Liverpool should splash the cash for Keita, urges Hamann
Jurgen Klopp has guided Liverpool back into the Champions League and could seek to spend big to lure Naby Keita to Anfield.

Naby Keita would be worth every penny of a £70million transfer fee if Liverpool decided to make the RB Leipzig midfielder the club's record signing.
That is the view of former Anfield favourite Dietmar Hamann, who believes the Guinea international would readily justify such a vast sum.
Keita has been strongly tipped for a move to Merseyside, with Jurgen Klopp said to be a keen admirer of the 22-year-old, and Hamann urged the Reds to take the plunge ahead of their return to the Champions League.
"Would £70million put me off buying Keita? No," the German told the Liverpool Echo.
"Just getting through the play-off round and into the group stage of the Champions League would pay off a big chunk of that fee.
"With Keita on board, Liverpool would have an even better chance of getting through.
"You can question the fees being mentioned for the likes of [Virgil] van Dijk and Keita, but if you want the top players you have to pay the going rate.
Get FourFourTwo Newsletter
The best features, fun and footballing quizzes, straight to your inbox every week.
"It's no good saying the market value is £30million because you aren't going to get someone like that for that fee.
"If Liverpool had to pay £60million or £70million to get Keita it wouldn't worry me. You are buying a top player for years to come."
Klopp has already secured the services of Mohamed Salah from Roma.

How to watch Arsenal vs West Ham: Live streams for today's WSL clash

‘Newcastle’s board said I was over the hill, so I left and played 108 consecutive games and won the European Cup – not a bad way to answer that accusation!’: Ex-Magpies defender reflects on career highlight after proving former side wrong