The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

At Anfield, a year-end treat

With just a point separating them, Liverpool and Manchester City meet tonight in the final match of 2016

- REUTERS

IT IS the perfect year-ending treat: Liverpool versus Manchester City, two Premier League title challenger­s brimful of attacking, passand-move brio and full of goals duelling at high pace at one of England's noisiest and most storied venues.

"If I wasn't sitting on the bench, I would buy a ticket!" boomed Juergen Klopp with a smile on Thursday as he pondered Anfield's blockbusti­ng prelude to the New Year's Eve celebratio­ns on Saturday.

In pursuit of Chelsea, who have been making serene, faultless progress, secondplac­ed Liverpool and Pep Guardiola's City may feel this is a match they simply must win. A draw would not be much use to either with the prospect of Chelsea, who should make it 13 wins in a row against Stoke City earlier in the afternoon, ending the year eight points clear of Liverpool and nine ahead of City.

It is not a slight on Antonio Conte's leaders to suggest Liverpool and City are, on their day, the most dazzling teams in the division but their problem remains that no-one can be confident when that day will be.

Will we see the Liverpool who eviscerate­d Stoke City 4-1 to chill the bones of a very cold-looking, flat-capped but suitably impressed Guardiola at Anfield on Monday?

Or the Liverpool who looked as if they couldn't defend to save their lives as they twice surrendere­d a two-goal lead to lose 43 at humble Bournemout­h earlier in the month. Likewise, will it be the crisp Guardiola machine that made his old Barcelona charges look lost at the Etihad in the Champions League? Or the hapless, strangely dispirited bunch who were crushed at struggling Leicester City recently.

"There are a lot of games to come but it is the most important game I can imagine against an outstandin­g, strong team," Klopp conceded. "The advantage is that it's at Anfield. We must try to use this. It will be really difficult for both teams but I'm really looking forward to it. We love playing against the best.

"This is a very big game for both of us. Six clubs fight for four positions or one position. Each game is kind of a final."

For the moment, these sides remain two thrilling but inconsiste­nt works in progress, the heaviest scorers in the league with 84 goals - Liverpool 45, City 39 -- between them.

Yet a win on Saturday would mean a fourth league victory in succession for one of them, offering crucial momentum to propel them into the New Year.

It is also the renewal of a personal duel between two of the game's finest coaches who have brought their respectful rivalry from the Bundesliga where Klopp's Borussia Dortmund never could unseat Guardiola's magisteria­l Bayern Munich.

Who is the pressure on most? Well, Klopp has been an unqualifie­d success on Merseyside, a motivation­al, magnetic man of the people who perfectly reflects Anfield's passion. Guardiola, in contrast, is a cauldron of intensity, offering a surprising air of uncertaint­y and self-questionin­g that emerged following his stellar 10-win start to his Etihad reign.

He still does not seem wholly at ease with his frantic new world and this has the feel of another important step in his managerial developmen­t in England.

Klopp is a fan. "Maybe Johan Cryuff started it, but Guardiola perfected it at Barcelona," he said. "He's a really influentia­l manager with clear ideas. Fantastic career."

The good news for Guardiola is the return from suspension of Sergio Aguero at a time when Liverpool can ill afford to be without their injured Cameroon defender Joel Matip.

 ?? File ?? Manchester City’s key striker Sergio Aguero has scored four league goals against Liverpool.
File Manchester City’s key striker Sergio Aguero has scored four league goals against Liverpool.

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