Liverpool and Wolves must be sick of the sight of each other by now.
On Saturday, January 7 the pair met in the FA Cup third round at Anfield, where the visitors were left incensed when VAR wasn't able to check what they thought was a late winning goal in a 2-2 draw.
Ten days later in the replay at Molineux, Harvey Elliott's superb early strike proved to be the only goal of the game in Liverpool's 1-0 victory.
The came the Premier League meeting on February 4, when a stunning start from Wolves condemned a dismal Liverpool to a 3-0 defeat courtesy of a Joel Matip own goal and strikes from Craig Dawson and Ruben Neves.
Now less than a month on, they meet again at Anfield. But anyone expecting to be able to view the game on television in the UK is going to be disappointed.
That's because the clash is not one of the 200 games selected for live coverage across the Premier League's three official live broadcasters Sky Sports, BT Sport and Amazon Prime Video.
The game had originally been scheduled for Matchweek 7 of the Premier League season and would have seen a 3pm kick-off on Saturday, September 10.
However, all matches across the divisions were postponed that weekend following the death of Queen Elizabeth II, while Liverpool also saw their game at Chelsea the following weekend called off due to police needing to divert their resources to work on the monarch's state funeral.
The rearranged game now cannot be broadcast live because it fails to fall into the 200 live matches that fit into the seven different TV packages that are agreed at the start of the season.
Those packages are:
Package A: 32 matches to kick off at 12.30pm on Saturdays
Package B: 32 matches to kick off at 5.30pm on Saturdays
Package C: 32 matches, with eight kicking off at 7.45pm on Saturdays and 24 kicking off at 2pm on Sundays
Package D: 32 matches to kick off at 4.30pm on Sundays
Package E: 32 matches, with eight kicking off on Sundays at 2pm and 24 kicking off at either 8pm on a Monday or 7.30pm-8pm on a Friday
Package F: 20 matches, with 10 from one Bank Holiday weekend and 10 from one set of midweek fixtures
Package G: 20 matches, all from two different sets of midweek fixtures
Outside of interruptions due to the pandemic, ownership of these packages has been fairly stable for the last few seasons, with Sky Sports taking package B, C, D and E which makes up 128 games.
BT Sport have package A and G, meaning 52 live games, and then Amazon Prime Video have package F.
The Saturday 3pm blackout remains in force in the UK, and although Liverpool vs Wolves has now been moved, it is still effectively coming under it.