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Reds can eliminate one of two title rivals by beating Chelsea tomorrow

- Martyn Herman

LIVERPOOL can eliminate one of their two rivals from the English Premier League soccer title race by beating Chelsea tomorrow and the way the dice is rolling for them they might even have one hand on the trophy by the end of the weekend.

If Brendan Rodgers’s side overcome second-placed Chelsea at Anfield and notch a 12th consecutiv­e league win it would knock Jose Mourinho’s side out of the reckoning and, should Manchester City then fail to beat Crystal Palace a little later, a first title for 24 years would be almost assured.

“If” is a notoriousl­y fickle word in the often unpredicta­ble Premier League, but Liverpool have built up a seemingly inexhausti­ble head of steam and with Chelsea having one eye on next week’s Champions League semifinal against Atletico Madrid the omens look good for the Anfield club. What is more, City are up against a Palace side on a five-game winning spin that has lifted the threat of relegation.

With Chelsea having drawn 0-0 in Madrid on Tuesday but suffering injuries to keeper Petr Cech and skipper John Terry, Mourinho has made no secret of the fact that the Champions League has now taken precedence over the domestic title scrap.

While the Portuguese, known for his mind games, has not actually conceded the title, he has said he wants to send out a weakened side at Anfield tomorrow, despite knowing victory there would put them within touching distance of Liverpool with two games remaining.

“I know what I would do, but I’m not the club. I have to speak with the club,” Mourinho said after the Atletico draw. “I would play with the players that are not going to play on Wednesday.”

Having been deprived of striker Samuel Eto’o and Eden Hazard for the first leg in Madrid, Mourinho would be loathe to risk them against Liverpool and, with Cech and Terry sidelined, his starting line-up will likely have an unfamiliar look tomorrow.

Whatever distractio­ns Chelsea have, however, Liverpool will be acutely aware that they have a poor record against the west London club with Mourinho in charge.

The Portuguese has won six and lost just once in eight league meetings with Liverpool.

Rodgers has refused to get caught up in title talk but should the best-case scenario occur tomorrow, his side would be nine points ahead of City, who would only have three games left to play, compared with Liverpool’s two.

The Northern Irishman’s calm assurance, aligned with skipper Steven Gerrard’s influentia­l displays at the heart of midfield and Luis Suarez’s goals have underpinne­d Liverpool’s march.

Results have also gone their way with bottom club Sunderland taking points off Chelsea and Man City, but keeper Simon Mignolet stressed it also showed the dangers that lurk at every turn.

“Three points was all that mattered at Norwich [in their last game,” Mignolet told Liverpool’s website.

“Before the game the manager told us that Chelsea’s defeat (against Sunderland) was a warning sign — that it showed what can happen in the Premier League against any team.

“We’ve seen with the points Chelsea and City have dropped recently that every single game in this league is tough. There are no signs of nerves. There is no point making ourselves nervous before a match.”

After playing Chelsea, Liverpool visit Palace and finish at home to Newcastle United. City’s game in hand next week is away to Champions League-chasing Everton before home matches against lowly Aston Villa and West Ham United.

While City battle to keep alive their title hopes, outgoing Manchester United will aim to end a tumultuous week with victory over relegation-haunted Norwich in what will be Ryan Giggs’s debut as manager following Tuesday’s sacking of David Moyes.

Sunderland host fellow strugglers Cardiff City tomorrow, while Fulham, second from bottom, have an opportunit­y to climb out of the bottom three if they beat Hull City today.

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 ?? PHOTOGRAPH: GETTY IMAGES ?? LIVERPOOL HOPE: Luis Suarez’s goals have underpinne­d Liverpool’s march to the PL title
PHOTOGRAPH: GETTY IMAGES LIVERPOOL HOPE: Luis Suarez’s goals have underpinne­d Liverpool’s march to the PL title

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