Newsletter Subject

⚽ Liverpool Is Just Too Good

From

foxsports.com

Email Address

reply@email.foxsports.com

Sent On

Tue, Nov 12, 2019 12:06 AM

Email Preheader Text

After another show of force against Manchester City, Liverpool are running away with the rest of the

After another show of force against Manchester City, Liverpool are running away with the rest of the EPL’s championship hopes. [View in browser]( [FOX SPORTS INSIDER WITH MARTIN ROGERS] In today’s FOX Sports Insider: No one in the Premier League can seem to keep pace with Liverpool ... the Raptors meet old friends in Los Angeles ... and the San Francisco 49ers can improve to 9-0. Soccer might be called the “Beautiful Game,” but let’s face it: the soap opera that makes the English Premier League so compelling is fueled by good old emotions like hatred, anger, and jealousy. Liverpool and Manchester City haven’t hated each other very much over the years, with the main reason being that they were too busy hating other teams far, far more. After the EPL title race tilted firmly in Liverpool’s favor with a 3-1 victory on Sunday, they are certainly making up for lost time now. English soccer’s feuds become entrenched in certain ways. This isn’t like American sports, where most teams are separated by distances of hundreds of miles. When Manchester City fans had to endure the long and all-encompassing dominance of local neighbor Manchester United, they truly endured it. “Imagine a couple of decades of going into work every Monday to be faced by some gloating idiot, who also happens to be your friend, sounding off about his team’s latest triumph,” City fan Anthony Tyler told me. Meanwhile, Liverpool’s same-city rival is Everton, with the two stadiums situated just a mile apart. On top of that, the Liverpool/Manchester United soccer war is one that has raged since deep into the distant past, based off the collective success of the two clubs and the historic tension between the north of England’s two most prominent cities. If anything, Liverpool and Manchester City had a common enemy. That has all changed now. [STORY IMAGE 1] “There was a time when it felt like we were never going to be able to look past United,” Liverpool supporter Steve Redmond told me. “It felt like they would always be the ones standing in our way — and, frankly, making our lives miserable. That’s gone now. Not all our fans will admit it, but it’s true — it’s all eyes on Manchester City.” With good reason. The top of English soccer is now both a true heavyweight battle and a two-horse race. Liverpool coach Jurgen Klopp and his City counterpart Pep Guardiola both like to claim the other is fixated upon them. In truth, they’re both right. Liverpool’s victory last weekend might have been a critical blow in this season’s race for the EPL title, even with nearly six months of the season still to run. Goals from Fabinho, Mohamed Salah and Sadio Mane ensured that Liverpool now have 34 points to City’s 25. Leicester City and Chelsea occupy second and third spots in the table, both with 26 points, but if Liverpool is to be overtaken, the challenge will almost certainly come from City. No one has ever started an EPL season better than Liverpool has this year, with 11 wins and one draw out 12 games to date. Coaching icon Jose Mourinho, formerly of Chelsea, Real Madrid, Manchester United and Inter Milan, believes there’s no way back. “From my position, I think it is done,” Mourinho told Sky Sports. “Unless something dramatic happens in terms of an injury situation that breaks the team, I think the (Liverpool) team is a complete puzzle. I feel the way they play is adapted to the qualities of the players. City is capable of winning seven, eight, nine matches in a row. But I don’t see how Liverpool can lose this advantage of nine points to them.” Rivalries can fester simply from two teams being the best in the country at any given time. However, the Liverpool/City battle exploded truly on April 2018, when the City team bus was attacked by Liverpool fans ahead of a Champions League game. “That one incident enraged Guardiola and City fans. That is the moment that really took the rivalry to a new level and sparked it all,” Charlie Wyett, football correspondent for The Sun told me via telephone. “Ever since then, it’s been huge.” [STORY IMAGE 2] At this point, the two clubs are not just competing on the field, but also away from it. In the transfer market, where City is backed by the huge wealth of its Abu Dhabi petroleum empire ownership group and Liverpool is funded by American consortium the Fenway Sports Group (led by Boston Red Sox owner John W. Henry), both teams often have their eye on the same players. Right now, Liverpool is firing. Salah and Mane form an unstoppable attacking force and the club are the overwhelming favorites to become champions of England for the first time since 1990. ([Fox Bet]( has Liverpool FC at -300 to win the EPL outright, with Man City behind at +225. Chelsea and Leicester are a distant third, at +3300.) Liverpool lost only one game last season and finished with 97 points, but it still wasn’t good enough to outlast City, who pipped them by one. City fans are unhappy at the perception that their team’s success is purely because of financial muscle. “Most times when you hear a club or a fan base get described as arrogant, it comes after that club has spent a lot of money,” longtime fan Tyler added. “It’s a little bit silly, really. Yes, we have spent a lot of money. And Liverpool have spent a lot of money. And Manchester United have spent a lot. This is the Premier League in 2019; everyone’s spending a lot of money.” Yet for all the cash, the thing driving this rivalry forward is passion. Part of the reason both Klopp and Guardiola have become cult figures at their respective clubs is because, for all the millions they make each season, they wear their heart on their sleeve. “It was wild; it was intense,” Klopp said after Sunday, matched with a smile that suggested he loved every moment of it. And so another chapter was written, and so English football’s most heated feud got a little bit spicier. They weren’t exactly friends years ago, but at least they had a common foe. Right now Liverpool and Manchester City have only one thing in common: the desire to topple the other. [STORY IMAGE 3] Here’s what others have said ... Avi Creditor, Sports Illustrated: “After blowing a 10-point lead last winter, Liverpool certainly has its guard up, even after extending its lead over City to nine points and its overall table lead to eight. But after Liverpool won the Champions League title, and after the start it has enjoyed to this season, there's a different aura around this team and a genuine feeling that it's Liverpool's title to lose.” Daniel Storey, Football365: “Liverpool win games from behind. Liverpool win games when scoring early. Liverpool win games when they are playing well and win games when they have to summon up every last ounce of resolve to get the job done. Jurgen Klopp’s side fell short last season, pushing City all the way despite added Champions League assignments. But while we were busy wondering whether Liverpool had the resolve to go again, Klopp concentrated on making them better. This astonishing run is the result. City have been left in their wake.” James Pearce, The Athletic: “Liverpool have won 13 successive home league games — the club’s best run since 1985. Having gone 29 league games unbeaten, they are closing in on the club record of 31 set in 1988. This is a special team producing incredible feats. They are one slick, unified powerful force. The European champions crave English football’s biggest prize and ending that painful 30-year wait for a 19th league crown.” [IN OTHER WORDS] - Ahead of their meetings in Los Angeles this week, former Toronto teammates [tell Eric Koreen of]( [The Athletic]( how Kawhi Leonard and Danny Green changed the Raptors forever. - [Jackie MacMullan at ESPN]( details how Cleveland Cavaliers coach Lindsay Gottlieb made it from the Cal women’s basketball team to the NBA. - A high school wrestler from Kansas spent four years fighting to give girls the opportunity to compete in an official state sport, [writes Liz Clarke at]( Washington Post.]( [THE INTERNET IS UNDEFEATED] [THE INTERNET IS UNDEFEATED]( The Green Bay Packers are one of the most unique teams in all of professional sports. They’re the only publicly-owned team from one of North America’s four major sports. They routinely play in an iced-over stadium. They originated the Lambeau Leap into the stands. Their fans wear cheese on their heads. But one of the most unique things about them is where Lambeau Field is actually situated: smack dab in the middle of a neighborhood. Fenway Park in Boston is nestled among downtown pubs, buildings and storefronts, but the above video really drives home that there are a good number of people who can tailgate at their own home barbecue ... and then walk next door and catch the game in person. [VIEWER'S GUIDE] Seattle Seahawks at San Francisco 49ers (ESPN, 8 p.m. ET) The only undefeated team in the NFL gets a Monday Night Football showcase against a hated division rival. Can the 49ers manage to make it to 9-0? Toronto Raptors at Los Angeles Clippers (NBA TV, 10:30 p.m. ET) The 7-2 Raptors are off to a strong start this season, while the 6-3 Clippers aren’t close behind. The defending champions will face NBA Finals MVP Kawhi Leonard’s new team on Monday night. WWE Raw (USA Network, 8 p.m. ET) Raw originates from England on Monday night, featuring the reveal of the Raw men’s Survivor Series team and a Women’s Tag Team Championship match. [BET OF THE DAY] [BET OF THE DAY] Odds provided by [FOX Bet]( Jimmy Garoppolo to complete 26+ passes & 49ers to win: +200 Are you looking to back the undefeated Niners tonight on Monday Night Football, but not exactly thrilled about laying the 6 points on the spread or -250 on the money line? Then this Jimmy G-based prop might be perfect for you! Garoppolo is averaging a touch over 25 pass attempts per game this season, but he’s thrown 32, 33 and 37 times in all three of San Francisco's games that have been decided by less than a TD this year. [WHAT THEY SAID] "There's really no secret to success. You make your own success." — Alex Morgan [FOLLOW FOX SPORTS] [Twitter]( [Facebook]( [YouTube]( [Instagram]( Download the FOX Sports app for live scores and streaming [App Store]( [Google Play]( Available on: [tvOS] [Roku] [fireTV] [androidtv] [XBOX] [Google chromecast] [tvOS] [Roku] [fireTV] [androidtv] [XBOX] [Google chromecast] Forwarded this message? [Sign up](. Trademark & Copyright Notice: ™ and © 2019 FOX Media LLC and FOX Sports Interactive Media, LLC. All rights reserved. Please do not reply to this message. If you do not wish to receive emails like this in the future, please [unsubscribe](. FOX Sports respects your privacy. Click [here]( to view our Privacy Policy. FOX.com Business & Legal Affairs - Manager Digital Media P.O. Box 900 Beverly Hills, CA 90213-0900

Marketing emails from foxsports.com

View More
Sent On

26/05/2024

Sent On

25/05/2024

Sent On

25/05/2024

Sent On

24/05/2024

Sent On

24/05/2024

Sent On

23/05/2024

Email Content Statistics

Subscribe Now

Subject Line Length

Data shows that subject lines with 6 to 10 words generated 21 percent higher open rate.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Words

The more words in the content, the more time the user will need to spend reading. Get straight to the point with catchy short phrases and interesting photos and graphics.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Images

More images or large images might cause the email to load slower. Aim for a balance of words and images.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Time to Read

Longer reading time requires more attention and patience from users. Aim for short phrases and catchy keywords.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Predicted open rate

Subscribe Now

Spam Score

Spam score is determined by a large number of checks performed on the content of the email. For the best delivery results, it is advised to lower your spam score as much as possible.

Subscribe Now

Flesch reading score

Flesch reading score measures how complex a text is. The lower the score, the more difficult the text is to read. The Flesch readability score uses the average length of your sentences (measured by the number of words) and the average number of syllables per word in an equation to calculate the reading ease. Text with a very high Flesch reading ease score (about 100) is straightforward and easy to read, with short sentences and no words of more than two syllables. Usually, a reading ease score of 60-70 is considered acceptable/normal for web copy.

Subscribe Now

Technologies

What powers this email? Every email we receive is parsed to determine the sending ESP and any additional email technologies used.

Subscribe Now

Email Size (not include images)

Font Used

No. Font Name
Subscribe Now

Copyright © 2019–2024 SimilarMail.