Hope replaced the injured Tom Heaton between the sticks for Burnley and he did not disappoint as the Clarets stood firm for a draw against Liverpool.
A slow start to the game saw no real chances in the opening 10 minutes of the clash. Robertson looked bright on the left flank for Liverpool, but his early dangerous crosses came to nothing.
Alexander-Arnold also looked lively down the right for the hosts, but his delivery on 12 minutes was wasted, with Sturridge looking slightly flat-footed.
The first real opportunity of the game came after 19 minutes when Sturridge turned provider and curled a cross towards the far post for Salah. The Egyptian just reached the cross but could only head over the bar.
From out of nowhere, Burnley took a surprise lead on 27 minutes. Brady flicked into the path of Arfield, who calmly slotted into the bottom corner from the edge of the box.
The lead did not last long, however, with Liverpool stepping up the intensity to superbly equalise. Can lifted a ball over the Burnley defence to pick out Salah, who expertly controlled before slotting a neat strike past Pope.
Liverpool tried to kick on and looked likely to go ahead before the break. Milner whipped in a delightful ball between defence and goalkeeper, but Sturridge again couldn’t benefit and the chance went begging.
Coutinho, who looked sharp throughout his 78 minutes on the field, played in Sturridge, whose touch set him up perfectly to strike home, but the shot rifled into the side netting.
Burnley had the final half chance of the first 45. Brady's free-kick picked out Mee, but his weak header did not trouble Mignolet as it rolled wide.
Liverpool maintained their position on the front foot after the break but were reduced to a number of long-range strikes as the Burnley defence stood firm.
On 46 minutes, Sturridge drove towards the Burnley box and tried to catch out Pope with a chip, but the creative effort flew just over.
Coutinho then had two efforts, along with strikes from Can, Milner and Robertson that didn’t find the target, leading to groans of frustration from the Anfield crowd.
Intricate play in the Burnley box from Firmino and Sturridge then set up a Milner volley that was superbly blocked by James Tarkowski.
Burnley had a couple of hopeful counter-attacks, but never really looked like taking the lead and were happy to sit back and soak up the Liverpool pressure.
Klopp waited 78 minutes before making a change, something that will surely be questioned in the post-match analysis.
The visitors did have an opportunity to win the match with 10 minutes to play when Mee met a deep cross and looped a header over Mignolet, only for Alexander-Arnold to clear off the line.
A final surge from the home side saw Pope produce a string of fine saves. Milner reached the left byline before cutting back for Alexander-Arnold at the far post. The youngster volleyed but Pope got across to save and hold brilliantly.
With five minutes to play, substitute Solanke had an effort tipped onto the crossbar by the 25-year-old goalkeeper. Salah was brought down in the box sparking calls for a penalty, but Alexander-Arnold had other ideas and sent the loose ball towards Solanke. He made firm contact but the effort was magnificently pushed onto the crossbar.
A couple of speculative strikes from Salah and Can were then comfortably kept out by Pope and his side stayed solid to condemn Liverpool to a home draw.
Klopp will be incredibly disappointed his side could not find a winner, but Burley and Pope deserve huge credit for producing such a stern display.