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How Jurgen Klopp Could Rejig Liverpool Team Against Man City

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Anfield may still be unfinished but that hasn’t made it any less of a fortress for Liverpool this season.

Sunday’s 3-0 Premier League defeat of Brentford was a ninth successive home victory in all competitions, their best such start to a campaign since the 1985/86 Double-winning team won their first 13 matches at Anfield.

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All of those triumphs have been secured with a margin of at least two goals, which equalled the club record for a similar run set from May to October 1980.

Pretty impressive stuff. The sequence, though, pales in comparison to what has been happening down the other end of the East Lancs Road at Manchester City.

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Pep Guardiola’s side have won every home game this calendar year, a run of 23 successive triumphs in which they have scored 76 goals and conceded only 11 times. In their last three games at the Etihad alone they have netted 11 goals, while the last team to stop them was Everton when earning a 1-1 draw on New Year’s Eve last year.

They now stand just one victory away from matching the longest run of home victories in English football history, which is currently held by Sunderland across 1891 and 1892.

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That Guardiola’s men could achieve such a landmark against their greatest rivals adds further spice to an occasion that has rarely failed to deliver. But the Reds have more at stake than merely being potential party-poopers, as a positive result would reaffirm their new-look side as genuine title contenders.

It would also go some way to allaying the nagging doubts over Liverpool’s away form. While the two games they have lost of nine on the road this campaign have been laced with VAR controversy, Jurgen Klopp’s side have only intermittently looked convincing even if, as evidenced by draws at Chelsea and Brighton and wins at Newcastle United and Wolverhampton Wanderers, the results have at times been impressive.

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The Etihad will be the ultimate barometer of Liverpool’s ability on the road and, as with most visiting clubs over the last decade, it hasn’t been a happy hunting ground.

In nine games at City since Guardiola took over, the Reds have won only once – the Champions League quarter-final second leg in April 2018. And while Liverpool have failed to score only twice in that period, their last clean sheet at the Etihad was almost 12 years ago.

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Although no team has conceded fewer times in the Premier League than Klopp’s men this season, eight of those 10 have come in their six away games. And only Aston Villa are averaging more home goals per game this season than City in the top flight.

Klopp has not been averse to throwing a curveball for Guardiola to deal with in this fixture. In April’s 4-1 defeat, he picked a team that had never before played together and didn’t ever again, while post-World Cup absences meant the same applied to the 3-2 League Cup loss last December.

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In November 2020, the Reds boss caught City off-guard – for a short time, anyway – by playing four forwards, and in the Champions League win in 2018 started with Gini Wijnaldum in defensive midfield and played James Milner further upfield in the absence of Jordan Henderson.

Indeed, the number six role will again be pivotal, as it has been for much of the campaign as Klopp has grappled with an unexpected summer in which Fabinho and Henderson followed Milner through the Anfield exit.

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Alexis Mac Allister is back after suspension and has started all bar two Premier League games as the defensive midfielder this term, and will be favourite to continue in the position.

The Argentine experienced a mixed bag playing for Brighton against City. Last season, he played in a double pivot alongside Moises Caicedo in the Seagulls’ 3-1 loss at the Etihad and was only a substitute in the 1-1 draw in the reverse fixture.

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He was employed further upfield in a 3-0 away loss the previous campaign and netted a late consolation from the bench in a 4-1 home defeat. And in 2020/21 he was again in an attacking role when starting both a 3-2 home win and a 1-0 away loss.

With Thiago Alcantara and Stefan Bajcetic both still sidelined, the only other player to have started a match in defensive midfield for Liverpool this season is Wataru Endo, who made only a second Premier League start at the weekend. It would be a significant increase in level and responsibility should the Japanese be given the nod.

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