Liverpool feel pressure to end ‘crisis’ run, Manchester City test Bournemouth’s limits

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Liverpool's Dutch manager Arne Slot reacting after the final whistle following the 3-2 away loss against Brentford at the Brentford Community Stadium in London on Oct 25, 2025.

Liverpool's Dutch manager Arne Slot reacting after the final whistle following the 3-2 away loss against Brentford at the Brentford Community Stadium in London on Oct 25, 2025.

PHOTO: AFP

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Liverpool face an in-form Aston Villa on Nov 1 as the English Premier League champions look to arrest their remarkable collapse, while Arsenal aim to surge further clear in the title race.

The Gunners hold a four-point lead over second-placed Bournemouth, who travel to Manchester City, before their trip to Burnley.

Third-placed Tottenham Hotspur are only five points off the top but are aiming to end a three-game winless run at home when they host London rivals Chelsea.

AFP looks at three key fixtures of the weekend.

Slot feels the heat

Liverpool boss Arne Slot badly needs his star names to get back on track, after being

dumped out the League Cup by Crystal Palace

on Oct 29 to compound a miserable run for the Premier League champions.

Slot made his priorities clear by making 10 changes as Palace cruised to a 3-0 win at Anfield against a youthful Liverpool selection.

The Dutchman said he could not risk any more injuries to his key players, with the visit of Villa quickly followed by clashes against Real Madrid and City.

“I don’t think it is possible if you lose six out of seven that there is even more pressure,” said Slot.

“If you are on a run of results like this, if you play for Liverpool, if you manage Liverpool, you know the pressure is there.”

Five games into the Premier League campaign, Liverpool led Villa by 12 points.

Four matches later, they meet separated only by goal difference.

Villa have overcome their difficult start with four consecutive EPL wins, including notable scalps against Tottenham and City, to surge back into contention for the Champions League places.

At the same time, Liverpool’s title defence has imploded.

They have not kept a clean sheet for 10 games, as Slot struggles to find the right balance to a side disrupted by a huge squad turnover during the transfer window.

Liverpool spent a Premier League record of nearly £450 million (S$770 million), but crucially lost more players than they recruited, with Trent Alexander-Arnold and Luis Diaz particularly missed.

“To see the champions lose four games in a row in the Premier League with the expenditure in the summer, I think we’re in crisis time for Liverpool right now,” said former Reds defender Jamie Carragher.

Bournemouth run on the line

The league’s longest unbeaten run faces a stern test on Nov 2 when Bournemouth visit the Etihad Stadium, hoping to land another blow to City’s title challenge.

The Cherries have not lost since the opening night of the campaign at Liverpool to spark ambitions of qualifying for Europe for the first time in history.

City are six points adrift of Arsenal, after a 1-0 loss at Villa last weekend ended their nine-game unbeaten run.

Pep Guardiola’s fear that his side were becoming too reliant on Erling Haaland was realised.

No City player other than the Norwegian has scored more than once in the Premier League this season.

Omar Marmoush and Rayan Cherki have missed much of the opening few months of the season through injury, but both scored in a 3-1 League Cup win over Swansea City in midweek to bolster the firepower at Guardiola’s disposal.

Spurs seek home comforts

Manager Thomas Frank has made a fine start to solving Tottenham’s troubles on the road, but is yet to foster the “fortress” he desires at home.

Of Spurs’ 17 points from nine games, 13 have come away from home – thanks to impressive wins at City, West Ham United, Leeds United and Everton.

But Bournemouth and Villa have won in north London, either side of a disappointing 1-1 draw against bottom-of-the-table Wolverhampton Wanderers.

“We would like our home to be a fortress,” said Frank.

“It cannot only be the team. It cannot only be the fans. It needs to be both.

“We need to bring energy to each other. We need to work unbelievably hard, perform well, try to be positive.”

Only a second league win over Chelsea since 2018 would quickly win over any doubters the Dane faces in the Spurs support. AFP

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