This in Your Game
Reading about tactics is one thing. Our training units teach you to execute these concepts in real match situations.
