Tottenham vs Liverpool: The Quick Hits
Liverpool are favourites to win this game, with the Opta supercomputer predicting a 43.9% likelihood of victory.
If Tottenham avoid defeat, Ange Postecoglou will be only the second Spurs manager in the Premier League era to go unbeaten in his first seven games.
Spurs haven’t beaten Liverpool in league competition since October 2017.
Match Preview
The tests keep coming for new Tottenham head coach Ange Postecoglou. Saturday may only bring up his seventh Premier League match in charge but come Sunday he’ll have pitted his wits against Manchester United, Arsenal and Liverpool, three of last season’s top five.
Spurs took four points from the first two of those encounters and now prepare to host a Liverpool side they have a dreadful record against, and who make the trip south having almost forgotten what it’s like to lose in the Premier League.
Jürgen Klopp’s team will arrive at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on a 17-game unbeaten run in the league, which is 10 matches longer than the current next best undefeated run in the division; coincidentally Spurs are one of those teams (with Arsenal) without a defeat in seven.
Liverpool have accumulated 41 points since their last loss, a 4-1 hammering by Manchester City in April, with Pep Guardiola’s champions the only team to have won more (43) over the same period. They finished last season very strong and then made some smart acquisitions in the transfer market that helped ensure they continue to look reinvigorated.
But they’ve not been perfect. Liverpool have developed a habit for conceding the first goal, doing so in five of their eight games across all competitions this season. Granted, they’ve won on every single occasion and, going back to last season, have been victorious in each of their past three away games despite letting in the first goal; the only team in Premier League history to better than record is Man Utd, who won seven consecutive matches on the road after conceding the opening goal between September 2020 and January 2021.
While it may be a good sign of the squad’s collective mental strength, it’s also a dangerous pattern to fall into. Tottenham will hope to buck the trend, and they’ll certainly back themselves to do what Bournemouth, Newcastle United, Wolves, LASK and Leicester City could not after also making an impressive start to the season. The fact they’ve scored two or more goals in each of their first six games in the Premier League should give them belief especially.
If they keep that up this weekend, Postecoglou will become only the second manager in Premier League history to see his side score two or more goals in each of his first seven games in the competition (after Craig Shakespeare with Leicester in April 2017); it’s worth noting, however, that Liverpool have scored three times in six of their eight games this term.
Liverpool have accumulated 41 points since their last loss, a 4-1 hammering by Manchester City in April, with Pep Guardiola’s champions the only team to have won more (43) over the same period. They finished last season very strong and then made some smart acquisitions in the transfer market that helped ensure they continue to look reinvigorated.
But they’ve not been perfect. Liverpool have developed a habit for conceding the first goal, doing so in five of their eight games across all competitions this season. Granted, they’ve won on every single occasion and, going back to last season, have been victorious in each of their past three away games despite letting in the first goal; the only team in Premier League history to better than record is Man Utd, who won seven consecutive matches on the road after conceding the opening goal between September 2020 and January 2021.
While it may be a good sign of the squad’s collective mental strength, it’s also a dangerous pattern to fall into. Tottenham will hope to buck the trend, and they’ll certainly back themselves to do what Bournemouth, Newcastle United, Wolves, LASK and Leicester City could not after also making an impressive start to the season. The fact they’ve scored two or more goals in each of their first six games in the Premier League should give them belief especially.
If they keep that up this weekend, Postecoglou will become only the second manager in Premier League history to see his side score two or more goals in each of his first seven games in the competition (after Craig Shakespeare with Leicester in April 2017); it’s worth noting, however, that Liverpool have scored three times in six of their eight games this term.
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