Man Utd v Liverpool: Team newspublished at 14:29 BST 3 May
14:29 BST 3 May
Matheus Cunha returns to the Manchester United side as Michael Carrick makes one change from the victory over Brentford.
Amad drops to the bench, with teenager Shea Lacey missing out altogether as another youngster Ayden Heaven starts alongside Harry Maguire, with Lisandro Martinez completing his three-match suspension.
Manchester United XI: Lammens, Dalot, Maguire, Heaven, Shaw, Casemiro, Mainoo, Mbeumo, Bruno Fernandes, Cunha, Sesko.
You can also listen to today's 5 Live Premier League commentaries on most smart speakers. Just say "ask BBC Sounds to play Bournemouth v Crystal Palace" or "ask BBC Sounds to play Man Utd v Liverpool".
Sutton's predictions: Man Utd v Liverpoolpublished at 10:04 BST 3 May
10:04 BST 3 May
Apart from the future of both managers, it doesn't feel like many people are talking much about either club here, which feels odd before such a grudge match between two old rivals.
It's impossible to predict how this one will turn out. Manchester United were lucky to edge past Brentford on Monday, while Liverpool got a good win over Crystal Palace to take a bit of heat off Arne Slot.
Bruno Fernandes has had an outstanding season for United and Liverpool will need to stop the Portuguese Pied Piper from leading them a merry dance.
It looks like no Mohamed Salah for Liverpool, after he went off injured against the Eagles, but Alexander Isak scoring in that game felt big for him and Liverpool, after such a stop-start campaign.
It could be that an individual - either Bruno or Isak - steps up again to win the game for their team but I am going for an entertaining draw.
‘Man Utd have weaknesses Liverpool can really go and attack’published at 15:06 BST 2 May
15:06 BST 2 May
Chloe Bloxam Fan contributor
Media caption,
It is Manchester United v Liverpool at Old Trafford this weekend, a massive game for many reasons - rivalry and also history between the two football clubs - but this time it feels closer than it has been in the past couple of years.
It feels like, in the past couple of years, Liverpool have been the superior side with the better players and management but, as it stands, United are three points clear of Liverpool in third place in the Premier League.
They're doing very well under Michael Carrick and it's always tough to go to Old Trafford even if we have had some really good results - 3-0 and 5-0 - in the past few years.
United will be really up for it. They’ll be harder to break down and harder to play against. They’ll have more structure to how they play.
Saying that, I did see how they played against Brentford and, honestly, that game could have ended 3-3 or 2-2.
There are weaknesses there for Liverpool to really go and attack, but Liverpool have to put them to the sword - they have to be clinical when they need to be. And it's whether Liverpool can do that.
Liverpool are on a decent run of form, especially in terms of getting the results, and have had a little bit of a boost in morale. But we’re going to need to be absolutely brilliant on Sunday because United will create a really good atmosphere and be prepared to take on this Liverpool side.
And in Carrick, there is definitely a person there who knows what rivalry in this fixture means because he's played in it.
I expect their team to be fully bought in to beating Liverpool, who are weakened without Mo Salah - who loves a goal against United - and also by not being able to bounce back this season when things have gone against them. United will try to latch on to things like that.
Liverpool have got to play their way and not get dragged into the way United want to play.
We've got to be focused and switched on from the first moment and, hopefully, come away with three big points that will put us above them on goal difference. A big, tough game for Liverpool.
Man Utd v Liverpool: Key stats and talking pointspublished at 13:15 BST 2 May
13:15 BST 2 May
Chris Adams BBC Sport journalist
Manchester United take on Liverpool at Old Trafford on Sunday (15:30 BST) in what is the 186th league meeting between England's two most successful clubs.
With four games to go, just three points separate United in third and Liverpool in fourth. A win for Michael Carrick's side will make Champions League football next season a certainty.
Neither side has mounted a serious title challenge, but the Red Devils hierarchy might be wondering what could have been had they appointed Carrick sooner.
Since the Englishman returned to the hotseat in mid-January, United have won nine of their 13 league games (including six out of seven at home) and top the overall form table for that timeframe.
After supplying Benjamin Sesko for United's second against Brentford on Monday, Bruno Fernandes is now just one shy of equalling Thierry Henry and Kevin de Bruyne's record of 20 Premier League assists in a season.
Classy Casemiro will be hard to replace
Fernandes' midfield colleagues, Casemiro and Kobbie Mainoo, also shone against the Bees. Those two players face very different futures, however, with Mainoo signing a new contract this week and Casemiro leaving at the end of the season.
The Brazilian got United's first against Brentford to take his league tally for the season to nine (he was briefly United's joint top scorer until Sesko edged ahead).
Aside from losing his vast experience and leadership qualities, the 34-year-old's aerial ability in the opposition box is unmatched among midfield players. Since making his United debut in August 2022, only centre-forwards Erling Haaland (18), Ollie Watkins (16) and Chris Wood (13) have scored more headers in England's top tier than Casemiro.
Reds chasing Champions League slot
Liverpool make the short trip across the M62 having won three league games on the bounce as they look to secure Champions League qualification for the ninth time in 10 seasons. Five points from their remaining games will guarantee just that.
It is a journey that has been a pleasant one for the Merseyside club in recent seasons - the Reds have won three of their past five league away games at Old Trafford, as many as in their previous 18 visits.
The departing Mohamed Salah has proven to be a constant thorn in United's side over the years, but it looks like a minor muscle injury sustained in the win over Crystal Palace last week will deprive him of one last chance to add to his 13 Premier League goals against Liverpool's bitter rivals – more than any other player in the competition's history.
Looking to life after Salah – with Hugo Ekitike sidelined for several months after rupturing his Achilles tendon – head coach Arne Slot will be hoping Alexander Isak's first Anfield goal, which came against Palace, gives the Sweden striker a timely morale boost.
Isak returned to action this month after breaking his fibula in December and has started just eight games since his British record £125m switch from Newcastle United in September. His next start will be his 100th in England's top flight.
Despite a 2-1 defeat in the reverse meeting in October, Liverpool's recent form against their old foes is generally very good – not since 2015-16 have Sunday's hosts done the league double in this fixture. In fact, the Reds have lost just three of their past 19 league games against United (won seven, drawn nine).
Wirtz development this season 'so clear and obvious' - Slotpublished at 18:20 BST 1 May
18:20 BST 1 May
Aadam Patel Liverpool reporter
Image source, Getty Images
Arne Slot confirmed on Friday that Mohamed Salah is expected to return to Liverpool action before the end of the season and his departure, after sustaining a minor muscle injury.
However, Liverpool will head to Old Trafford this weekend without the man who has a formidable record against Manchester United.
The Reds will need others to take responsibility - and the focus will intensify on Florian Wirtz and Alexander Isak when they take on United, Chelsea and Aston Villa over the next fortnight.
Both of the summer signings, who cost a combined £241m, scored against Crystal Palace last time out, but Isak is yet to complete 90 minutes as a Liverpool player and Wirtz is still awaiting a statement performance for the club.
The Germany international is yet to score or provide an assist against any of the Premier League teams currently occupying the European places but, when that was put to Slot on Friday, he insisted it is a "coincidence" and he is "100% sure" Wirtz will start delivering in the bigger games.
His tally of seven goals and 10 assists this season is certainly no room for major concern but Wirtz, who turns 23 on Sunday, would be the first to admit he must do better.
"The development Florian has made in his Liverpool career is so clear and obvious," said Slot.
"In the 93rd minute against Crystal Palace, making a duel on the sideline, winning a throw-in, and then making a sprint from 40 yards and hitting the ball in the top corner - that is something I'm not completely convinced he could do eight months ago.
"His improvement - and he was already an elite player - will only continue. He is only 22, so that makes complete sense. Almost every player in the world is at his best when he is 25 or 26, but he is already an elite player and he can only become better.
"That is the beauty of the signings we made last summer. All of them are of a certain age where we can only expect them to get better."
'It's a big relief Salah's injury is minor'published at 15:59 BST 1 May
15:59 BST 1 May
Liverpool boss Arne Slot expects Mohamed Salah to be back for the final part of the season, although the forward has been ruled out of their trip to Manchester United on Sunday.
Slot on Salah, Alisson and improvementspublished at 15:32 BST 1 May
15:32 BST 1 May
Holly Bacon BBC Sport journalist
Media caption,
Liverpool boss Arne Slot has been speaking to the media before Sunday's Premier League game against Manchester United at Old Trafford (kick-off 15:30 BST).
Here are the key lines from his news conference:
Slot said Mo Salah has a "minor injury" and will be back for the final part of the season but not in time for Sunday. He added: "It is a big relief that his injury is minor and he is able to play for us and at the World Cup. If a player deserves a big send off then it is Mo."
The Liverpool boss said Alisson Becker is "close" to training with the group but has not done so yet. He did say there a difference between an outfield player and goalkeeper in terms of coming back - that "players need to run much more than goalkeepers do" and that [with outfield players] "it's usually that the fitness levels are not at the intensity required for the Premier League".
Slot believes his team can be "at a much higher level" than they have been in their past three games, which they won. He added: "We've shown already that we can play much better but in many of these games we were very unlucky with the outcome. In the last three games, I wouldn't say we didn't deserve to win but we were more lucky than we've ever been this season."
He added: "This team is capable of much more but it would be helpful if everyone is available once in a while and that hasn't been the situation throughout the whole season. It's very extreme at the moment the amount of players we have missing."
The Liverpool boss admitted that converting chances is not something they have done very well this season and said "one of the players that we thought could score a lot of goals for us [Alexander Isak] has hardly been available".
On the possibility that he will add to his backroom staff this summer, Slot said: "We all know we've lost a member of staff during the season. We parted ways [with Aaron Briggs] so I think it makes complete sense for this club if someone is leaving in a certain department that you are looking at a replacement."
In the short time Florian Wirtz has been at the club, Slot said the development he has made is "clear" and that he is "already an elite player but he can only become better". He added: "That's the beauty of the signings we made last summer. All of them are at a certain age where we can only expect them to become better as long as they don't get injured."
On facing Manchester United, Slot said: "We are aware of the fact it's a very big game, not only because we play Manchester United but also to qualify for Champions League and to get the highest possible finish in the league table. We know how important it is to qualify for the Champions League for any club but definitely for our club."
He said United were better than their league position suggested last season and have become "more consistent, especially under Michael Carrick" in their results.
Liverpool 'haven't really got a style of play'published at 15:32 BST 1 May
15:32 BST 1 May
Image source, Getty Images
James Nelson-Joyce from hit BBC Show This City of Ours joins the latest episode of The Wayne Rooney Show.
On the change under Arne Slot, Nelson-Joyce said: "I think the thing is for Liverpool fans, for nine years we saw us going into everything 100 per cent, 100 miles an hour and I think even Jurgen Klopp on the sidelines was always up, going for it.
"It has taken some getting used to how we are playing now - it's a bit monotonous.
"We haven't really got a style of play. Slot doesn't really have that thing - this isn't me digging on him - but he hasn't got that thing Klopp had, getting the fans and the crowd going."
Wayne Rooney added: "Klopp was the only Liverpool manager I've looked at and thought 'I'd love to play for him' - obviously not for Liverpool but for him as a manager.
"Slot maybe hasn't got the aura [of Klopp] which could be a good thing or a bad thing."
'Too soon' for Alisson to leave Liverpoolpublished at 08:09 BST 1 May
08:09 BST 1 May
The Redmen TV's Ste Plunkett believes it would be the wrong time for Alisson Becker to leave Liverpool, with the goalkeeper linked with a move this summer.
He told BBC Radio Merseyside: "It's too many players going out the door. You're losing Mohamed Salah, Andy Robertson and potentially Alisson.
"There's three of the lads who've been there and done it, got the t-shirt and will always be part of that leadership group they talk about so often.
"To lose all three in a summer, I think would be a real setback.
"I think it's too soon. The only caveat you could put on that is he does struggle to stay fit these days and obviously won't be on little amounts of money."
Gossip: Juventus interested in Alissonpublished at 07:41 BST 1 May
07:41 BST 1 May
Mohamed Salah could spurn the Saudi Pro League this summer and the Egyptian could instead sign for Turkish side Fenerbahce. (A Spor - in Turkish, external)
Juventus are interested in goalkeeper Alisson Becker, who only has a year left on his contract. (Mail, external)
There were concerns that Salah may have played his last game for the club after he was forced off against Crystal Palace on Saturday with a hamstring injury.
However, Liverpool said on Wednesday that the problem is a "minor muscle injury" and that it is "anticipated" the Egypt international will recover in time to feature again before ending a nine-year spell at Anfield.
"You could sense the anxiety among the fanbase," Rudkin told BBC Radio Merseyside. "You didn't know if it was going to be his last game.
"No-one wants to say goodbye to Salah in that way. We all absolutely adore him so the idea that was the last time we'd see him in a Liverpool shirt was really sad.
"It is a massive relief and it means now he can appreciate the games he has left with the fans.
"He probably panicked himself when he went off injured thinking it would be the last time he plays for Liverpool."
'Absolutely gutted if he left' but 'there are more pressing issues to resolve'published at 11:15 BST 30 April
11:15 BST 30 April
Image source, Getty Images
We asked for your views on the situation with Alisson, who is entering the final year of his contract at Anfield and is currently out because of injury.
Would this summer be the right time for Liverpool to sell him and, if so, is Giorgi Mamardashvili good enough to step up to number one?
Here are some of your comments:
Graeme: Any club wants to keep its best players and those players are also coveted by big European clubs because they're so good. Alisson is no different - he's a top keeper and has kept the team in so many matches. However, his injuries are frequent and frustrating. With Freddie Woodman making his debut, could this be his moment to become number two, with Giorgi Mamardashvili moving to number one? Whatever happens, Alisson is a legend.
Jimbo: Sell him if we can. Hopefully for big cheese to the Saudi Pro League rather than peanuts to Italy. If he stays, it's simply a downward spiral of absence through injury plus poor kicking when available.
Ian: Mamardashvili is obviously a competent replacement for Alisson or Liverpool wouldn't have bought him, and he has put in some impressive performances in Alisson's absences. If he wants to go then cash in and put the money in the transfer kitty because we definitely need to replace Mohamed Salah and strengthen a weak midfield.
Mark: Should have kept Caoimhin Kelleher - he was great.
Andy: I'd be absolutely gutted if Alisson left this summer - he still has so much to give the team, quite apart from being one of the world's best stoppers. Why would we let him go? We have missed some experience this season and he has bucketloads.
James: I worry about the loss of leadership but other than that we have a very capable number two ready to step up and what looks to be a decent number three who could also step up. There are more pressing issues to resolve than worrying too much about the goalkeeping position.
Neil: Really hope Alisson stays but would completely understand if he wanted a new challenge.
The club's supporters' union Spirit of Shankly organised the removal of the typical array of flags and banners from The Kop on matchdays and also asked fans in the ground to hold up yellow cards reading 'Caution - Anfield's soul at risk', in the 13th minute during their 3-1 win over Crystal Palace.
Host John Bennett is joined by football finance expert Kieran Maguire and Nils Kern - editor of Real Madrid fanzine, Real Total - to discuss why clubs are becoming increasingly concerned with financial success.
Click play above to hear the full chat or listen on BBC Sounds here
'Would I love him to stay? Of course' - Van Dijk on Alissonpublished at 20:28 BST 29 April
20:28 BST 29 April
Image source, Getty Images
Liverpool captain Virgil van Dijk says "of course" he would "love" goalkeeper Alisson Becker to stay at Liverpool but insists the club will always adapt and evolve when senior players depart.
Earlier this year the Reds exercised the one-year extension option they had on the 33-year-old's contract, which was due to expire in the summer.
"Listen, there is always going to be a day where you – including myself – will go," said Van Dijk.
"But if it's going to happen – and I have no idea about it and I don't think at this point he has an idea about it – then we will, as a club, adapt to that."
Alisson has won eight trophies during his eight years at Anfield but missed 16 games last season through injury and that tally is already at 17 this time around.
"We have been through everything together, positive things and some negative things unfortunately as well, so it would definitely be a big blow and a miss but I don't think, for me, it's a good idea to think ahead about what could or could not happen," Van Dijk added.
"He's very important for me as one of the leaders in the team and I think he is very important on the pitch because I think he is one of the best – in my opinion the best – goalkeeper in the world.
"He's trying to be back as soon as possible to help us for the last four games and that's our main focus.
"Whatever happens after that is not something you should ask me. Would I love him to stay? Of course, there's no doubt about that.
"There are rumours but if there is anything concrete then we will all find out but for me I'm never worried."
What is the chance of Alisson leaving this summer?published at 08:51 BST 29 April
08:51 BST 29 April
Aadam Patel Liverpool reporter
The future of Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson has been the subject of several questions sent in via our club Ask Me Anything form.
When Arne Slot was asked last week about the possibility of Alisson leaving this summer, the Liverpool head coach did not guarantee he would stay. So there is certainly a chance he moves on.
If the Brazilian, who has been linked with Juventus, was to leave, then it would mean Liverpool losing another experienced campaigner, with Mohamed Salah and Andy Robertson already confirming their exits this summer.
"The people who make these decisions take everything into account," said Slot, when asked about the 33-year-old.
"They try to make the best decisions with the interest of the club. It [experience] is definitely one argument to keep him but there are other arguments. That is a decision the club has to make if that is needed. In the end, he still has one year [on his contract]."
Alisson signed a one-year contract extension in March that would see him through to the end of 2026-27 at Anfield and stop him leaving on a free this summer.
But he missed 16 games last season through injury and that tally is already at 17 this time around.
In Giorgi Mamardashvili, Liverpool have their back-up option ready to step up as a new permanent number one.
So if a reasonable offer was to come in this summer for Alisson, who has played 332 games for Liverpool since joining from Roma in 2018, then there is certainly a possibility that both parties could choose to move on.
What do you think about the situation with Alisson? Would this summer be the right time to sell? And is Mamardashvili good enough to step up to number one?
Liverpool have a new 'cult hero' in Woodmanpublished at 08:51 BST 29 April
08:51 BST 29 April
Image source, Getty Images
The Late Challenge podcast's Mo Stewart discussed Liverpool's 3-1 over Crystal Palace at the weekend with BBC Radio Merseyside.
The victory made it three league wins on the bounce for the Reds and one of the biggest takeaways from the game was the performance of third-choice goalkeeper, Freddie Woodman.
He made five saves, his highest total in a single match in the Premier League.
"That Liverpool performance wasn't a million miles away from the ones earlier on in the season," said Stewart.
"On Saturday, those chances came for Crystal Palace but they didn't go in. Chances came for Liverpool and they did.
"The fact Woodman got his name sung on The Kop, not only did they say he should be the new England goalkeeper, but I believe there's merch being made with his name on.
"Liverpool love a cult hero, and I think he's become one over the past two games."