'We can't carry on like this': Jurgen Klopp's Liverpool must play twice in 24 hours with two different squads

Fixture pile-up means League Cup tie against Aston Villa on December 17 and the Club World Cup the next day

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - NOVEMBER 05: Jurgen Klopp, Manager of Liverpool looks on prior to the UEFA Champions League group E match between Liverpool FC and KRC Genk at Anfield on November 05, 2019 in Liverpool, United Kingdom. (Photo by Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images)
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Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp will split his squad to play two games in 24 hours amid huge fixture congestion, but complained: "We cannot carry on like this".

Klopp must make the extraordinary decision of who plays where after their League Cup quarter-final against Aston Villa was confirmed for its original date, December 17, the day before Liverpool play a Club World Cup semi-final in Doha.

"We cannot carry on like this. Come on. That's why I ask that we sit at a table and find solutions. At the moment, the solutions sound like problems," said Klopp.

Fixture congestion - the Reds have already had to postpone one Premier League match to fit in their trip to the Gulf - meant it was impossible to fit in the tie before the scheduled semi-final first leg in early January.

So Liverpool have reluctantly agreed to fulfil both fixtures using the full extent of their extended first-team squad and youth team players.

"We asked Aston Villa if they would come to Qatar and we can play the game there!" joked Klopp.

"We have an idea how we do it, but it's too early to speak about it. We made a decision because all the other alternatives were more problems than solutions, so we said 'okay'.

"This is how we can do it as good as possible for us. We have a bit of time to think about that, and more important things to do.

"In these next couple of weeks we will make a decision about how it will look exactly. But in the end, they will play a Liverpool team, 100 per cent."

Klopp has previously sounded his displeasure at how the domestic calendar, combined with international fixtures, places a huge demand on players.

However, he was not willing to risk becoming embroiled in a row with authorities about the scheduling of this game.

Asked if they were put under pressure to play the League Cup game, he said: "Kind of! Do you want to be really in trouble with FIFA? No. Do we want to be in trouble with the EFL? Probably not. We respect the competition.

"It sounds like we don't like the Carabao (League) Cup, which is not true. What I don't like is that it's two legs in the semi-final. I don't understand that and I don't like that in the busiest period.

"The Club World Cup, you only play if you win the Champions League, and that doesn't happen in your life five million times. You take the opportunity.

"Is it the best time of the year? No. We are busy, but we go there. We try to play all the games with what we have. Now we had this situation and nobody had any idea.

"It's not only the Carabao Cup. If you have a rematch (replay) in the FA Cup, which I don't like, and you go through to the final of the Carabao Cup... you cannot work like this.

"I don't want to cancel competitions - I'm from Germany, why should I cancel English competitions - but I still want to talk about the problems, and that's what I did.

"Every year we do the same and people think it's funny that a team has to play five games in three days."

The EFL insisted they had to protect the integrity of their competition but thanked Liverpool for agreeing to a solution.

"The EFL has long acknowledged that this competition provides those clubs with large resources with the opportunity to rotate their squads knowing that teams who wish to be successful have to be prepared to play a large amount of matches over the course of the season," said EFL football services director Dave Cookson.

"Therefore, in these exceptional circumstances, the decision was taken having received clear assurances from the club that there will be a level of consistency in team selection, a feature which is key to ensuring integrity is maintained.

"We recognise the challenges Liverpool face in this matter and appreciate the efforts made to find a practical solution."