Tuesday 20 October 2015 13:17, UK
Sky Sports pundit Jamie Carragher has cast his eye over Jurgen Klopp's first game as Liverpool manager.
The Reds kicked off the Klopp era with a hard-fought goalless draw away to Tottenham, a ground where they had won the previous two encounters by an aggregate score of 8-0.
Despite the lack of goals, former Reds defender Carragher was impressed with the display, which he believes exhibited Klopp's managerial foundations - discipline and pressing.
Speaking on Monday Night Football, he said: "I liked what I saw. Very rarely do you see a manager stamp his authority on a team from day one, but that's what he did.
"Over the week since he's had the job, we've been reading about what he is like as a manager - pressing, how much distance they are going to cover.
"Transition pressing was a massive thing for Klopp at Borussia Dortmund and it looks like it's going to be a really big thing for this Liverpool team. One thing Klopp likes is for four or five players to get around the opposition player on the ball. He sees transition as a great opportunity to score a goal.
"As soon as they lose the ball you can see they will keep pressing until they win it back. They're organised and you can see that has been worked on in the first two or three days in training.
"What was the difference? Well, these are things you don't see from every team and that is what impressed me in the past from Klopp and we're seeing it from day one. The distance Liverpool covered, it was like they had an extra man on the pitch in terms of pressing and defending.
"The increase in sprints was the big one, the big thing in football is sports science and how quickly you can get to people and press people with high intensity. This was not a Liverpool team that were under the cosh or had 30 per cent possession, they had more possession than Spurs and they still covered that amount of ground.
"What I liked was how compact they were at White Hart Lane, 30 to 35 metres from back to front. He played in the positions they were suited to and still got them to press. The work from those first two to three days on the training ground was clear to see on the pitch."
Klopp's glittering seven-year spell at Borussia Dortmund, during which he won two Bundesliga titles and guided the club to the 2013 Champions League final, was notable for his employment of defensive intensity.
Carragher was quick to dismiss those discrediting Liverpool's improvement under Klopp and, instead, praised the German's ability to transfer his tactics to his new club given the short amount of time he has had to work with the team.
"While Liverpool aren't the only team to press in that way, it was brilliant to see such organisation on the first day," he added.
"The roles of [Philippe] Coutinho and [Adam] Lallana were to stop balls going through the middle, they forced Tottenham wide all the time and they pressed. Despite having only three days to work with the team you could see the organisation straight away.
"If you were to ask any of the Tottenham players whether they enjoyed playing in that game I think it would have been a nightmare for them.
"Liverpool's future opponents will be thinking they're in for a right game, it's going to be very tough and it's not going to be enjoyable if they continue to press like that, and I think they will.
"I've heard it mentioned that all Liverpool have done is run around and that every team should do that. Every team doesn't do that. You can't continually throw that Klopp, he's come in from day one and he's done it."