City hope to hold onto fourth place, gained after a 1-1 draw at Stoke on Tuesday, but face Liverpool at Eastlands, a team that City don’t hold a good record against.

The likely outcome of Sunday’s match is a draw, considering seven of the twelve Premiership meetings between the two have ended that way. Of the other games, the blues have won two while Liverpool have taken maximum points on three occasions.

Of the 59 games played in the old first division, City won 22 but the Reds have won 26 and scored ten more goals in the process, 98 to City’s 88. The first time City met Liverpool at home was at Hyde Road in 1863. It was the first game ever played between the two and the first of only two games played outside the top flight.

Liverpool won that game 1-0 and the following season they played out a 1-1 draw at Hyde Road in front of 30,000 people. Overall, from 73 league games played, City have won 24 to Liverpool’s 30.

Outside the league, the teams have met 21 times but City’s record is slightly better. From those 21 games, City notched up seven wins to Liverpool’s eight. Liverpool won twice at Maine Road in the FA Cup (4-0 and 1-0) while City have a solitary victory from four games, a 2-0 4th round replay win in February 1973.

City v Liverpool Home Record

  PL W D L GF GA
Premier League 12 2 7 3 12 15
First Division (Old) 59 22 11 26 88 98
Second Division (Old) 2 0 1 1 1 2
First Division (New) 0 0 0 0 0 0
Second Division (New) 0 0 0 0 0 0
League Totals 73  24 19 30 101 115
FA Cup 4 1 1 2 2 5
League Cup 2 1 0 1 3 3
Europe 0 0 0 0 0 0
Others 0 0 0 0 0 0
War 15 5 5 5 27 30
OVERALL TOTALS 94 31 25 38 133 153

Interesting Yet Useless Match Facts

City’s biggest home win over Liverpool was 6-0 in 1935, while the heaviest came five years later when Liverpool won 7-3 at Maine Road.

The biggest attendance against Liverpool at Maine Road was for an FA Cup 5th road match was 70,640. The game ended 0-0

The teams first met in 1863 but City had to wait until 1903 to record their first home in. The game ended 3-2.

Liverpool are unbeaten in four at Eastlands.

Some former Liverpool and City players you might remember

Steve McMahon, Steve McManaman, Peter Beardsley, Nicolas Anelka, Robbie Fowler. Albert Reira

And some you might have forgotten about

Paul Stewart, Nigel Clough, Mark Seagraves, Paul Walsh, David James

Match Stats Courtesy of www.MCFCStats.com

City moved into the top four when a Gareth Barry strike cancelled out a Glen Whelan goal to give City a share of the Spoils at The Britannia Stadium.

The home side also had Abdoulaye Faye sent off for a professional foul on Emmanuel Adebayor but the blues still couldn’t capitalise with an extra man and laboured to a disappointing 1-1 draw.

It was another away performance that left City fans frustrated and onlookers scratching their heads wondering how the blues have reached the lofty heights of the Premiership top four on such performances.

It should have been a game where the blues used one of their games in hand to put some clear daylight between us and the chasing pack but they allowed Stoke to dominate the game and clearly hadn’t learnt from Saturday’s FA Cup tie as Stoke rattled the blues in the early stages.

Rory Delap was causing all sorts of havoc with his long throw-in’s and the home side should have taken the lead when Mamady Sidibe shot weakly when unmarked and allowed Shay Given to make the save.

Stoke harried the blues defence and City, missing the presence of Carlos Tevez and Craig Bellamy, struggled to get new boy Adam Johnson involved and they were grateful at the half time whistle that they went in still on level terms.

Just seven minutes into the second half and Stoke were reduced to ten men. Adebayor escaped Faye’s shackles but the Stoke man clearly held Ade’s shirt but incredibly, referee Alan Wiley missed it. But his assistant had seen the shirt pull and Wiley duly dispatched the red card. The initial miss of the foul was the second in a hat-trick of blunders by the official after he had earlier missed Patrick Vieira’s stamp on Whelan.

Down to ten men, it was somewhat inevitable that Stoke would take the lead and they did so in the 72nd minute. Adam Johnson’s poor clearance fell to Whelan whose shot squirmed from the grip of Shay Given and nestled in the back of net.

City fought back and snatched a point in scrappy circumstances. Adebayor headed on for Barry, whose initial shot hit the post but bounced straight back to him and Barry hooked the ball home.

Not the kind of performance City wanted and, on this showing, it is little wonder Liverpool are going into Sunday’s match full of confidence. The club have paid a lot of money for the stars that are just not performing. If this continues, they might as well gift wrap fourth place and send it to Anfield.

There was an old saying in the league years ago; If you win your home games, draw your away games you’ll win the league. It was an adage that rung true and it was a standard that every team that was serious about winning the championship strived to achieve.

Unfortunately in today’s game it no longer applies. Winning home games and drawing away will probably leave you with a fourth place finish so the emphasis on winning away games is greater than it was twenty years ago.

And that is where the blues tend to fall down, season after season. So far City have clocked up just three wins on their travels and while it is a slight improvement on last season, it is nowhere near the kind of standard the blues should be setting themselves.

For some unknown reason, City just cannot perform away from Eastlands. Last season, a 3-0 win at Sunderland in August was not repeated until the team travelled to Everton and won 2-1 last Spring. This season, after winning their first two away games, they then failed to win until a 3-0 victory over Wolves during the festive period.

City have one of the best home forms in the Premier League and is only beaten by Chelsea but the away form leaves a lot to be desired. If City would have picked up maximum points at Hull, Wigan, Birmingham and Bolton, which were all attainable, it would have given up an extra nine points, just five behind Chelsea and a good outside bet for the title.

Instead, we are fighting it out for fourth place with Liverpool, Spurs and Villa. With away games such as Arsenal and Chelsea still to come, City need to start making matches against the likes of Hull and Stoke an expected away win, rather than an anticipated defeat.

Winning games rather than avoiding defeat, is the key to toppling the top four.

The blues take on Stoke for the third time in eight weeks and will face The Potteries again next Wednesday in the FA Cup replay.

City have travelled to Stoke 40 times since their first meeting in at the Victoria Ground in 1899. That game ended in a 1-0 win for Stoke.

Since then, the blues have visited Stoke another 39 times in the league and have lost 24 games in total, winning only ten. Their only meeting in the Premier League came last season when the blues lost 1-0, a win that helped Stoke survive their first Premiership season.

The majority of their meetings came in the old first division, when 33 games were played at Stoke. City won seven of those losing and losing twenty. The record gets worse for City. During the war years, the teams played ten times at Stoke and City failed to record a single victory, drawing two and losing eight.

The two have met five times in cup competitions; twice in the FA Cup and three times in the League Cup. City have won one and lost one in the FA Cup and still await their first victory at Stoke in the League Cup, drawing one and losing two.

Overall, from 55 games played, City have won just 11 to Stoke’s 35. Goal wise, Stoke have a clear lead, scoring 98 times to City’s 46.

City’s Record At Stoke

  PL W D L GF GA
Premier League 1 0 0 1 0 1
First Division (Old) 33 7 6 20 26 55
Second Division (Old) 3 1 0 2 4 6
First Division (New) 2 1 0 1 6 4
Second Division (New) 1 1 0 0 1 0
League Total 40 10 6 24 37 66
FA Cup 2 1 0 1 2 2
League Cup 3 0 1 2 1 5
Europe 0 0 0 0 0 0
Others 0 0 0 0 0 0
War 10 0 2 8 6 25
Overall Totals 55 11 9 35 46 98

Interesting But Useless Facts

City’s biggest win at Stoke came in May 1998 when the blues won 5-2.

Stoke have inflicted two 5-0 defeats on City, their heaviest losses at Stoke to date.

Stoke are one of the oldest football clubs in the world. They were founded in 1863. Only Notts County are older. So who did Notts County play against?

Stoke were the first team to finish bottom of the table when the Football League began in 1888.

To ensure their dominance of the league’s worst team, they did it again the following season.

OTBM’s newest feature takes a look at some of the greatest players ever to grace the blue and white of City. This week we look at the short career of Paul Lake, one of the best midfielders who never had the opportunity to fulfil his potential.

Paul Lake, known as Lakey amongst the supporters was City through and through. Born in Denton on 26 October 1968, he was spotted by legendary City scout Ken Barnes playing against boys much older than himself and Barnes could tell, even though Lakey was only ten years old, that the youngster was destined to achieve great things.

Lake joined Blue Star, a youth club with links to the blues, during his teenage years and caught the interest of Manchester United but was more interested in playing for his boyhood heroes at Maine Road. In July 1985, Lake enrolled on a Youth Training Scheme at Maine Road and his path to hero status amongst the fans began.

Just a year later, Lake was part of the dynamic youth team which won the FA Youth Cup in fine style and the following season, the young Lake was baptised in the first team by playing against Wimbledon. That season, Lake was part of the team that dropped out of the old First Division along with Leicester and Aston Villa but he was to form an integral part of new manager Mel Machin’s youthful looking squad, of which Lake was becoming the star.

The 1987/88 season fully announced Lake’s arrival. A series of sublime displays, most notably in the League Cup against First Division opposition catapulted Lake’s status. Members of the team were being coveted by Liverpool, Spurs, United and Glasgow Rangers but, much to the relief of blues supporters, they came instead for Paul Stewart, who left the club fro Spurs in a £1.7m deal, the highest figure City had ever received for any player.

The next season like was outstanding, although a clash of heads during the game with Leicester City, during which he swallowed his tongue and was revived on the pitch by Roy Bailey, knocked his form and in a crucial championship decider against Chelsea a week later, was dispossessed on the half way line which allowed Tony Dorigo to run and score Chelsea’s third which secured a 3-2 win.

But City still won promotion and in the 1989/90 season, Lake destroyed neighbours United at Maine Road, setting up goals for Trevor Morley and David Oldfield as City ran out 5-1 winners. His performances throughout the season were rewarded when he was called up to Bobby Robson’s provisional England squad for the 1990 World Cup in Italy. However, he missed out on making the final squad.

During the summer, Lake was the subject of a reported £3m bid from Liverpool but chairman Peter Swales had little choice but to reject it. Swales had been the target of many a supporters ire over the years and should he have sold their prize asset, there would have been nothing short of a rebellion amongst the Maine Road faithful.

City had recorded a 3-1 defeat at Spurs and a 1-0 home victory over Everton at the start of the new season by the time Aston Villa arrived at Maine Road. Little did any of the supporters know at the time that it would be one of the last times they would see Lake in action. An innocuous challenge with Tony Cascarino, for which the Villa man could not be blamed, left Lake with a ruptured cruciate ligament and it would leave him out of action for two years.

Eventually, the moment all City fans had been waiting for arrived but it soon turned to tragedy. Lake had made his comeback as a substitute in a previous game but had only played eight minutes of an away game at Middlesbrough when the ligament snapped again. It would prove to be the last time Lake would wear the City shirt in a competitive match again.

After four years and fourteen operations, Lake finally admitted defeat and hung up his boots. Lake made 110 appearances for City and although it seemed like more, only scored seven goals for his beloved blues.

Since retiring from the game, Lake trained as a physiotherapist at Salford University and was the club physio at Macclesfield for five years before moving to Bolton Wanderers. However, he left Bolton during the 2008/09 season and has now started up his own physiotherapy practice in Manchester.

Paul Lake – City hero, blue legend. A fully deserving Past Master.

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