
Thomas
Tuchel believes Chelsea will be taking on one of Europe's elite sides when
they visit Anfield on Thursday, despite Liverpool's dreadful recent home
form.
The Premier League champions have not won at Anfield in any competitions
since beating Tottenham on December 16 and are on a run of four successive
home defeats.
It has been a remarkable decline for Jurgen Klopp's side, who were on a
68-game unbeaten home run - stretching back to April 2017 - until their 1-0
defeat to Burnley in January sparked their current losing streak.
Liverpool look set to hand their title back to Manchester City, who lead the
table by 15 points, but Tuchel believes those two sides remain the
"benchmark" that his side must strive to meet.
Ahead of Thursday's meeting at Anfield, live on Sky Sports, Tuchel said:
"For me, those two teams are still the benchmark. We want to close the gap
and the gap is not too big that we cannot close it in weeks and months. This
is the target.
"We have always a chance to win any game because we have self-confidence, we
have everything we need to win against everybody and be a tough opponent.
"At the same time, you can always lose games in the Premier League because
it's one of the toughest competitions you can face.
"I'm pretty sure that Liverpool miss their fans. I know from experience what
impact the crowd at Anfield can have on their team.
"They dropped points, sometimes deserved but many times not deserved, and
there was also a streak of very unlucky results.
"It is one of the strongest teams in Europe. One of the best managers in
Europe, but we are confident enough."
Chelsea's game at Anfield is a key game in the race for the Premier League
top four, with fifth-placed Chelsea currently one point outside those places
- one point and one place ahead of Liverpool.
But while Tuchel is keen to maintain - and even extend - his side's lead
over Liverpool, he does not believe a defeat would be devastating for their
hopes of qualifying for next season's Champions League.
"We know we have 12 matches to go, so no matter what result we get out of
tomorrow, it will not be the end of the race for the top four," said Tuchel.
"But it is of big importance.
"I hope we can show up with the same attitude like we faced all the tough
challenges so far. This race will go, in my opinion, until the end of the 12
games we have to play. But tomorrow is a very important fixture."
Tuchel: Abraham has been unlucky
Tuchel raised eyebrows with his decision to leave Tammy Abraham out of his
squad for Chelsea's game against fellow top-four rivals Manchester United
last Sunday.
That decision was made despite the England striker being the Blues' top
scorer this season with 12 goals, and Tuchel believes Abraham has been
"unlucky" in recent times.
"I think so, and it is my job to push him to his limits," said Tuchel when
asked if Abraham could work his way back into his plans. "We will not stop
doing this and supporting him.
"It was a tough decision but with everybody coming back now and hopefully
nobody injured, we have these decisions to make. This is part of my job
which I do not like, but at the same time, I like it because it means we
have everybody available.
"In this case, it was not a signal or punishment, it was just a choice for
alternatives. He lacks a little bit of luck, Tammy, not only in the games
but also in training. Once the last touch comes back and he's fighting hard,
he will stay."