Klopp has challenged his players to shake off any lingering effects of injuries, admitting Liverpool are no longer in a position to accommodate slow returns to form.
The Reds' squad had been beset by fitness concerns for a number of months until a quartet of comebacks last week finally whittled down the absentees
Trent-Alexander Arnold started his first game since February in Thursday's 1-0 win over Atalanta in the Europa League while goalkeeper Alisson Becker was making just his second since a hamstring problem over two months ago.
Klopp has been trying to assuage an injury list for most of the calendar and at one point in mid-February, he was unable to call upon as many as 13 first-team players.
The manager says he cannot afford his players the time and space normally needed to get back to full fitness.
Klopp
“We need Trent Alexander-Arnold, of course, but we need him in a really good shape and form and that's what he has to get up to,"
"It's not about him and it's not his fault if he wouldn't be, it's just the situation.
"So it is how quickly can we get him rolling, if you want, the same for Diogo. It was the same for Robbo (Andy Robertson) and it is the same for Mo Salah.
“They all had injuries which they never had before, for length. Dom Szoboszlai the same. Curtis Jones the same.
"It's good to have them but it is not about who wears the shirt, it is about how can we perform. We have to find a way to help the boys in the best way, to bring them as quickly as possible into their best form or shape and from there we have to go.
"But of course each player plays with that quality anyway and without them we wouldn't have a chance. With them we have a chance, with them in a really good football moment the chance gets bigger and bigger."
Klopp added
“There is no perfect way, the boys more or less have to get through this by themselves. We had an injury with Conor Bradley, so it means one right-back solution is gone so it's good that Trent is back.
"So now he will probably find a way into it on the field by doing it. That's how it is. We can talk about that for the next five days but I'm long in the business and I don't know anybody who can speed these things up.
"It depends in the moment; the better the team plays the easier it is for the boys to step in and get up to speed.
“If you are not in a great moment it is really tricky for them as well so they should not be the ones who turn it around.
“The boys who played much more rhythm have to set the level and the other boys fit in and then push us to the next level."
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