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Liverpool return to Premier League duty on Saturday evening with Crystal Palace heading to Anfield, and there’s plenty on the line for both sides. Arne Slot’s team are still chasing a strong finish to a season that has been dragged into a scrap around the European places, while Oliver Glasner’s Palace arrive with mid-table security in place but still looking to add real substance to their campaign. Liverpool sit fifth on 55 points, just about alive in the race for the Champions League spots, and every home game now carries the feel of a must-take opportunity. Palace are 13th on 43 points. Safe enough, yes. Satisfied? Not quite.
There’s also a pretty vivid backdrop to this one. Liverpool have already been knocked about by PSG in the Champions League and by Manchester City in the FA Cup, so league matches have become the cleanest route to finishing the year on a high. Palace, meanwhile, have been juggling Premier League duties with a Conference League run, and that has taken its toll in recent weeks. You can see the strain in the results. The question here is simple enough: can Liverpool turn possession and pressure into a result, or will Palace make this another awkward afternoon?
The answer matters because these two have already produced some sharp, messy football this season. Palace have had Liverpool’s number more often than not in the recent head-to-heads, and that lingering edge should stop anyone from treating this as a routine home win. Still, Anfield is Anfield. Liverpool don’t need much encouragement there, and with both sides carrying enough attacking threat to make a low-scoring grind feel unlikely, this has the ingredients for a proper end-to-end contest.
Liverpool’s recent run has been all over the place, which is probably the kindest way to describe it. They went to Everton on 19 April and came away with a 2-1 win thanks to late drama, Virgil van Dijk settling it in stoppage time after Mohamed Salah had opened the scoring. Before that, though, there was the disappointment of losing 2-0 at home to Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League, a result that stung because it came after a decent 2-0 Premier League win over Fulham at Anfield. Between those moments were the 2-0 defeat at PSG in the away leg and the heavy FA Cup loss at Manchester City. That’s a mixed bag. Not the sort of run that screams stability.
The encouraging part for Slot is that Liverpool remain dangerous at home. Their league record at Anfield reads nine wins, four draws and three losses, with 29 goals scored and 17 conceded. That’s a strong enough base to trust them in most domestic fixtures, even if they’ve not been airtight. They can still score in bursts, and they still generate enough territory to pin teams back for long spells. The problem is that they’re not always ruthless when the match gets stretched, and their defensive concentration has dipped too often for a side with top-four ambitions.
There’s also a clear pattern in the results. Liverpool have won their last outing but had been wobbling before that, and their biggest issue isn’t really chance creation — it’s control. They can look superb for a quarter of an hour, then suddenly lose the thread. Palace won’t mind that one bit. If Liverpool start slowly or leave gaps after losing the ball, Glasner’s side will take the invitation. That won’t be enough to scare Anfield on its own, but it’s enough to keep this from feeling like a banker.
Palace arrive with a very different sort of recent story. Their last six matches have been tidy without being explosive, and that fits the season as a whole. They held West Ham to a goalless draw at home on 20 April after the disappointment of a 2-1 loss away to Fiorentina in the Conference League. Before that, though, they beat Newcastle United 2-1 at Selhurst Park and had already put Fiorentina to the sword 3-0 at home in Europe. There was also a 1-1 draw away to AEK Larnaca and a 0-0 league draw against Leeds. They’re not easy to beat, but they’re not exactly blowing teams away either.
Away from home, Palace have actually built something respectable in the league. Seven wins, two draws and six losses is a decent return, especially with 19 goals scored and 17 conceded on their travels. That’s the key point here: they’re organised enough away from Selhurst Park to stay competitive, and they’re not shy about taking the game to opponents when space opens up. The flip side is that they don’t tend to dominate matches. They keep things tight, wait for moments, and rely on efficiency rather than volume. Fine strategy. Just not always enough against stronger sides.
Glasner’s team have also shown they can carry a threat in Europe and at home, but the last couple of weeks suggest a side that’s being asked to do plenty with a fairly modest margin for error. The draw with West Ham was controlled, yes, but Palace only landed one shot on target. That’s not a huge red flag by itself, but it does hint at a team that can sometimes run a little dry in the final third. Against Liverpool, they’ll probably get chances. Can they finish enough of them? That’s the real question.
This fixture has been awkward for Liverpool for a while, and Palace have the sort of recent record that gives them genuine belief. The last eight meetings include three Palace wins, and Liverpool have won only once in that stretch. That’s not a fluke anymore. It’s a pattern.
The more recent results are even tougher for the hosts to swallow. Palace beat Liverpool 2-1 at Selhurst Park in the league in September 2025, then turned them over again 3-0 in the EFL Cup at Anfield in October. They even won the Community Shield 5-4 on penalties after a 5-4 sort of game in August. Liverpool did win 1-0 in October 2024, but that looks more like the exception than the rule. Palace have also scored first in five of the last seven meetings. That little detail matters. It tells you they don’t go to pieces in this matchup.
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 4/7 here, and it looks the strongest angle in the match. Liverpool have enough attacking quality at home to contribute, Palace have shown they can score on the road, and neither defence has the kind of shut-down record that would make a tight 0-0 or 1-0 feel especially likely. The projected xG line, 1.5 for Liverpool and 1.1 for Palace, points the same way. Not by a mile. But clearly enough.
The head-to-head trend leans into it as well. Recent meetings between these two have often turned lively, and Palace’s habit of striking first in this matchup keeps the game from settling into Liverpool’s preferred rhythm. A 2-1 home win feels the right scoreline, with Liverpool just about having enough at Anfield to edge it. If you’re after a secondary angle, Both Teams to Score would also deserve a look, though the stronger call remains the goals line.
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