Arne Slot insists Liverpool can seize title edge on road with home comforts to come

Liverpool face tricky trips to Aston Villa and Manchester City this week

Liverpool's manager Arne Slot Slot admits the side's performance level has dipped in the past two league outings. Photograph: Darren Staples/AFP via Getty Images
Liverpool's manager Arne Slot Slot admits the side's performance level has dipped in the past two league outings. Photograph: Darren Staples/AFP via Getty Images
Premier League: Aston Villa v Liverpool, Wednesday, 7.30 – Live TNT Sports 2

Arne Slot believes Liverpool can secure a significant advantage over Arsenal in their next two games, with Anfield primed to shape the destiny of the title race.

The league leaders would establish a 10-point lead over Mikel Arteta’s challengers with victory at Aston Villa on Wednesday. That awkward away assignment is followed by a visit to Manchester City on Sunday.

Arsenal took four points from their trips to Villa Park and the Etihad Stadium and Slot believes Liverpool’s position will be even stronger if they equal or better that return. Failing that, the head coach will take consolation in the Anfield factor, with seven of his team’s final 11 league games at home.

Slot said: “As a manager you never think: ‘After 25 games how many points will we be clear or behind?’ You only think about winning as many games as you can and implementing a certain playing style to get as many wins as you can. You never know how other teams will do and the fixture list also decides how things will work out.

READ SOME MORE

“These two games we are going to play now have already been played by Arsenal – Villa away and City away. Then we can make a difference in the upcoming two games. If not, then we are on equal terms because we have played a lot of similar games and there are still 11 games to go. The positive thing is that, after these two games, we’ve got seven home games and four away. And we all know how much Anfield can help us.”

Slot admits Liverpool’s performance level has dipped in the past two league outings, against Wolves and Everton. However, he insists that was a consequence of allowing David Moyes’s team “to play their pattern” in the Merseyside derby and the knock-on, emotional effect of James Tarkowski’s 98th-minute equaliser. Four points from two below-par displays, he believes, could prove crucial.

“Was it one and a half weeks ago that we completely outplayed Spurs?” he said, when asked whether Liverpool were in a difficult moment. “I don’t count Plymouth [in the FA Cup]. I agree the last two performances were not the same level we had at West Ham away or Tottenham at home but are we Tottenham 4-0 win at home or are we the Everton team? I think we are somewhere in between.

“If there’s any experience I’ve learned of winning a league title [with Feyenoord] it is that, if there are 38 games to be played, you don’t expect to play fantastic football 38 times. If you are a very good team and a special team you play 20-25 very good games, a few mediocre ones and you play a few very bad ones. But it is more about the results in the mediocre or bad ones than the 20-25 because they are ones you will probably win.”

Cody Gakpo, who missed Sunday’s win over Wolves, will again be absent through injury but could be in contention to face City. – Guardian