Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Klopp hails his winning youngsters from afar

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J U RGE N K lopp se nt messages of support and congratula­tions before and after the youngest side i n L i v e r p o o l ’s history beat Shrewsbury 1- 0 i n t hei r FA Cup fourth-round replay.

The manager and his squad were, somewhat controvers­ially, absent on their scheduled mid-season break but the German still maintained contact with the coaching staff and the players and had an able deputy in James Milner offering his experience and expertise at close quarters.

While his team-mates are currently on holiday, Liverpool’s veteran midfielder has remained at home for a few extra days to continue his rehabilita­tion from a hamstring injury before he takes a break but wanted to offer his support in a more substantia­l way.

“He trained with us and he asked whether he could come along. I think the answer is ‘Yes, of course you can.’ It was very respectful to ask,” said U/23 coach Neil Critchley, who led the team at Anfield in Klopp’s absence.

“He then said ‘Can I come in the dressing-room?’. What do you think? ‘Of course’.

“He was giving words of advice, he was getting right behind the players. He was vocal in the dressing-room. He was animated. He was vocal behind me, I could hear him.

“He was genuinely delighted at how the boys performed.”

Klopp, as he did back in December when he was away with the first team at the Club World Cup in Qatar, watched the game from afar and offered his backing via phone.

“The boss was in touch with some words of advice and encouragem­ent,” added Critchley after former Manchester United academy graduate Ro-Shaun Williams’ own goal settled the tie midway through the second half.

“We had a message from the staff that he is delighted with the performanc­e and is buzzing.

“We have given him a game against Chelsea to look forward to.

“He just gives you total clarity, belief, play the Liverpool way, go for it. And that is what the first team do.

“This is us, this is how we play, this is what we stand for and you had better be ready for it.”

Liverpool’s starting line-up had an average age of 19 years and 102 days, contained three debutants and had 36 senior appearance­s between them yet they dominated a game and fully deserved their victory and a lap of honour in front of a sell-out 53,000 crowd.

“We played the game with real maturity. I was really impressed with how we stood up to the physical side of the game, first balls, second balls, much better than the Aston Villa game,” added Critchley.

“Over 90 minutes, we had the better chances and were just about the deserved winners.”

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