Will they gegenpress on after their 0-0 draw with Spurs?
This man has started well under Klopp.
Simon Mignolet was excellent for Liverpool, he sometimes makes simple things look difficult, but he was safe as houses for his club today, and often is in big matches.
Under Brendan Rodgers, the system of playing it out from the back sometimes made Mignolet look bad, his defenders would lazily pass the ball around the back, and when it came back to Mignolet, the opposing team would pounce and force a mistake.
He certainly wasn't the best man for the job when it came to playing Brendan Rodgers' system, but he's made a good start under Klopp, playing in a sweeper role as the defenders push up as far as the halfway line.
Mignolet's decision making is generally pretty sound, so this should be a role that suits him.
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Gegenpressing is hard...
Liverpool came out of the traps at lightning pace, and it almost paid off early on. Tottenham struggled to get on the ball, and were at sixes and sevens in the first 20 minutes or so.
But after 30 minutes, the pace dropped and Liverpool started to revert back to the slow, aimless build-up play that is so easy to read, and made them so predictable and impotent under Rodgers.
Stan Collymore wrote that he thinks Liverpool's new system will be heavily reliant on them scoring the first goal, and then controlling the game from there.
And it certainly seems that, from today's evidence, the longer the game goes on without Liverpool scoring, the more chance their opposition have of getting control of the game and exposing tiring players who can't keep up that level of intensity for 90 minutes.
But it can work - particularly defensively.
It took Borussia Dortmund a fair amount of time to fully develop the playing style Klopp is now famous for. But when they got there, they were magnificent.
And from today's evidence, Liverpool look to have learned the basics quickly, particularly at the back.
But what about the other end of the pitch?
Ian Kington / AFP / Getty Images
Sadly, Liverpool are, and probably will be, lacklustre in the final third for a little while longer.
Over the past year or so, Liverpool's attackers have had an uncanny ability to bore people to tears.
They played at times almost as if they were afraid of the box, skirting around it, making sideways pass after sideways pass, until Henderson, Gerrard or Coutinho eventually got bored and fired off a shot from 20 yards.
Jurgen Klopp will have to go some way to reach the dizzy heights of Liverpool's dazzling Suarez, Sturridge, Sterling combo, especially given only one of those players is still at the club, and his career looks as if it could be perennially hampered by injury.
But one man who does have the ability to flourish under this system is Benteke. Playing with one man up front requires an all-rounder, someone who can hassle defenders and pull the opposition out of shape, someone who can get a head on the ball, someone who will take their opportunities when they get them.
It requires fast feet, somebody comfortable with the majority of play coming through a crowded and narrow middle channel, sometimes it even just requires somebody who will get out the way and let the midfielders through the gap.
Christian Benteke fits the mould, but who should play behind him?
Ian Kington / AFP / Getty Images
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