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"I've watched it enough times - I'm a wee bit annoyed about that."Everyone still talks about it because I think that was the moment people could see I could potentially be the left-back for years to come."I'm not saying it would have been nine years, but that was a moment in a big game against the best team in the world at that time. I think fans left that stadium thinking 'we could have a proper left-back here'."That was the moment I really felt 'I belong at this football club, I am worthy of the shirt and I'm worthy of being here'."It's the big games you get judged on.
So it was nice to get that refresh in the October!"I just went in the next day and I thought 'everything he has said to me, I am going to do. I took the attitude of 'I’m at Liverpool Football Club and I’m going to do everything I can to make this work'.
I think there’s only two players who have had that now – me and Freddie Woodman!"Jurgen then put me into a cupboard for four months and I didn’t play a minute but from that moment on I knew the relationship with the fans was always going to be a good one."I think they saw a player out on that pitch who, if they could get a chance to put on a Liverpool shirt and play in a competitive game, they would play similar to me in terms of giving 100% and always being at it."So to Sunday, when he will share his final farewell alongside another legend in Mohamed Salah who, having joined in the same summer, has been alongside Robertson every step of the way.But with Brentford the opposition, the left-back has, in trademark fashion, sought to ensure the attention is also directed at former team-mates who were unable to have such a fitting send-off."It means a lot but it's probably more important for my kids to see that and experience that," says Robertson. "I'm delighted I won't be the only one doing it.
