Virgil van Dijk says the intensity of Liverpool’s bitter rivalry with Manchester United will make Sunday’s FA Cup quarter-final a major test for his quadruple chasers.
Liverpool head to Old Trafford looking to move a step closer to the second trophy of manager Jurgen Klopp’s farewell season.
Having beaten Chelsea in the League Cup final, Klopp’s side are embroiled in a gripping Premier League title race with Arsenal and Manchester City, and also face Atalanta in the Europa League quarter-finals.
With Liverpool targeting a trophy clean-sweep and United hoping to preserve their last chance of silverware this season, the stage is set for the latest chapter in English football’s most historic feud.
Separated by just 30 miles, the cities of Liverpool and Manchester have been united in mutual loathing since the Industrial Revolution, competing for bragging rights in football, music, fashion and numerous other domestic squabbles.
On the pitch, Liverpool and United have produced countless classic encounters.
But the rivalry turned ugly in the 1970s and ’80s when bloody battles between hooligan gangs made the fixture one of the most vicious on the domestic calendar.
While violence in the stands is less prevalent these days, police will be on red alert on Sunday when 9,000 Liverpool fans descend on Old Trafford.
United have a record 20 English titles, but Liverpool, who have six European Cups to their rivals’ three, hope to equal that feat this season.
In recent years, Manchester City have emerged as Liverpool’s closest challengers in a series of heavyweight fights for Premier League supremacy.
But despite that change in the balance of power, Liverpool captain Van Dijk believes meetings with United still require a unique level of commitment.