Alisson Becker became the world’s most expensive goalkeeper last summer just as Hugo Lloris was celebrating the peak of his professional career. While new signing Becker posed for pictures at Liverpool’s Melwood training ground, Lloris was still in the after-glow of the World Cup, five days on from France’s 4-2 victory over Croatia. Yet neither enjoyed the moment for long. Less than three weeks after Liverpool paid Roma 75 million euros ($83 million) for Alisson, Chelsea added another five million on top to sign Kepa Arrizabalaga. And Lloris has spoken since about the “emptiness” he felt as soon as the dust had settled from Moscow. “I remember I needed one day to stay in bed and just stop,” said Lloris. “I had to disconnect a little bit.”
Or Alisson will have capped a remarkable debut season by winning the same trophy Liverpool surrendered to Real Madrid one year ago, largely due to the mistakes of his predecessor, Loris Karius. For both Alisson and Lloris, the road to Madrid has not been smooth but, in particular, for Tottenham’s captain, whose tumultuous season began with a drink-driving charge in August, that earned him a £50,000 fine and 20-month ban. By the end of the Champions League final between Tottenham and Liverpool on Saturday, Lloris might have won the game’s greatest prize for his club, 10 months after claiming the most prestigious one for his country.
“It was an accident that serves as a lesson,” said Lloris. “I made a mistake.” On the pitch there were errors too, enough of them to put his place in doubt, and then pivotal saves, without which Spurs might have missed out on qualifying for next season’s Champions League, let alone winning this one.
In Europe alone, there was the man-of-the-match display against Borussia Dortmund in the last 16 and, in the quarter-finals, the early save from Sergio Aguero’s penalty, that would have given Manchester City an away goal and control of the tie. But he also recklessly rushed out to set Barcelona on their way to a 4-2 win at Wembley and was then sent off against PSV Eindhoven, who then snatched a late equaliser.
When Lloris signed for Tottenham in 2012, some questioned why France’s captain, and a goalkeeper widely regarded as one of the most promising in the world, was joining a team with its feet firmly planted in the Europa League. And perhaps Lloris would have left were it not for the arrival of Mauricio Pochettino, with whom he has forged a close bond.
“Hugo is one of the best keepers in the world,” Pochettino said in October. “He’s our captain and there’s no doubts about him.” Supporting, rather than selling, struggling players has been a key trait of Pochettino’s time at Spurs, in part perhaps, because the club’s financial limitations have given him little choice. But Liverpool could afford to be more ruthless, even if the club identified Alisson months before Karius’s blunders.