The Liverpool F.C.–Manchester City F.C. rivalry is a high-profile inter-city competition between English professional association football clubs Liverpool and Manchester City. Though the two clubs had been involved in a title slipstream in the 1976–77 season, Liverpool and Manchester City ‘s modern competition began in the 2010s, with City beating Liverpool to the 2013–14 title by fair two points on the concluding day of the season. [ 1 ] In the final examination of the 2015–16 Football League Cup, City beat Liverpool on penalties. Liverpool and Manchester City met in european competition for the first time in the 2017–18 UEFA Champions League Quarter-finals, where Liverpool won 5-1 on sum, reaching the final, and winning the competition a year late. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] In the 2018–19 season, City again won the deed on the final examination day, with City ‘s 98 points and Liverpool ‘s 97 being the third- and fourth-highest Premier League points totals ever. [ 4 ] The come season, Liverpool won the championship, recording 99 points ( the second-highest Premier League full ever ) to finish 18 points above runner-up City. City gave Liverpool a guard of honor in their first game as champions.
Pep Guardiola of Manchester City and Jürgen Klopp of Liverpool were the managers during the era in which the competition between the two clubs intensified, as they began to dominate English football. [ 5 ]
Inter-city competition [edit ]
LiverpoolManchester Locations of the cities, in England The cities of Liverpool and Manchester are located in the union west of England, 35 miles ( 56 kilometer ) apart. Since the industrial rotation there has been a coherent theme of competition between the two cities based around economic and industrial contest. Manchester through to the eighteenth hundred was the far more populous city, and held a place of significance and luminary as representative of the north. By the late eighteenth hundred, Liverpool had grown as a major sea port – critical to the growth and success of the northerly cotton mills. Over the adjacent hundred, Liverpool grew to supersede Manchester and throughout the late 19th and early twentieth hundred was frequently described as the british Empire ‘s second city. [ 5 ] The links between the two cities were strengthened with the construction of the Bridgewater Canal, the Mersey and Irwell Navigation, and the worldly concern ’ mho first inter-city railroad track, the Liverpool and Manchester Railway, for the transportation of bare-assed materials inland. [ 6 ] The construction of the Manchester Ship Canal, funded by Manchester merchants, was opposed by Liverpool politicians and bred resentment between the two cities. tension between working class Liverpool dockers and labourers in Manchester was heightened after its completion in 1894, good three months anterior to the first meet between Liverpool and Newton Heath in a play-off match that would see Newton Heath relegated to the Second Division. [ 7 ] today, the crests of both the city of Manchester and Manchester City include conventionalized ships representing the Manchester Ship Canal and Manchester ‘s trade roots. The ship is besides included on the crest of many other mancunian institutions such as Manchester City Council and rivals Manchester United. Post-war shifts in economic ties, reliance on regional ember, and shifts in transatlantic trade patterns caused by the growth of asian tug markets caused the gradual decline of british manufacture. While the city of Liverpool suffered the loss of its primary coil source of income to southern port cities, Manchester maintained some of its manufacture inheritance. This reversal of fortunes happened against the backdrop of shifting political backgrounds and significant events in british acculturation and company in the second half of the twentieth hundred. Both cities were partially of the county of Lancashire until March 1974, upon the act of the local Government Act 1972. Since then, Liverpool and Manchester each respectively anchor the neighbor metropolitan counties of Merseyside and Greater Manchester. The two cities continue to be solid regional rivals, vying for charm of surrounding areas. Their retain importance to the UK economy has been reflected with the award of the 2002 Commonwealth Games to Manchester, while Liverpool was awarded the title of 2008 european capital of Culture as part of its ongoing regeneration. More recent projects by Peel Ports have sought to re-establish the economic links between the Port of Liverpool and Port of Manchester, including re-developing trade wind links via the Manchester Ship Canal .
Manchester City F.C. was formed in 1880 by members of St. Mark ‘s Church of England in West Gorton of Manchester. It was formed by two church service wardens after they looked to introduce new activities to men in the area, aiming to curb alcoholism and crowd violence. The club was founded as St Mark ‘s ( West Gorton ). Liverpool F.C. was formed in 1892 following a discrepancy between the board of Everton and clubhouse president of the united states John Houlding, who owned the club ‘s background, Anfield. The disagreement between the two parties over rent resulted in Everton moving to Goodison Park from Anfield, and Houlding founded Liverpool F.C. to play in the vacate stadium. [ 9 ]
Liverpool ‘s beginning temper was in the Second Division in 1893. The team went undefeated all temper, winning the title and being put up for election to the First Division, which would see them play a one-off examination match against the bottom side of the First Division for their place. The team that Liverpool were to face was Newton Heath, whom they beat 2–0 to take their set in the first tier. [ 10 ] When the teams played each other in the 2014 International Champions Cup in the United States, the competition took on another sporting angle in the master of ceremonies country due to the possession of the two clubs ; City Football Group ‘s partners in their Major League Soccer team New York City FC – Yankee Global Enterprises – own the New York Yankees Major League Baseball franchise, who have a impregnable competition with the Boston Red Sox – a auxiliary of Fenway Sports Group, the owners of Liverpool. [ 11 ]
Manchester City consecutively won the 2017–18 and 2018–19 seasons, the latter season in which Liverpool were challenging for the title and putting up an intensifier battle against the winners. These seasons are considered the escalating point in the competition between the two clubs ( though the competition had already begun in the early on 2010s during Manchester City ‘s dramatic resurrect to success ), with both having been the reciprocal rival of Manchester United for decades. prior to this, the 2013–14 season was the last one to have both Manchester City and Liverpool compete against each other at the top for the title, with the erstwhile having won it for the fourth time in their history .
Rivalry between managers [edit ]
Liverpool built their laterality on a dynasty known as the Anfield Boot Room. The boot room itself was where scheme for future matches was planned, however, it became a breeding ground for future Liverpool managers following the arrival of Bill Shankly in 1959. The original members were Shankly himself, Bob Paisley, Joe Fagan and Reuben Bennett, although the likes of Kenny Dalglish joined later on. [ 12 ] Following Shankly ‘s retirement in 1974, having secured eight trophies in 15 years, Bob Paisley stepped into the vacant director ‘s position and amassed 20 trophies in 9 seasons. [ 13 ] Following his retirement, Joe Fagan took over and in the first of two seasons at the club, won a triple of trophies. Kenny Dalglish, while not an master member, was accepted into the group as the adjacent in line for the function of director, and he combined it with his playing duties to win Liverpool 10 trophies. The boot room joining was ultimately broken in 1991, 32 years after Shankly ‘s arrival, with the appointment of Graeme Souness, who actually demolished the boot board itself to make way for a imperativeness room. [ 14 ] It did still manage to produce a final Liverpool director in Roy Evans, who won the League Cup, but upon his resignation in 1998, the era was over. Manchester City ‘s longest serve coach was Wilf Wild, who was in charge from 1932 to 1946, for a full length of 14 years 9 months. however, as Wild ‘s tenure covered the stallion length of the Second World War, in which no competitive football was played, he is not the one with the most games served as coach. Les McDowall, who was in charge from 1950 to 1963, a period of 13 years, managed the club for the most competitive games, a sum of 592 games, a full 240 games more than Wild, who recorded the second most. The most successful Manchester City coach in terms of major trophies won, as of 1 March 2020, is Pep Guardiola, who has won eight trophies in four years from 2016 to 2020. Jürgen Klopp and Pep Guardiola, the managers of Liverpool and Manchester City respectively, in the mid-2010s have developed a competition, having been the respective managers of Der Klassiker rivals Borussia Dortmund and Bayern Munich in the Bundesliga previously. [ 15 ] At the end of the 2018–19 season, Guardiola described his relationship with Klopp as a “ beautiful competition ” [ 16 ] and called Klopp ‘s Liverpool team “ the strongest opponents I have faced in my career as a director ”. [ 17 ] In September 2019, Klopp hailed Guardiola for being his ‘greatest equal ever ‘, after both the two were nominated for the FIFA Men ‘s Coach of the Year prize in 2019, which Klopp won. [ 18 ] [ 19 ]
Honours [edit ]
Liverpool has importantly more trophies than Manchester City, with the latter achieving a discovery in success in the 2010s following their purchase by the Abu Dhabi United Group. Liverpool has batch more european honor, with Manchester City only managing to win the 1969–70 Cup Winners ‘ Cup, as of 2020. Liverpool ended their 30-year league title drought by winning the 2019–20 Premier League .
- Table correct as of 11 May 2021.
Team | League | FA Cup | League Cup | Community Shield |
Super Cup | European Cup/ Champions League |
UEFA Cup/ Europa League |
UEFA Cup Winners’ Cup |
UEFA Super Cup |
Intercontinental Cup |
FIFA Club World Cup |
Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Manchester City[20] | 7 | 6 | 8 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 28 |
Liverpool | 19 | 7 | 8 | 15 | 1 | 6 | 3 | 0 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 64 |
Combined | 26 | 13 | 16 | 21 | 1 | 6 | 3 | 1 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 92 |
The below board demonstrates the competitive results between the two sides ( not indicative of titles won ). League includes the Premier League, League Division One and League Division Two. The Lancashire section and the War Leagues are not included .
- As of 3 October 2021
Matches [edit ]
The table below shows the matches played between Manchester City and Liverpool, separated by home, as in matches played at Manchester City ‘s home stadium ( following a mobile embryonic being, City resided at Hyde Road from 1887 to 1923, then Maine Road until 2003, and ultimately the City of Manchester Stadium from the 2003–04 season onwards ) are shown in the left hand table and matches played in Liverpool ‘s dwelling stadium ( Anfield ) are shown on the right. Cup finals are typically played at a impersonal localization such as the England national football team home stadium ( Wembley ) .
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City ‘s Michael Ball takes a release gripe against Liverpool in the Premier League match in April 2007, at the City of Manchester Stadium |
Shared musician history [edit ]
- As of 31 May 2021
See besides [edit ]
References [edit ]
- 11vs11 – complete results
- World Football – complete results
- LFC Stats – complete results