The first few matchdays of the 2024-25 Champions League campaign were a bit strange from a general vibes perspective. We saw plenty of interesting matches and great performances, but with the freshly expanded format — four more teams, two more matchdays, four-team groups ditched for a giant, 36-team table with two-thirds of teams advancing to the knockout rounds — it was hard to really glean the stakes of what we were seeing.
It’s not hard anymore.
In Matchday 6, we saw teams officially eliminated, we saw Liverpool lock up a top-eight finish and a bye to the round of 16, we saw a couple of Europe’s richest teams (Real Madrid and Paris Saint-Germain) get off the mat a bit, and we saw another one (Manchester City) continue its recent tailspin. We also saw lots of goals. Twelve of 18 matches had at least three of them, and seven had at least five.
With this level of entertainment, it’s almost a shame that the competition will now basically take six weeks off — Matchdays 7-8 are in the last two weeks of January — but we’ll make do. The more time to prepare for the richest Relegation Six-Pointer of all time (Manchester City at PSG on Jan. 22), the better, eh?
Let’s once again go country-by-country to look at who’s faring well, who’s flailing and which players performed the best in Matchday 6, the best of the competition thus far.
The categories below:
‐ Title hopefuls: Teams with at least a 3% chance of winning the whole thing, per ESPN BET ‐ Fighting for the top eight: Teams with at least a 20% chance of finishing in the top eight of the league phase, per Opta ‐ Just hoping to advance: Teams with at least a 20% chance of finishing in the top 24, but a less than 20% chance of finishing in the top eight, per Opta ‐ Playing out the string: Teams with an under 20% chance of finishing in the top 24
ENGLAND: Liverpool and Arsenal are new title favorites, Manchester City’s tailspin continues
TITLE HOPEFULS: Liverpool 16.2% (up 1.2% from last matchday), Arsenal 11.5% (up 0.6%), Manchester City 10.1% (down 3.6%)
You know your season’s going pretty well when we can nitpick semi-comfortable wins, but Liverpool both clinched a top-eight finish and left plenty to be desired in their 1-0 win over Girona on Tuesday. They scored only via a soft penalty and goalkeeper Alisson, in his return from injury after a couple of months, had to come up with a couple of huge saves as Girona was able to open up the match at times, attempting 13 shots worth a decent 1.2 xG.
This was the first time in five away matches that Liverpool didn’t allow at least two goals — they were stretched particularly open last week in a 3-3 draw at Newcastle — and they weren’t incredibly sharp against Girona either. But they handled their business, and they remain atop the table in both of the world’s most lucrative leagues.