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Harvey Elliott: Being at Liverpool still hasn’t sunk in

Born and raised as a Liverpool fan, Elliott no longer has to watch his favourite side on TV every weekend. Anfield has been his home since 2019, when he swapped Fulham for his boyhood Reds after establishing himself as one of the brightest young talents in English football.

It’s the sort of bond between club and player that fans are desperate to see. They want their stars to care and few embody that passion quite like Elliott, who appreciates the reality in which he finds himself.

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“It’s more happiness and excitement, more than pressure,” he tells 90min of the feeling of representing his boyhood side. “It’s something I’ve been working towards since before my career, and when the opportunity came and I heard there was interest in me, it was just one of them where I wanted to take it with both my hands and make sure I make the full use of it. I’m loving it.

“When you step on the pitch, you need to do your job, but when you step off it, I’m still the happiest kid in the world playing for Liverpool. It’s a win-win. Doing what I love, playing football, I can’t wish for anything different.”

Jurgen Klopp may not have been the manager in charge of Elliott’s beloved Liverpool growing up, but few bosses are as revered on Merseyside these days as the German, who helped drag the Reds to the top of the mountain after years lost in the wilderness.

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“The first day I walked through the door, he kind of took me under his wing and would tell me things I needed to improve on, put an arm around me if I’d done something well, and gave me many, many opportunities,” Elliott recalls. “That’s the kind of manager and kind of person he is. He wants to give everyone the opportunity. At the end of the day, it’s just down to you to take it, take those opportunities to keep in the team.”

Elliott still remembers the early days of his Liverpool tenure. The 16-year-old waltzed into an Anfield dressing room already occupied by the likes of Mohamed Salah, Virgil van Dijk and Sadio Mane and was faced with the task of trying to prove he belonged.

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