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Everton v Liverpool: Key stats and talking points

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The first Merseyside derby to be played at Hill Dickinson Stadium, this Sunday (14:00 BST), sees these old rivals closer to each other in the league table than many would have predicted at this stage of the season. BBC Sport looks at the key themes around the fixture.

Beto hits run of goalscoring form

Everton's recent record against Liverpool may be poor but on paper this appears to be an excellent chance to notch up a rare win over their cross-city rivals. The Toffees are full of confidence and lie just five points behind the Reds, who sit in a Champions League spot, as they look to secure European football for the first time since the 2017-18 campaign.

But getting three points off Liverpool is a task that they have found incredibly hard of late. Everton won six of their first 15 Premier League meetings between 1992 and 1999, but since the turn of the century they have managed a paltry six victories in their subsequent 52 top-flight derbies.

Only once in the last 13 seasons have the Blues been within five points of Liverpool after 32 matches of a campaign.

If they do manage to secure the bragging rights it will mark the first time David Moyes' side have won three successive matches at their new home.

They have been indebted of late to the goals of much-maligned striker Beto. Only Manchester United's Bruno Fernandes (seven) has been involved in more top-flight goals since the end of February than the Guinea-Bissau striker's five, with four goals and one assist.

He puts his upturn in form down to hard work. "I know people in my position would have given up," he says. "Me? Even if I go to the last game of the season and I only have one goal to my name, I will still be there, putting in everything I have to make it right."

Graphic showing Beto's improvement in the Premier League after Christmas
[BBC]

Reds seeking end-of-season boost

Liverpool's final chance of silverware this season was extinguished on Tuesday as they tamely bowed out of the Champions League to a Paris Saint-Germain side who proved to be a class apart over both legs.

It was their 17th defeat of a disappointing season and further heaped pressure on boss Arne Slot. He was left fuming that they were on the wrong end of a VAR call, which he feels has been a regular theme throughout the campaign. "I'm not surprised," Slot said after their 64th-minute spot-kick was overturned on review. "So many decisions have gone against us this season."

Graphic showing Liverpool's record number of defeats in a season in the Premier League era
[BBC]

To further compound their frustrations, top scorer Hugo Ekitike has been ruled out for the season with a serious Achilles injury. Slot must now pick his players up and focus on securing Champions League football.

With this being their first match at Hill Dickinson Stadium, the Reds have the chance to become the first team to win at 60 different Premier League grounds having managed to do so at 59 of the 61 they have played at so far. For quiz fans, Kenilworth Road and Bloomfield Road are the ones they have still to conquer.

Original Article

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