The Guardian (USA)

Liverpool and the quadruple may not prove such a laughable notion

- Andy Hunter

A 12.30pm kick-off after an internatio­nal break will concern Jürgen Klopp more than any back-slapping to celebrate his 250th league game in charge of Liverpool on Saturday. Even a manager as despairing of the schedule as Klopp, however, may privately concede that Watford’s early arrival offers an ideal opportunit­y in his quest to unnerve and ultimately unseat Manchester City.

Liverpool would go top with a 10th successive Premier League win and 10th consecutiv­e home league win when Roy Hodgson’s relegation-threatened side visit. They would be on the summit for only a few hours should City respond in kind at Burnley but the sense of Liverpool closing in would have been reinforced before Pep Guardiola and his players emerge at Turf Moor. It feels inexorable on current form.

City have been top since beating Watford on 4 December and held an 11-point advantage over their only genuine title rivals at the start of January, having played a game more. Their lead was nine points at the start of February, six when March opened and has been whittled down to one before the business end commences in April. Liverpool, who have equalled their points tally for last season, have reasserted their claims to be far more than a “pain in the ass” to Guardiola. They are his greatest obstacle in the Premier League, FA Cup and Champions League too, and the strongest squad of Klopp’s near seven-year Liverpool reign appears well-equipped to handle the physical load. There is no questionin­g their ability to handle the demands mentally.

“We are not close to thinking about any crazy stuff like that,” the Liverpool manager said when, with the Carabao Cup in the bank, the subject of winning the quadruple cropped up with a quarter more substance. He will continue to straight-bat the possibilit­y, certain in the knowledge that one tired performanc­e, bad decision or injury crisis could shatter the historic quest and one draw can have profound repercussi­ons in a Premier League race with a City team capable of producing another flawless run of their own. But there is justificat­ion for others to contemplat­e crazy stuff, and for Liverpool supporters to dream about it before the showdown at the Etihad Stadium on Sunday week.

From the rare luxury of a monthlong pre-season training camp in Austria and France last summer until the 47th game of their season before the internatio­nal break, Liverpool’s objective, as Klopp has stated, was to build a foundation to deliver in April and May. In that respect his team have timed their run to perfection.

Liverpool have dropped two Premier League points since the turn of the year; City seven points in their past seven league games. There have been 16 wins in 19 matches in all competitio­ns in 2022, including the remarkable penalty shootout success against Chelsea in the Carabao Cup final, and their only defeat, against Internazio­nale in the Champions League, could not derail progress to the quarter-finals on aggregate. Benfica await next week. The Portuguese club are third in Primeira Liga. Liverpool defeated the leaders, Porto, 5-1 and 2-0 in this season’s group stage.

No team in England’s top four divisions have conceded fewer league goals at home than Liverpool (seven), and

the improvemen­t in squad depth was evident throughout the Carabao Cup campaign and when Mohamed Salah and Sadio Mané departed for the Africa Cup of Nations after scoring in the 2-2 draw at Chelsea in January. That month’s signing of Luis Díaz, who has assimilate­d seamlessly since his arrival from Porto, has embellishe­d an already formidable forward line.

Klopp’s aversion to talk of a quadruple is understand­able, however. Liverpool produced several laboured performanc­es before the internatio­nal break but, as in the slender victory over West Ham or defeat by Inter at Anfield, managed to find a way through. The loss of Trent Alexander-Arnold to a hamstring injury is significan­t, with the team’s most creative force responsibl­e for 11 Premier League assists this season and 17 in all competitio­ns. The right-back spent time rehabilita­ting in Dubai during the internatio­nal break and, while not expected to feature against Watford or Benfica on Tuesday, remains on course to return for the crucial trip to the Etihad. Andy Robertson should be available on Saturday despite having to self-isolate with Covid on Scotland duty.

Salah returned to Liverpool by private jet on Wednesday after Egypt’s latest penalty heartbreak at the hands of Senegal and Mané the night before. The Egypt internatio­nal has been castigated in some quarters back home for his country’s failure to reach the World Cup, with Salah sending his penalty over in the shootout, and Klopp will be wary of any emotional toll on his leading goalscorer. The pain could work in Liverpool’s favour as Salah channels his frustratio­ns into their three remaining targets for the season, or decides the sanctuary of Anfield is worth a contract extension. A home date with Watford looks an inviting way to start for a striker with nine goals in seven outings against them.

Klopp’s personal milestone is even more impressive. No Liverpool manager has overseen as many league wins in their first 250 matches as the 54year-old, who has 159 victories in 249 games. Kenny Dalglish was the previous highest with 150 from his first 250. The potential exists for 16 more this season, along with unpreceden­ted achievemen­t.

 ?? Liverpool FC/Getty Images ?? Jürgen Klopp during a Liverpool training session on Thursday. Photograph: Nick Taylor/
Liverpool FC/Getty Images Jürgen Klopp during a Liverpool training session on Thursday. Photograph: Nick Taylor/
 ?? ?? Mohamed Salah back in training on Thursday. Photograph: Nick Taylor/Liverpool FC/Getty Images
Mohamed Salah back in training on Thursday. Photograph: Nick Taylor/Liverpool FC/Getty Images

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