IT’S nip and fucking tuck time again.
We win. They win. But we have the edge. It’s now very clear. Manchester City are very good but Liverpool may just be the more complete football team.
In full attacking cry, Pep Guardiola‘s side can look a force of nature, as can Jürgen Klopp’s Liverpool. But turn this city team around — not an easy thing to do granted — and they can be made to look ragged. This no longer applies to Liverpool.
I was privileged to watch the 1978-79 Liverpool side that conceded just 16 goals in a season. It was in no sense a defensive team, far from it (it scored 86 goals), but it just so completely controlled games that the opposition simply couldn’t lay a glove on.
The 2019 model Liverpool has only seen 10 goals breach its defence with nearly two thirds of the season past. It’s point gaining at a faster rate than the ’79 side. Whisper it, but we may be witnessing a very special team emerging.
Bob Paisley’s side amassed 68 points, then a top-flight record. Adjusted to today’s 38-game season, with three points awarded for a win, that translates to a haul equivalent to about 88 points in 2019. This year’s Liverpool need just 31 points from 16 remaining games to match the achievement of Liverpool’s greatest ever league season.
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Klopp’s team could reach the 1979 total merely by winning eight or nine of their remaining fixtures. In many ways, what’s unfolding before us beggars belief. We could be watching the greatest incarnation of a Liverpool team of all time.
So what does the greatest version of all time look like? It may very well look like Mo Salah, like Sadio Mane, like Alisson Becker, like Virgil van Dijk, like newly tied-down Andy Robbo. For Dalglish, Souness, Hansen, read Firmino, Wijnaldum and Gomez. This is how we may come to view today’s crop.
And yet, the truly incredible possibility remains that the very best of the best could still be bettered by the current incarnation of Manchester City. For a 90-point finish by Liverpool in May — awesome achievement as that might be — would mean that they had still gone on to drop a further 15 points this season.
Even with a four-point lead over City, as it stands, it would be unlikely dropping 15 more points would be few enough to enable Liverpool to emerge with a first league title since 1990.
I don’t know how Jürgen sleeps at night. I’m up till all hours. Kloppo knows to become the king of kings he can only face the front, and in his and our path stand Crystal Palace. Right now, they are the greatest threat to our ambitions.
Our horrible ex Roy Hodgson will drive his south London bus and park it in front of our goal this Saturday. He has men who can threaten us on the counter — Zaha and Townsend most notably — but all the training ground sessions he will be working on this week will be about frustrating Liverpool.
Palace are 14th but they may be less crap than that placing suggests. They have won two of their last two away — against Wolves and Man City. We’d be foolish to underestimate them.
Klopp will likely face up Hodgson’s uber conservative 4-5-1 formation with his now preferred 4-2-3-1. Gini Wijnaldum and Trent Alexander-Arnold will join Joe Gomez in the treatment room and won’t face Palace at the weekend. James Milner will surely take Trent’s place, while Fabinho should return to his preferred midfield position in Wijnaldum’s stead.
The biggest selection decision for the Liverpool manager will be whether or not to pick Shaqiri ahead of Naby Keita. I’d like to see Naby given the nod and the opportunity to play himself into form. Shaqiri is so potent as an impact substitute and could be best preserved as the not-so-secret late weapon.
It’s just another game and just another day, Reds. A day nearer the greatest day.
Predicted 11: Alisson; Milner, Matip, van Dijk, Robertson; Fabinho, Henderson; Mane, Firmino, Keita; Salah
Kick off: 3pm, Saturday
Referee: Jonathan Moss
Odds by Redsbet: Liverpool 1-5, Draw 23-4, Crystal Palace 21-2
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Dropping any points at this stage would be a nightmare but to drop them to Palace, and Roy – God help us, that is the definitive appalling vista. Let’s mow them over and start gathering ourselves for the challenges ahead.
We have never scored a goal against a Hodgson team at home in the league (two 0-0s and a 1-0 defeat). We need to make sure that very odd stat is dead and buried tomorrow
Indeed, they are also the last team to beat us at Anfield in the League. they also did us a favour in beating City at the Eithad.
We MUST not treat this team and/or Roy lightly.
Love how everyone’s on board with “playing Keita into form” that is, until he has stinker and we draw and everyone’s head falls off.
At their ground the greatest threat to Liverpool that day was Naby and his passing to Palace in dangerous areas in and around our box. granted we had that one sublime moment where Naby played that one ball and so far that has been all we’ve seen from Keita.
i am like your good self, i am hardly thrilled at the prospect of relying on Naby, so far for me his selection is up their with Lallana’s. But we are fast filling up the treatment room and have fair few options left, other than the kids… and Wolves gave us enough indication to tell us everything we needed to know.
The title race talk and projections of how many points we need is coming too early for me. We’ve only just passed the half way point. Get to 28 games and if we are still there or thereabouts, talk then.
Boring twat, I know but I remember Ranieri refused to talk about the title until it was being couriered up the M1 to the KP stadium.