Former Liverpool star Jamie Redknapp last night backed Jurgen Klopp as the ideal man to take over from Brendan Rodgers.

The Irishman was axed by the club's American owners minutes after the club drew 1-1 against Everton in the Merseyside derby at Goodison.

Klopp has been out of work since leaving Borussia Dortmund at the end of last season and the German is the early favourite to replace Rodgers, alongside Carlo Ancelotti.

Redknapp said: "I would go for Klopp over Ancelotti; I think he has got more to prove. Liverpool is not an easy job now.

"It needs somebody with that energy and drive to get Liverpool back to where it wants to be and I think Jurgen Klopp is that man."

Redknapp felt Rodgers handled himself well at Anfield after losing some key players during his tenure, adding: "The football Liverpool played at times was fantastic. You could say that was because he had Luis Suarez but he certainly gave him the right role, he handled every situation Luis Suarez caused him extremely well.

"He's had to deal with Raheem Sterling leaving the club, obviously he has lost Steven Gerrard this season so he's had a lot to deal with, to a certain extent.

"But as soon as things start to go wrong, and there was a clamour for a change at the club with the fans, it becomes very difficult for you."

John Aldridge, who played for Liverpool between 1987-89, was surprised by the timing of the club's decision to end Rodgers' spell in charge.

Aldridge said: "Well I'm utterly shocked. I've seen the press conference and I'm really shocked the way it has all happened so quick.

"Us ex-players have tried to be constructive in our criticism of how Liverpool have portrayed themselves over the last couple of months of last season and the way we've started this campaign - it's not been great. You wait and see signs of us rejuvenating but it's not really happened up to now.

"The timing I have to say - I thought Brendan was going to be given a bit more time to turn it around - but you move on, that's what football is all about.

"It's a results business and Liverpool has got a massive, big stand to fill with nearly 10,000 more seats and they have got to get the feel-good factor within the club which we haven't had for a while now and maybe that might have tipped the balance with the owners."

Former Liverpool captain Jamie Carragher said the club's owners must get the next appointment right, and suggested Rodgers should have gone sooner.

Reflecting on a dismal end to last season, Carragher said: "They finished poorly - you think of the (FA Cup) semi-final against Aston Villa, games against Hull, Palace and that finish at Stoke (where Liverpool lost 6-1 on the final day), so he's lucky to keep his job.

"But to then keep him in charge, give him that money and then change the manager after seven games, he will know himself he had to make a big start and he hasn't so that's where the pressure comes from."

Addressing the challenge facing owners Fenway Sports Group, Carragher was critical of their performance at the helm of the club.

He said: "They've made a lot of decisions since they've come that haven't worked. At the moment the owners' track record in making changes for Liverpool Football Club over the last two or three years has not been good enough. It's miles off.

"I'd have preferred them to do it (sack Rodgers) in the summer. He's been there three and a bit years, they haven't won a trophy and they've played Champions League football once, that's not good enough for Liverpool.

"Liverpool have won one Carling Cup in 10 years.

"Liverpool are becoming Tottenham: they think they're a big club but the real big clubs are not too worried about them, who they buy and what they're going to do. That's the situation it's become for Liverpool, even when I was there towards the end. I'm not just blaming Brendan Rodgers and this set of players.

"What are these owners of the club going to do to get Liverpool back to where they need to be, which is consistently in CL and challenging for trophies?"

Graeme Souness, who captained and managed Liverpool, said the club had fallen behind their supposed rivals, notably in the transfer market.

"The teams that buy the finished article are Man Utd, Chelsea and Man City, and what do they have in common? They win the Premier League," Souness said. I'm amazed by the story and I'm not sure which way it'll turn now."