Liverpool’s record-breakers eye home straight

Jurgen Klopp will send his Liverpool team onto the pitch in their ongoing pursuit of the Premier League title against relegated Huddersfield on Friday knowing he has already rewritten the club’s record books.

The only question that remains in their neck-and-neck race with Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City is whether that will be sufficient to end his club’s 29-year wait for an English league crown.

Last weekend’s victory at struggling Cardiff took Liverpool to 88 points, the most they have ever recorded in the Premier League era, and has them on course to finish with an astonishing 97 points should they win their remaining three games.

With the exception of the 100 points amassed by City in winning the championship 12 months ago, no other team in Premier League history has ever notched as many as 97 points, regardless of their finishing position.

Even Liverpool’s current tally of 88 points would have been enough to have finished first in 14 of the 26 seasons the Premier League has been in existence.

It means Klopp’s side could end the season with the third-highest points total in Premier League history and still see their frustrating wait for an end to their title drought continue for another 12 months at least.

The form book does not offer Liverpool much hope, with City having won 25 of their past 27 league and cup games dating back to late last year, even if Liverpool themselves have lost just once — to City in January — in the league all season.

Guardiola has already called Klopp’s current side the greatest Liverpool team he has ever seen, an extravagant claim but one which is supported, at least in part, by the statistics.

Adjusting the old two points to three points for a win, the only top-flight campaigns in which a Liverpool side has finished with more points than their current total came in 1978/79 (98) and 1987/88 (90), meaning that victory over Huddersfield would leave the 2018/19 vintage as the second-best Liverpool team ever, at least in terms of league points.

Despite the obvious pressure, and the fact that the lead at the top of the table has changed hands no fewer than 28 times already this season, Klopp remained in high spirits in his pre-match press conference.

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