Jordon Ibe strike gives Liverpool the upper hand in Capital One Cup semi-final

Liverpool drew first blood in their Capital One Cup semi-final first leg at Stoke where a resilient performance was capped by Jordon Ibe's first-half winner. An angry Jurgen Klopp demanded his players give more after a lacklustre 2-0 defeat at West Ham on Saturday and they duly obliged by putting their bodies on the line - at considerable expense.They lost playmaker Philippe Coutinho and defender Dejan Lovren to hamstring injuries inside 35 minutes and their only fit centre-back - Mamadou Sakho missed the game with a minor knee problem - Kolo Toure gingerly limped off at full-time holding the back of his thigh.The only upside of those injuries was the early introduction of Ibe, who injected pace down the left and ultimately provided the only goal.Liverpool's current tally of 22 goals in 20 league matches is the lowest in their history and their starting line-up, with Christian Benteke dropped, had just nine to their credit this season - Stoke's Marko Arnautovic started with seven to himself.Klopp's call for a response after a woeful weekend display was heeded from the off with Roberto Firmino, playing as a nominal number nine instead of Benteke, testing Jack Butland after just 36 seconds.It was virtually one-way traffic in the opening half-hour as Stoke's footballing front four of Bojan Krkic, Xherdan Shaqiri, Ibrahim Afellay and Arnautovic hardly got a kick and even when they did Bojan completely fluffed his shot when the unmarked Shaqiri cut a low corner back to him.By then Liverpool had already lost Coutinho to a hamstring injury and when Lovren went off as well it meant the Reds had six players either with, or recovering from, a similar problem - in addition to Jordan Henderson (heel), Danny Ings, Joe Gomez (both long-term knee ligaments) and Sakho on the sidelines.But just as they appeared to be losing their momentum, Ibe struck at the opportune moment.Joe Allen appeared to have mis-hit a shot from Adam Lallana's 37th-minute cross but on second inspection the Wales midfielder had opened up his body shape to divert the ball on to Ibe who fired home at the far post.Arnautovic headed wide before Simon Mignolet saved from former team-mate Glen Johnson at a corner and the half-time introduction of forward Jon Walters for midfielder Geoff Cameron gave Liverpool's makeshift central defensive pair of Toure and midfielder Lucas Leiva much more to think about.Alberto Moreno's tackle on Glenn Whelan could have resulted in a penalty - as could the Stoke midfielder's challenge on Allen at the other end - before Firmino almost inadvertently made the match safe when Butland's blasted clearance rebounded into the goalkeeper's hands and fortunately not over his head while Stoke's greatest threat came from substitute Joselu's deflected shot which Mignolet tipped over.Walters dragged a shot wide with the last kick of the match but Stoke are far from out of the tie as they head to Anfield knowing that is where Liverpool are often more vulnerable.TWEET OF THE MATCH"Wow. Three hammys. Any fitness coaches get your cv's in the post. Liverpool FC, Melwood." - Joey BartonPLAYER RATINGSStokeJack Butland: 6Glen Johnson: 6Ryan Shawcross: 7Philipp Wollscheid: 6Erik Pieters: 6Glenn Whelan: 6Geoff Cameron: 5Xherdan Shaqiri: 6Ibrahim Afellay: 6Marko Arnautovic: 6Bojan Krkic: 5SubstitutesJonathan Walters (on for Cameron, 46): 6Joselu (on for Bojan, 69): 5Peter Crouch (on for Shaqiri, 83): 5 LiverpoolSimon Mignolet: 6Nathaniel Clyne: 6Kolo Toure: 6Dejan Lovren: 5Alberto Moreno: 6Emre Can: 7Lucas Leiva: 6Joe Allen: 7Adam Lallana: 6Philippe Coutinho: 5Roberto Firmino: 6SubstitutesJordon Ibe (on for Coutinho, 18): 7James Milner (on for Lovren, 34): 6Christian Benteke (on for Allen 79): 5STAR MANEmre Can: It was a close-run thing with Joe Allen, but the Germany international just edged it with a controlling, composed performance in midfield where he provided some much-needed leadership.MOMENT OF THE MATCHJoe Allen's deft pass for Ibe's goal. There was some debate whether it was a mis-hit shot, but the midfielder definitely meant his lay-off.VIEW FROM THE BENCHJurgen Klopp had to make two early changes after more injuries to his already-depleted squad, but even dropping midfielder Lucas Leiva into central defence worked. He had demanded a performance from his players and he appeared to enjoy their response. Mark Hughes cut a forlorn figure as the Stoke boss stood in the rain getting drenched without a coat. Made three positive substitutions, but none came off and none of his flair players put in a performance.MOAN OF THE MATCHThe lack of goals, which is probably not surprising for two of the Premier League's least prolific sides. The game in the second half was more open than the scoreline suggests.WHO'S UP NEXT?Exeter v Liverpool (FA Cup, Friday January 8)Doncaster v Stoke (FA Cup, Saturday, January 9)

Source: PA