Guardiola: Anfield 'toughest stadium to visit'

Manchester City faces one of the toughest tasks in football when it visits Liverpool at Anfield this weekend, says Pep Guardiola.

Published : Nov 08, 2019 22:46 IST

Pep Guardiola at Anfield
Pep Guardiola at Anfield
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Pep Guardiola at Anfield

Pep Guardiola described Anfield as the toughest stadium in the world to visit right now, but insisted Manchester City is not out of the Premier League title race if it loses to Liverpool on Sunday.

The build-up to the mouth-watering top-of-the-table clash has been dominated by talk of diving and tactical fouls, although City boss Guardiola and Reds counterpart Jurgen Klopp have done their bit to ease the tension.

Last season City took four points from the Reds, a return that proved decisive as they pipped Liverpool – which lost just once in the league – to the title by a solitary point.

READ|  Ederson ruled out of Man City's clash at Liverpool

Guardiola described the triumph as one of the greatest of his career and recognised the difficulty of playing at a stadium where Liverpool has not lost any of its previous 45 league games.

"As a manager, I said last season when we won the league, they're the best contender I ever faced in my career to win this league," he said. 

"It was the biggest achievement, or one of the biggest achievements, as a club. It remains the same. Probably right now they're the strongest team in the world.

"They are an exceptional team. Of course, the history is there for itself. It's something special, I think more for the quality of the team of what they do, quality of players they have, quality of manager they have, I believe more in that, in the team, than the scenario [atmosphere at Liverpool]. 

"Right now it's [Anfield] one of the toughest ones, right now in Europe it’s the toughest stadiums to go there."

READ :  Liverpool vs Man City stats, head-to-head ahead of Sunday's encounter

Unbeaten Liverpool can open up a nine-point gap over City with victory on home soil, but Guardiola insists defeat will not mean the end of their title aspirations.

"I don't know to be honest, I think in November it never ends. I think we have a lot of games still to play," he added. 

"My experience in sport is you have to play until the end, are we going to win Champions League? Your favourite question! I don't know the answer.

"They lost one game last season, this season they are unbeaten so I think they won't lose many but the season is long."

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