I'm my own man, says Southampton boss Hasenhuttl

The new Saints manager shrugged off comparisons with his friend and Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp and prioritised dragging his new club out of the relegation zone.

Published : Dec 07, 2018 06:38 IST

Ralph Hasenhuttl prioritised dragging his new club out of the relegation zone.
Ralph Hasenhuttl prioritised dragging his new club out of the relegation zone.
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Ralph Hasenhuttl prioritised dragging his new club out of the relegation zone.

New Southampton boss Ralph Hasenhuttl on Thursday rejected his nickname the “Klopp of the Alps”, saying he wants to forge his own reputation in the Premier League.

The new Saints manager shrugged off comparisons with his friend and Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp and prioritised dragging his new club out of the relegation zone.

Former Austria striker Hasenhuttl has become Saints' fourth permanent manager in less than 18 months after Mark Hughes was sacked on Monday.

The 51-year-old will oversee just one training session before Saturday's league clash at fellow-strugglers Cardiff and called on his squad to push quickly up the table.

The engaging Hasenhuttl, who joked that his surname translates into English as “rabbit hutch”, fired a word of warning that he will ship out any players not ready for hard work.

Asked about his nickname and comparisons with Klopp, Hasenhuttl replied: “I have heard about it. I don't like it so much.

“I want to be my own character and I know him very well,” he said. “We were sitting in the football school together and made our pro licence together and I was always a fan of his football.

“It was a very proactive way to play. I think he set marks in Germany with his kind of football and that really influenced my style, absolutely.”

He said it would be “fantastic” if he could enjoy similar success but the first target was to pull away from the relegation zone.

The former RB Leipzig boss admitted he will drive the Southampton squad hard, vowing to produce at the bare minimum a team that grafts for the supporters.

“You can expect a very passionate kind of football with 11 characters on the field who know exactly what to do, what they have to show the crowd,” said Hasenhuttl.

“I know there are no guarantees of winning and the only thing we have is to work on chances. If you want guarantees buy a washing machine.

Asked how he will handle becoming Austria's first Premier League manager, he said: “It means a lot of pressure on me because if I do badly the gap is closed for everyone else, so I should do it well.

“But I'm not afraid of anything. I'm proud but this is only the beginning.

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