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Premier League: Will this finally be Liverpool’s year?

  • Liverpool’s form and self-belief suggests that their long wait for the league title is coming to an end
  • Liverpool have already opened up an eight-point lead over the chasing pack

Liverpool players celebrate the opening goal against Manchester City.
Liverpool players celebrate the opening goal against Manchester City. (Getty Images)

There is still more than six months of the Premier League season left, with 26 games and no doubt many plot twists ahead, but Liverpool’s 3-1 win over Manchester City on 10 November had the feel of a changing of the guard at the pinnacle of English football.

It was not so much the maths, though Liverpool’s nine-point advantage over defending champions City, with a point less over Leicester City and Chelsea, is a significant gap, especially as Jürgen Klopp’s side have lost just one league game in 18 months. But it was the manner of Liverpool’s victory at Anfield which suggested that the fans’ nearly 30-year wait for a domestic league title may be coming to a close.

City were by no means poor, and played their part in an entertaining encounter, but Liverpool were better in every department. Klopp’s side were sharper in attack, where Mohamed Salah and Sadio Mane both found the target, more solid at the back and the midfielders were faster, stronger, harder and more incisive, as always helped by their rampaging full-backs.

Liverpool are European champions after overpowering teams of the calibre of Barcelona, bullying them physically, ripping them apart with speedy bursts down the flanks from Trent Alexander-Arnold and Andy Robertson and through ruthless finishing. City, though, have won the past two Premier League titles thanks to their technical brilliance and mastery of possession football, which they executed with relentless consistency.

However, this season Liverpool have matched that level of consistency. Unbeaten and with 11 wins from 12, they arrived at this game with the only question being whether they could cope with the unique challenge of Pep Guardiola’s City machine.

The only conclusion after 90 minutes of high-quality football was that Liverpool have no weak spots. It is hard to think of any team in the world that would enter the intimidating atmosphere of Anfield confident of leaving with a win.

City, in contrast, have had a major weakness exposed due to injuries and made an unfathomable mistake in the transfer market by not replacing former captain Vincent Kompany when he left the club in the close-season—and that has come back to bite them. Liverpool were able to replace Virgil van Dijk’s injured defensive partner Joel Matip with the experienced Croatian Dejan Lovren and still had England international Joe Gomez on the bench.

There was no glaring error from City’s defenders but there was an air of vulnerability about them throughout the game and the sense of certainty that Liverpool would punish Guardiola’s back line for any slip-up.

“If you give them an inch, they will take that and score goals," said City’s Portuguese midfielder Bernardo Silva, who grabbed their late consolation goal.

City will recover from this loss, will surely strengthen their defence in the January transfer window, and it would be a foolish pundit who writes them off.

Liverpool’s protestations that this game decided nothing were inevitable but there was no hiding the desire Klopp has to deliver that long-absent league title.

“Nine points, you cannot imagine that something like this happens," said the German. “But it’s not important because who wants to be first in early November? We want to be first in May."

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