
Anfield Index
·21 avril 2025
Liverpool’s title win could be sealed without kicking a ball

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·21 avril 2025
There’s a certain comedy to inevitability. You know the punchline’s coming, but it still manages to land with a thud. Liverpool, dragging their boots through another routine victory, are now brushing shoulders with the Premier League title like it’s an old acquaintance they haven’t quite hugged yet. A 1-0 win at Leicester wasn’t poetry, but it was purpose — and in April, purpose trumps prose.
Liverpool now sit 13 points clear of Arsenal with five games left. It’s not so much a race as a slow crawl to a finish line no one else has been allowed near. The maths is simple, at least by football’s messy standards: if Arsenal lose to Crystal Palace on Wednesday, they are capped at 78 points — one fewer than Liverpool already have.
That means this thing — this season-long, muscle-sapping, narrative-drenched journey — could end not with a roar at Anfield, but with a whimper in North London.
Photo: IMAGO
That’s how Liverpool could win the title. Not in the blaze of floodlights or under the Kop’s roar, but somewhere between Oliver Glasner’s tactical rigidity and Mikel Arteta’s high-wire idealism. A Crystal Palace smash-and-grab is now the only thing separating Arne Slot’s side from early coronation.
“We’re all looking forward to that game,” Slot said of Sunday’s clash with Tottenham. But he knows — as we all do — that the real action could come 96 hours earlier.
On the Leicester performance, the Dutchman was honest, almost amused:
“Since I’ve been here I don’t think we played a game where we’ve had so many big chances and didn’t score one of them.”“In the end we needed a set piece to score, which wasn’t a big chance, but a great finish from Trent.”
Liverpool have rarely sparkled of late, but they’ve learned to endure. And that, perhaps more than anything, is how you win a title.