Gary Neville is sure of it, while Jurgen Klopp is no doubt convinced. And most pointedly of all, Pep Guardiola is all too aware as well.
The Premier League has a title race and it is Liverpool whose mood is most buoyant as we head into the final international break of the season. It is easy to see why. Having held a 14-point advantage at the top of the table as recently as mid-January, Manchester City now cling to a slender one; their grip is loosening.
Monday's goalless draw at Crystal Palace hands Liverpool the chance to close that gap further to just one point when they take on Arsenal at the Emirates on Wednesday night.
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Maximum points against Mikel Arteta's men and against Watford, who visit Anfield on April 2, and City will find themselves in second for the first time since the start of December before they play away at Burnley later that day.
And Guardiola, like Neville and Klopp, will know that his rivals' firepower could be the reason for the balance tipping back into the Reds' favour.
"Liverpool are dangerous," Neville said on Monday night. "They are really dangerous. And I hate saying that!
"We're talking about fine margins when you talk about these two great teams who are going for the Premier League title. And it has been for a number of years now.
"You're not talking about massive differences between them. And there's nothing wrong with Pep Guardiola's team, they played a brilliant game tonight as he says.
"The one thing I would say is if Liverpool play that game, they win that game because they’ve got better strikers, they’ve got better forwards, finishers, better strikers in terms of scoring goals, who are more ruthless and clinical.
"I look at those five strikers that they’ve got and going into the last part of the season knowing that you can win an awful lot of football matches with those five up front, whereas City don’t have that same luxury in attacking areas.
"Liverpool's front five are an absolute joke!"
Next up for a free-scoring Liverpool side, one who have plundered 111 goals across all competitions - including a Premier League-high 73 - is a trip to the Emirates to face a team they have bagged six times against in their three meetings so far.
And whoever Klopp chooses from in his 'joke a front five' between Sadio Mane, Mohamed Salah, Diogo Jota, Roberto Firmino and Luis Diaz, the manager will feel secure that his marksmen can shoot their way past Arteta's rearguards.
Salah will be a late call having injured his foot in Saturday's 2-0 win over Brighton, but Klopp will afford his 28-goal frontman every opportunity of proving his fitness for the Emirates and the signs are positive given the last game the Egypt star missed through injury was due to concussion protocols against Barcelona in 2019.
In 11 games against the north Londoners, Salah has struck seven times, but he is not alone when it comes to a considerable haul against Wednesday's opponents. Mane has the same number in a dozen matches, while Firmino is another who has regularly punished the Gunners, having registered eight in his 15 appearances.
Not to be left out of the merriment in front of Arsenal's goal, Jota can boast six in as many games, with two of those sending Liverpool to the Carabao Cup final in January. So Klopp has plenty of welcome selection headaches to make when it comes to his front three as an in-form Diaz also stakes his own claims.
The Colombian has added two in Liverpool red to the 16 he bagged for Porto during the first half of the campaign and the £50m signing has hit the ground at quite the sprint since joining at the end of January.
"The difference at the end of the season could be just the fact that Liverpool do have more strikers that are more clinical and more, sort of if you like, suited to scoring goals," Neville added on just how this fascinating title race could be decided.
Guardiola will be acutely aware of the sheer wealth of options available to his great rival at Anfield having already made his fear known over Liverpool's attacking prowess years ago.
It was in the dressing room of Goodison Park back in 2018 when Guardiola disclosed to his backroom staff how the Reds' trio of Mane, Salah and Firmino concerned him. “They scare me," he said in Man City's All or Nothing documentary. "They’re dangerous, I mean it!"
Guardiola was right to be fearful too as Liverpool ran out 5-1 winners over the two legs of that Champions League quarter-final before the triumvirate finished the season with 91 goals between them. Four years on, all three remain at the club but are now aided and abetted by Diaz and Jota, while Takumi Minamino and Divock Origi wait in the wings for a quadruple-chasing Liverpool.
In a season that will be defined, as ever, by those "fine margins" that Neville speaks of, it could quite well be the sheer force of attacking power that blows it all truly wide open again. Klopp's not-so-secret weapons may yet be the deciding factor.