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Divock Origi Ya Yi Ritaya Yana Dan Shekara 31 Bayan Aiki Da Aka Tuna Da Manyan Lokuta na Liverpool
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Divock Origi Ya Yi Ritaya Yana Dan Shekara 31 Bayan Aiki Da Aka Tuna Da Manyan Lokuta na Liverpool

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"Three goals come to mind," Origi told Sky Sports. "Barcelona, in the Champions League final, and the Everton derby in the 96th minute. Each one is iconic in its own way. The final probably represents the height of it all — but if I had to choose one, I'd say the Barcelona goal. The emotion and the feeling of those three will stay with me forever."

Those three moments are woven into Anfield folklore, but they were not the only times Origi made Everton supporters suffer. He scored six goals in Merseyside derbies across his career — more than he managed against any other opponent.

A bond forged at Anfield

Brendan Rodgers brought Origi to Liverpool in 2014, and over 175 appearances he scored 41 goals — a return that understates his true impact on the club's modern era. He was present in the difficult early days of Jurgen Klopp's tenure, featuring in the German's first 11 matches and contributing vital goals in the UEFA Europa League before the arrivals of Mohamed Salah, Virgil van Dijk, and Alisson transformed Liverpool's fortunes.

The relationship between Origi and Klopp was, by any measure, a remarkable one — a manager and a squad player forging something deeper than circumstance usually allows.

"Klopp holds a special place for me," Origi said. "We shared special moments and won the biggest trophies together. The first thing he told me was that he believed in me. He said that as long as I was all in, we'd achieve great things together. And we did."

When Origi departed in 2022, he left with a UEFA Champions League, Premier League, FA Cup, UEFA Super Cup, and FIFA Club World Cup medal in his collection — an extraordinary haul for a player who found consistent starts difficult to come by.

Life after football

Spells at AC Milan and Nottingham Forest followed his Liverpool exit, though neither brought the same sense of belonging. Now, Origi is setting his sights beyond the pitch — pursuing a passion for fashion, working alongside friend Marvin Willem Ofori at Belgian football agency DLF Sports, and studying entrepreneurship.

"I've been blessed to win some of the biggest trophies in the game," he told Sky Sports. "But more than that, I'm proud to have contributed to teams that will forever be remembered in the history of football."

Asked what legacy he hopes to leave, Origi's answer carried the calm of a man at peace with his story.

"A player who authentically fulfilled his purpose. A player who fully walked in who he was created to be — not just as a player, but as a man."

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