Liverpool Host Man City in Premier League Top-of-the-table Clash

Liverpool Host Man City in Premier League Top-of-the-table Clash

Few matchups stir the pot quite like Liverpool versus Manchester City in recent years. Tomorrow, the Premier League offers a spectacle as the Reds host the Citizens at Anfield in a clash that could very well dictate the trajectory of this season’s title race. With just a point separating the two gladiators, the stakes couldn’t be higher

For the final time in the Premier League, Liverpool’s Jurgen Klopp and Manchester City’s Pep Guardiola will share a warm embrace on the Anfield touchline tomorrow afternoon, before the first whistle blows in their tantalising top-flight battle.

Only one place and one point separates the two titans after 27 games of the 2023-24 season, although Arsenal could knock both sides down a spot before tomorrow’s headline encounter commences.

While Klopp and Guardiola could still engage in a battle of wits in this year’s FA Cup final, this weekend’s mouthwatering showdown will be the last time that the pair butt heads with precious Premier League points at stake, not to mention outright control of the title race.

Thanks to their latest Premier League winning goal on record and the 10th latest in the history of the competition – since data became available – the crown is currently the Reds’ to lose, as Darwin Nunez came up with an extraordinary 99th-minute header to down Nottingham Forest last weekend, earning Liverpool’s first Premier League win at the City Ground in the process.

Whether the Reds’ winner should have stood has been a hot-button topic – referee Paul Tierney awarded an incorrect drop-ball according to the laws of the game – and as Nottingham Forest players and staff lost their rag at full time, Liverpool rejoiced in maintaining their one-point lead over the Citizens at the summit of the table.

However, Klopp’s side will be demoted to the runners-up spot if Arsenal overcome Brentford today, and the Reds arrive back on Merseyside following a taxing – but worthwhile – Czech Republic jaunt, demolishing Sparta Prague 5-1 in the first leg of their Europa League last-16 showdown.

The epet Arena annihilation of the Maroons marked Liverpool’s seventh successive win across all tournaments since last month’s 3-1 beating at the hands of Arsenal, and the Reds boast an identical triumphant streak at home, where they are now without defeat in 29 straight fixtures since Real Madrid’s Champions League crushing 13 months ago.

At least three goals have also flown into the opposition net in six of Liverpool’s last seven Anfield contests, but with the hosts only managing one clean sheet from their last nine home affairs, an equally rampant Man City have every right to dream of playing the role of party poopers.

Beginning the month of March with back-to-back Premier League blockbusters, Guardiola’s side were shocked by a Marcus Rashford rocket against Manchester United last weekend, but hotshot Phil Foden (two) and Erling Haaland – atoning for one of the worst misses the competition has ever seen – completed the Citizens’ expected comeback.

While Liverpool still have 90 minutes of their Europa League tie to go before they can celebrate progression, the Manchester mammoths cruised into the last eight of the Champions League with a 6-2 aggregate beating of Copenhagen – earning a straightforward 3-1 home success on Wednesday – and a second straight treble is still a possibility for Sunday’s visitors.

Sixteen of Man City’s last 17 matches across all tournaments have ended in victory – including each of their last five – since December’s 1-0 reverse at the hands of Aston Villa, which has preceded an astonishing 10-game winning run on the road for the reigning top-flight champions.

A 1-1 Etihad stalemate earlier in the season saw Man City stretch their unbeaten run against Liverpool to three matches since a 1-0 defeat in this exact fixture last season, but the Reds have only been beaten in one of their last 20 Premier League home games versus the Citizens, and that 4-1 loss in February 2021 came inside an empty stadium deprived of the unnerving Anfield atmosphere.

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