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5th January 2024
03:40pm GMT

Speaking on The Fozcast, the Toffees defender responded: "Always, because I always warm up right near the halfway line.
"I like to be that end of the warm ups so I'm always quite high and can see (Klopp) gleaming at me from the side.
"I'm thinking 'I better make sure this pass is right', or he's going to walk into the dressing room and say 'that Tarkowski's having one in the warm-up, go and play on him'.
Foster claimed that he felt similarly to Tarkowski, having come up against Klopp's sides numerous times before retiring last year after his stint with Wrexham.
However, the shot stopper claimed Klopp's main motive behind this ritual, is not to imitate the team, but to learn something from them.
Klopp said: "No, I didn't know that. I don't do it for that. I do it so I can (identify) a technical or a tactical something I can pick up on.
"Because sometimes you will get some teams that will set up their actual shape and position in the warm-up.
"And if I see a left-back or a right-back will come inside or might stay... I might just clock it a little bit and I might mention it to the players before I go.
"I definitely don't do it to try and intimidate players."
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