'Let's call it now - the title race is over, Liverpool will be champions'

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Liverpool players celebrate the win at Manchester City that points them eleven points clear of Arsenal at the top of the Premier LeagueImage source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Liverpool players celebrate the win at Manchester City that points them eleven points clear of Arsenal at the top of the Premier League

Chief football writer at Etihad Stadium

Liverpool's rain-soaked, jubilant supporters called it with 90 seconds remaining of a statement win over Manchester City.

"We're going to win the league" echoed around a sea of empty sky blue seats at Etihad Stadium, as Liverpool closed out the win that leaves them 11 points clear at the top of the table.

And they are right. Liverpool are going to win the league.

Head coach Arne Slot's seamless transition from Jurgen Klopp will be rewarded with the prize Liverpool's great old managers such as Bill Shankly, Bob Paisley and Joe Fagan coveted above all others, the "bread and butter" as they called it.

The 2-0 win here, bolted on to Arsenal's loss at home to West Ham on Saturday, means that, although there can be thousands of words spent on dancing around the subject, this season's title race is done and dusted.

Etihad Stadium has witnessed many title celebrations in recent seasons. This looked and sounded like another one. The difference being this was Liverpool's fans chanting "hand it over" rather than the playing out of another addition to Pep Guardiola's roll of honour.

The race may not be run mathematically and football can be a strange, unpredictable game. It is not, however, so strange and unpredictable that a remorseless Liverpool team who have lost only one league all season, at home to Nottingham Forest in September, will lose an 11-point advantage with only 11 matches left.

And seven of those games are at Anfield. The game is up for Arsenal. Their game in hand carries decreasing significance.

Liverpool can now afford some slip-ups, not that Slot will want that, and even if they do, Arsenal will have to win almost every game, something that looks beyond a side with a propensity to slip under pressure.

Slot says lead 'not comfortable' - but history disagrees

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Happy to win at Etihad Stadium - Arne Slot

Slot, understandably, was cautious.

"In every other league, having a lead like would be very comfortable, but not in this league," he said. "There is a challenge in every game. We even saw Plymouth Argyle challenging us in the FA Cup.

"The fans can sing what they want but we know how hard we have to work. Someone asked me after we drew at Aston Villa whether we were having a dip. I never believed that and I'm not going to say anything now."

Seemingly insurmountable leads have been surrendered at the top of the Premier League in the past, but very few as big as the one Liverpool now hold. Not at this stage of the season.

The only one bearing any comparison was during the 1997-98 campaign, when Manchester United were 11 points clear of Arsenal on 2 March and were reeled in.

However, they had already lost five games at that point and had proved they were far from infallible. Liverpool have that Forest defeat as the only blemish on their league record.

And the wonderful Arsenal side under Arsene Wenger that chased United down were a very different proposition to the current crop under Mikel Arteta, who are destined to be the title race's nearly men again.

Guardiola declined the opportunity to crown Liverpool champions, but effectively answered the question with two more questions: "How many points are they away from Arsenal? How many games have they lost?"

Say no more.

He made a point of warmly congratulating Slot at the final whistle before seeking out every Liverpool player for a handshake. Guardiola knows a title-winning side when he sees it, and he was looking at one right here.

Speaking to BBC Sport, former England goalkeeper and Match of the Day pundit Joe Hart said "there's no way back" for Arsenal in the title race.

"They can do what they want, they can win every game from here, but I still don't think it will be enough," he added.

Still don't believe the title is Liverpool's? Just look at the stats...

Liverpool's dominance of this Premier League season is further underlined by the statistics that show they are superior in so many metrics that matter.

Slot's machine has scored more goals than every other team with 64. Liverpool are top of the shots, with 452, as well as shots on target, with 173.

As the table above shows, they aren't just top of the league - they're top of nearly every metric you could use to measure their success.

And at the heart of it all is Mohamed Salah, who opened the scoring with his 30th goal of the season before creating the second for Dominik Szoboszlai, effectively wrapping up the win before half-time.

The 'Egyptian King' has now scored 30 goals or more in five separate seasons for Liverpooll, putting him level with Roger Hunt and Ian Rush.

Salah also has 21 assists this season, a remarkable total of 51 contributions to goals before the end of February.

And victory here at Etihad Stadium, a huge moment in the season, may just taste a little sweeter because it came at the club who have denied Liverpool in tight title races before. Twice, a Guardiola-led City have done it to them on the final day.

Liverpool had won only one of their previous 15 league games away to City before this. Victory will have made up for those disappointments.

It would be no surprise if the closing stages of this league season turns into a Liverpool procession.

Premature? Not really. It is now a case of when rather than if the red ribbons adorn the silverware.

Start the car. Or in this case, the open-topped parade bus.

Liverpool not fluent but 'business-like' against Man City

Slot has brought his own touches to what Jurgen Klopp bequeathed him, which was an outstanding squad fit for purpose for a title tilt, aided and abetted by the astonishing collapse of Guardiola's all-conquering Manchester City after a historic four successive titles.

Liverpool may not quite produce the fireworks that accompanied Klopp's so-called "heavy metal football", but they still have the fearsome Salah - and Slot's addition of a ruthless efficiency has made them the full package this season.

The emotion-fuelled thrills of the Klopp era are now fused on to the ice-cold approach of Slot.

He has taken on the task of succeeding an icon and actually improved Liverpool.

The champions-elect had just 33.9% possession in the win at City, their lowest in a Premier League victory since current Opta records started in 2003-04.

They also had fewer shots, eight to City's 16, and fewer touches inside the box, 27 to City's 40.

"That was a proper business-like performance from Liverpool," said Hart. "They looked like they had a contingency plan for any threat - well, the minimal threat - by City that they did feel they were vulnerable to.

"They executed that really well, then everyone else took care of their own business where they thought they could dominate.

"They were completely in control and comfortable everywhere on the pitch."

City may have had more possession, but Liverpool keeper Alisson hardly had any serious work to do.

The second half was a formality, for all City's efforts, as so much floundered on the flanks while Slot's team posed a huge threat on the counter.

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