How Klopp has successfully out-shined previous Liverpool problems

Squad depth has been a problem for Liverpool in the past, but is it now a strength? Here’s why the Premier League leaders look well-equipped to cope with a potentially gruelling second half of the season.

Liverpool’s extraordinary season continued with Saturday’s 5-1 thrashing of Arsenal. After 20 games, they have amassed more points than in any previous top-flight campaign. It is only the third time they have reached this stage of a season unbeaten. They are on course to register the best defensive record and highest points total in Premier League history.

Liverpool’s defensive record, for example, becomes even more impressive when you consider the circumstances. Klopp was unable to call on either Dejan Lovren or Joel Matip at the start of the season, but Joe Gomez excelled in their absence. The youngster was then injured, suffering a fractured leg at the start of December, but Matip and Lovren stepped back in impressively, ensuring Liverpool have been unaffected by his absence.

Further forward, Liverpool’s summer signings have added versatility and variety. Fabinho and Naby Keita have only started 16 Premier League games between them so far, with Klopp careful to bed them in slowly, but they have still made important contributions. Their limited game-time also means they will be fresh for the months ahead.

Fabinho and Keita are helping Liverpool cope without Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain and their arrivals have impacted others positively, too. The increased competition for places has brought the best out of James Milner, who has moved back into the central midfield, while Georginio Wijnaldum and Jordan Henderson were both praised by Klopp on Saturday.

At just £13m, Xherdan Shaqiri has proved the shrewdest of the new additions. The Switzerland international’s arrival from relegated Stoke was not greeted with much fanfare, but he has adapted swiftly, scoring six goals in 15 Premier League appearances and allowing Klopp to adapt Liverpool’s attacking approach and avoid the pitfall of becoming predictable.

Shaqiri’s creativity has helped Liverpool unpick deep-lying defences – only Mohamed Salah has created more chances per 90 minutes so far this season – and his versatility has allowed him to slot in everywhere from central midfield to wide on the right – giving Klopp scope to rotate at the same time as easing the goalscoring burden on Salah, Mane and Firmino.

Daniel Sturridge has fallen in line following his return from loan at West Brom at the end of last season, earning praise from Klopp and scoring two Premier League goals in just 260 minutes of action. In September, it was his stunning late strike that salvaged a 1-1 draw at Chelsea, preserving Liverpool’s unbeaten start and keeping them level on points with City.

Divock Origi has made a vital difference, too, emerging from the bench at the start of December to score a late winner in the Merseyside derby on his first appearance of the season. Had Liverpool drawn that game, they would have slipped four points behind City. Instead, Origi’s goal sparked an eight-game winning streak which has transformed the title race.

Klopp deserves credit for keeping players such as Sturridge and Origi motivated – he has also successfully brought Nathaniel Clyne in from the cold recently – and it can now be said that the depth and completeness of Liverpool’s squad compares favorably with either of the sides directly below them in the table.

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