The rescheduled date and time for Liverpool’s Premier League match with Tottenham Hotspur next month was announced on Friday.
The clash at Anfield will now kick off at 4.30pm BST on Sunday May 5.
Liverpool are currently at the top of the Premier League table with 70 points after 30 matches. Arsenal are in second place with two points fewer than the league leaders. Meanwhile, defending champions Manchester City are third with 67 points.
Aston Villa, Tottenham and Manchester United are at fourth, fifth and sixth place, respectively.
Earlier, Jurgen Klopp was satisfied with Liverpool's performance in Thursday night's 3-1 win over Sheffield United at Anfield.
Klopp's men took the lead in the first half when Darwin Nunez took full advantage of an attempted clearance from goalkeeper Ivo Grbic.
The visitors levelled proceedings in the second half through Gustavo Hamer's header deflecting in off Conor Bradley, but Mac Allister's beautiful Kop-end hit and Cody Gakpo late goal sealed all three points for Liverpool.
“As a manager, you have to take it like you get it. I would prefer to be 5-0 up at that moment already but that's tricky. We scored one of my favourite goals ever, 1-0, because I think from time to time a striker needs that kind of thing. I ask him quite a lot to press the opponent and it's quite rare that you get really close enough to have this kind of block, but he did and then scores, 1-0. That's great,” Klopp said after the match.
“And then these kind of games are difficult. Low block, obviously learning that their set-pieces are really difficult after 20 seconds when they could have been 1-0 up, which would have been really funny again, and then in the next corner again the ball goes through and there is nobody at the far post – thank God, otherwise that would have been again a big chance.
“Then obviously we controlled the game but there are different ways to control a football game and the way we controlled it today was not the right one with not enough creating.
“I don't expect now that we have chance after chance after chance because they didn't even have counter-attacks if I'm right. If I would have asked the boys for the counter-press, it was not necessary because we won the ball back anyway, so it's like you don't even have these kind of moments. What you have to do, we saw that after 60 minutes. You have to accelerate, you have to speed up, you have to overlap, underlap – and that's what we did all of a sudden.”