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Jurgen Klopp wants Liverpool squad to be lean and keen for 2020/21 season

Klopp on players potentially travelling amid pandemic regulations: "This is the responsibility of the boys. They have to follow the news, and then you have to react."

Virgil van Dijk, Andy Robertson, Trent Alexander-Arnold
Image: Liverpool players have been given a two-week holiday following their final Premier League fixture

Jurgen Klopp wants to retain a lean squad to ensure they remain competitive next season.

The Liverpool boss used 24 players for their record-breaking Premier League title win and run to the last 16 of the Champions League.

All but four outfield players contributed at least one goal in either competition with youngsters Harvey Elliott and Neco Williams and January signing Takumi Minamino having limited opportunities. Joe Gomez was the only senior player who had a full season not to find the net.

Klopp gave chances to some of the club's academy players in the FA and Carabao Cups to cope with fixture congestion but believes keeping as small a core as possible keeps the players on their toes.

"The solution cannot be to have a much bigger squad for the specific moment and then realise you cannot use all the players," said Klopp, who sent his players off on a well-deserved two-week holiday with a reminder of their responsibilities to keep on top of the latest coronavirus travel guidance and potential quarantine restrictions.

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Jurgen Klopp has been named the LMA Manager of the Year after guiding Liverpool to their first league title in 30 years.

"These players can only play the football they play because they know they are needed.

"They are all human beings and nobody can be held back for a year and then on the last day of the year be told, 'Now we need you.'

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"In between now and then there must be a lot of training and support and challenges stuff like this.

"We cannot keep someone in the backyard and bring them up in the decisive moment. That will not help. We will have solutions for that, we have young players.

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FREE TO WATCH: Highlights from Liverpool's win against Newcastle in the Premier League.

"The size of the squad is not that important to me, the quality of the squad is very much so."

The sale of Dejan Lovren to Zenit Saint Petersburg in a £10.9m deal and Adam Lallana's departure to Brighton, plus the likely departure of Xherdan Shaqiri and potentially Divock Origi leaves spaces up for grabs.

Rhian Brewster, on loan at Swansea, looks set to be integrated into the squad but Klopp is still likely to need to strengthen even if the likes of Curtis Jones, Elliott and Williams play bigger roles.

Adam Lallana holding the Premier League trophy aloft after Liverpool's first top-flight title win in 30 years
Image: Adam Lallana has completed a move to Brighton

However, the manager has consistently cautioned about unrealistic expectations in a post-pandemic transfer market.

"Usually we know about the financial funds that we have as much as you can know," he added.

"A few weeks ago nobody knew if we could play Champions League next season again. Can you count on the money of the Champions League and how much will it be?

"That is all uncertain and that is what we consider because we are not only responsible for the success of the club, we are responsible for all the people at the club and that means everyone who is working here.

"As long as we don't know exactly about things, we have to wait. We have a really good squad, we have to see what we can do, we have to see what have to do, we need still more time.

"Time will hopefully bring a bit more clarity about the future and then we will make our decisions."

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Sky Sports' football pundits assess who will be challenging for the Premier League title next season. 

With the potential for travel regulations to change overnight, as was the case with Spain at the weekend, Klopp issued a warning to his players as they headed off on holiday.

"We had this talk. It is like a conversation without a solution to be honest, the thing is it's an open process which we all have to respect in the moment," he said.

"The boys can go on holiday and we know from everybody where they will go, and it's all OK - these countries are all completely fine - but there's the little extra that the situation can change, constantly.

"So now this is the responsibility of the boys. They have to follow the news, and then you have to react. It is not our job, to say 'Maybe Spain close the border again', or whatever.

"We will do as much as we can to help, but they need to be aware of the situation as well."

The summer transfer window will run for 10 weeks from July 27 and close at 11pm on October 5. A domestic-only window for trades between the Premier League and EFL then runs from October 5 and closes on Friday October 16 at 5pm. Follow all the news and analysis on Sky Sports News and across Sky Sports' digital platforms.

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