Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

Klopp’s Fab Four are like a bunch of mates down the park scoring goals for fun

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NOBODY is going to fancy facing Liverpool’s Fab Four in the Champions League draw on Monday.

Nobody is going to relish a date with Manchester City, despite their 227-day unbeaten run coming to an end in a dead rubber with Shakhtar Donetsk.

And nobody is going to write off Manchester United while Jose Mourinho is conducting the orchestra.

With five clubs in the last 16, English football will never have a better chance to reclaim the European Cup. And I’m not discountin­g Chelsea or Spurs either.

On a huge weekend of derby days in the Premier League, the firepower on display should be like those superpower­s parading their military might.

I love watching Liverpool’s front four – Roberto Firmino, Mohamed Salah, Philippe Coutinho and Sadio Mane – and you have to make them favourites against Everton at Anfield tomorrow. In Sam Allardyce’s world the clean sheet is king, but Liverpool have not lost a Merseyside derby in 14 games and I can’t see Everton’s defence keeping Jurgen Klopp’s attacking arsenal at bay.

Klopp has assembled a frontline to rival anything the Kop has seen in 30 years.

There was John Barnes, John Aldridge and Ray Houghton in the 1980s, Robbie Fowler, Michael Owen and Emile Heskey winning three cups in 2001, and the Brendan Rodgers holy trinity of Luis Suarez, Daniel Sturridge and Raheem Sterling three years ago, but this current forward line excites even more.

The sheer speed of their counter-attacks at Brighton last weekend, and the seven-goal demolition of Spartak Moscow in midweek, was Klopp flexing his muscles.

It is no accident that only Paris Saint-germain scored more goals in the Champions League group stage – Liverpool have one of the most potent attacks in Europe.

Between them, Firmino, Coutinho, Salah and Mane have scored 25 goals and shared 14 assists in the Premier League alone this season. They are like a group of mates down the park who score for fun.

City look unstoppabl­e in the title race. Even when it’s 1-1 with five minutes to go, you know they are going to conjure up a winner, as they did against Bournemout­h, Huddersfie­ld, Southampto­n and yet again last Sunday against West Ham.

You can feel their confidence and energy. Everyone wants the ball and they find a way to win games.

I’m not sure you can say the same about United yet, although their 35 points would have been enough to lead the Premier League after 15 games every season since Arsenal’s Invincible­s of 2003-04.

By no means can United’s contributi­on to the current campaign be branded boring. After all, they have scored four goals on eight occasions already.

But Mourinho is prepared to win points by being cautious where necessary, and I don’t see United being gung-ho in tomorrow’s Manchester derby at Old Trafford.

I expect them to sit back and place a heavy emphasis on setpieces in the final third.

French star Paul Pogba’s red card at Arsenal last weekend is a setback for them but if Marouane Fellaini comes into the side he could be a key influence.

City are not the tallest side and they will discount Fellaini’s aerial threat at their peril.

United came through a big test at the Emirates with flying colours and I can see them thwarting City again after keeping two clean sheets against them last season.

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