Under Pep Guardiola and Jurgen Klopp, City and Liverpool
have become the dominant forces in English football, sharing the past four
Premier League titles between them.
City, who have won three of those, delivered a warning shot
to the pretenders to their crown with a hugely impressive 1-0 win at Chelsea
last weekend.
But it is Liverpool who boast the only unbeaten record after
six games and find themselves a point clear of City, Chelsea and United, even
though they dropped two points at Brentford last week.
City ended their long wait for a win away to Liverpool in
emphatic fashion with a 4-1 victory in February but they have not won in front
of a crowd at Anfield since 2003.
Fatigue could take its toll on Guardiola’s men after a
draining week. Three days after their statement win at Stamford Bridge, the
English champions were beaten 2-0 by Paris Saint-Germain in the French capital.
Liverpool, by contrast, were able to ease off the gas long
before the end of a 5-1 Champions League win over Porto.
However, the Reds will be without right-back Trent
Alexander-Arnold, who was left out of Gareth Southgate’s England squad
announced Thursday with a groin problem.
“Obviously when you have something with your muscle, it’s
not likely for Sunday,” said Klopp. “No muscle injury heals that quick.”
Everton threat to United
United needed all 95 minutes to edge past Villarreal in
their midweek Champions League game, emerging as victors thanks to Cristiano
Ronaldo’s dramatic stoppage-time winner.
The late intervention from the Portuguese superstar stopped
the rot for Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s men after a run of three defeats in four
games.
But in truth United were lacklustre again, relying on
goalkeeper David de Gea, who produced a string of vital saves.
Everton head to Old Trafford level on points with
Solskjaer’s men after an impressive start to life under Rafael Benitez.
The Toffees are more than capable of following the example
set by West Ham and Aston Villa, who have both won at the Theatre of Dreams in
recent weeks, unless United show significant improvement.
Chelsea made a brilliant start to the season under Thomas
Tuchel, picking up where they left off after beating Manchester City in the
Champions League final in May.
City exacted a measure of revenge at Stamford Bridge last
week and Chelsea slipped up again in the Champions League in midweek, losing
1-0 to Juventus.
But Tuchel’s men appear to have a relatively straightforward
task as they seek to return to winning ways against winless Southampton at
home.
Nuno needs response from Spurs
Just three weeks after topping the Premier League table,
Nuno Espirito Santo’s position as Tottenham manager has been questioned by fans
following three dismal league defeats on the spin.
Spurs have lost to Crystal Palace, Chelsea and Arsenal by a
combined score of 9-1 to fall back into the bottom half of the table.
Nuno is yet to conjure the best from star forward Harry
Kane, who failed to force a move away from his boyhood club during the transfer
window.
And he has so far failed to instill the defensive
organisation that was his calling card in three seasons at Wolves.
Another defeat when in-form Villa visit the Tottenham
Hotspur Stadium on Sunday would leave the Spurs faithful restless over the
international break.
Fixtures (all times GMT)
Saturday
Manchester United v Everton (1130), Burnley v Norwich,
Chelsea v Southampton, Leeds v Watford, Wolves v Newcastle, (all 1400),
Brighton v Arsenal (1630)
Sunday
Crystal Palace v Leicester, Tottenham v Aston Villa, West
Ham v Brentford (all 1300), Liverpool v Manchester City (1530)