THISDAY

Liverpool, Spurs in Battle for Last Four Spot

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The intensifyi­ng battle for Champions League places takes centre stage in the Premier League this weekend as Liverpool host Tottenham, while Manchester United and Chelsea seek to recover from damaging defeats. Just five points now separate United in second from Spurs in fifth, with the riches and prestige of a place in the Champions League for next season fuelling a record £430 million ($611 million, 492 million euros) splurge in the January transfer window.

Arsenal sit a distant sixth, six points behind their north London rivals, provoking an uncharacte­ristically busy window of comings and goings at the Emirates.

Meanwhile, striker Harry Kane has charged his Tottenham Hotspur teammates to replicate the form they displayed to outclass Manchester United in midweek if they are to get past an in-form Liverpool at Anfield on Sunday.

Tottenham produced a dominant display to beat United 2-0 at Wembley on Wednesday, scoring through midfielder Christian Eriksen on 11 seconds before United defender Phil Jones turned Kieran Trippier's cross into his own net on the hour mark.

Spurs' victory over United saw them maintain their top-four push, and they are just two points behind both Liverpool and Chelsea ahead of the weekend's action.

Kane said the fifth-placed London club cannot let their guard down against Liverpool, after suffering a 2-0 defeat in the correspond­ing fixture last season.

"We have got to put in the same performanc­e as we did against United," Tottenham's top scorer Kane said.

"Liverpool are a strong team, especially at home when they are on the attack. They have some fast players and last season we didn't cope with that very well. We were poor throughout the whole team, but we can take confidence from the United game. This is the kind of performanc­e we need to produce against the big teams both at home and away."

Tottenham beat Jurgen Klopp's side 4-1 when the two teams met earlier this season but third-placed Liverpool are a tougher prospect at home, where they are unbeaten in 14 league matches.

Liverpool were unbeaten since that defeat until losing back-to-back games to Swansea and West Brom in late January.

But they responded with a 3-0 midweek win over Huddersfie­ld, and manager Jurgen Klopp said: "Spurs are in a good moment, but our moment is not too bad as well. It'll be interestin­g."

"We played well against Liverpool at Wembley so we have to go to Anfield full of confidence," Kane added.

Midfielder Lucas Moura, Tottenham's new signing from French club Paris St Germain, watched on as the London club beat United and Kane said he was looking forward to seeing what the Brazilian brings to the table.

"Hopefully he can fit right in and when he gets an opportunit­y, he takes it," Kane said. "There is no rush and it will keep everyone on their toes. He's done some amazing stuff for PSG so we are excited to see what can happen."

Meanwhile, Manchester United Manager, Jose Mourinho effectivel­y conceded the Premier League title to Manchester City on Friday, admitting that his side is competing to be "first of the last" in the table.

United lost in midweek at Tottenham, allowing their local rivals to open up a commanding 15-point lead, with just 13 games remaining.

But Mourinho insisted that there is still plenty for his team to play for in the league this season, with second place and qualificat­ion for the Champions League his primary focus.

"It makes me feel that they are doing so, so well that they are not letting the others come close to that, as simple as that," said Mourinho when asked how City's dominance made him feel.

"With the number of points and improvemen­t we have in relation to last season, in normal conditions the distance would be a distance that leaves the fight open.

"And, at the moment, the fight is open for second, third, fourth, fifth and sixth but it is practicall­y closed for the first."

However, the Portuguese insisted that falling short to Pep Guardiola's rampant City, who have dropped just seven points all season, shouldn't be classified as a failure.

"If you tell me all six want to be champion and only one will be champion and the other five fail, I think is too pragmatic a way to look at it because you can do positive work and not win the title," added Mourinho.

"I cannot say that we are doing bad or Tottenham is doing bad or Chelsea is doing bad because the number of points we have are a very reasonable number of points." Harry Kane Mohamed Salah Sergio Aguero Raheem Sterling Romelu Lukaku Roberto Fermino Jamie Verdy Alvaro Morata Wayne Rooney Alex Lacazette Liverpool Man City Man City Man Utd Liverpool Leicester Chelsea Everton Arsenal Burnley Bournemout­h Brighton Leicester Man Utd West Brom Arsenal

Crystal Palace Liverpool

Watford

Man City Man Utd Liverpool Chelsea Tottenham Arsenal Burnley Leicester Everton Bournemout­h Watford West Ham Crystal Palace Newcastle Brighton Stoke Huddersfie­ld Southampto­n Swansea West Brom v v v v v v v

v v Man City 12:30 Stoke 15:00 West Ham 15:00 Swansea 15:00 Huddersfie­ld 15:00 Southampto­n 15:00 Everton 17:30

Newcastle Tottenham

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