Liverpool owner John Henry returned to Anfield for the Reds chance to win the Premier League
Liverpool owner John Henry will be in attendance as the Reds look to clinch the Premier League title against Tottenham Hotspur this afternoon. Arne Slot's side need a point against the North London club to claim top-flight success with five matches remaining.
The triumph at Anfield would see Liverpool move level with Manchester United as 20-time winners of the domestic title. Henry and his wife, Linda Pizzuti, will be at Anfield hoping that Virgil van Dijk can lead the Reds to a second top-flight triumph in five years.
It will be the first matches that the American owners have been on Merseyside for since Slot's first home league match against Brentford.
They were in attendance for the farewell for Jurgen Klopp and his backroom staff last May as Henry appeared on the pitch
Throughout the campaign, Linda has showed her support for the Reds from afar and can witness them immortalise themselves against a struggling Spurs side.
She shared a series of stories on her Instagram firstly of the fans congregating and waiting for the bus to arrive with the caption: "Electric already," before showing the behind the scenes prior to kick-off where she said: "It's a beautiful day and the pitch is ready."
Should Liverpool avoid the banana skin against Ange Postecoglou's side, Slot will join the likes of Jurgen Klopp and other Liverpool managerial greats to lead the club to domestic triumph.
But the Dutchman admitted that he won't "go crazy". He said: “I enjoyed it a lot when Feyenoord won the title – but I don’t go crazy.
"It wasn’t like I ran three times around the stadium. I was just very, very happy inside and I shared my emotions with the people around me and the fans.
"But I will never be the one who is the loudest nor the weirdest in the moment. I’m not like that. It is for other people to judge.
"It would be a bit weird to judge myself, but I can judge the performance for my staff and the medical staff – and they should get a lot of credit over the course of the season.”
“If you start to work here, then quite quickly you get a certain feeling.
"I feel part of it. But to say I am a scouser now would be too much. The good thing about the people here is that they welcome you from the start and you feel part of them.
"But it would be weird if I said after 10 months that I feel the same as people who have lived here for 30 or 40 years. Ask me after 10 years."