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The English Premier League's thrilling title race is going down to the final day after yet another late winner from Liverpool.
With Mohamed Salah back in the locker room, shaken by a heavy knock to the head, it fell to his replacement to score the crucial goal.
The pressure is back on the champions, who host in-form Leicester on Monday, 6 May needing a victory to keep the destiny of the title in their own hands heading into the last weekend.
"Unbelievable," Klopp said, after uttering an expletive live on British television.
With shows of resilience seemingly every week, Liverpool and City are bringing the best out of each other in a title race neither team deserves to lose.
Liverpool has 94 points, a tally that would have been good enough to win the title in all but two seasons since the introduction of the Premier League in 1992. The Reds have lost just once in the league, 2-1 at City in January.
It still might not be enough, though.
If City wins its last two games — it finishes the season with a match at lowly Brighton — the league trophy will be staying at Etihad Stadium.
The Egypt forward, one of Liverpool's first-half scorers, was carried off on a stretcher in the 73rd minute after smashing the back of his head on the ground following a collision with Newcastle goalkeeper Martin Dubravka.
Salah appeared to be in tears at one point and covered his face with his hands as he was taken off the field.
Klopp said after the game, however, that Salah watched the end of the match and was "OK," despite receiving a "proper knock to the head."
At the other end of the Premier League, there'll be no last-day battle for survival this season, with Cardiff becoming the third and final team to be relegated after losing to Crystal Palace 3-2.
What looks to be going to the wire — just like the title race — is the fight for Champions League qualification behind Liverpool and City.
Despite its courage and grit, there was an element of luck to Liverpool's latest win. The team could easily have been forced to play the majority of the game against Newcastle with 10 men.
Right back Trent Alexander-Arnold, who set up both the opening goal for Virgil van Dijk and also Salah's goal which made it 2-1, blocked the ball with his elbow on his own goal line moments before Christian Atsu made it 1-1 in the 20th minute.
The referee could have given a penalty and red card, but instead awarded Newcastle the goal.
Origi is proving to be a lucky charm, too. He also came off the bench to score a bizarre injury-time winner against Everton in December.
"There's a lot of emotion," Origi said about the to-and-fro title race.
Cardiff is returning to the second-tier League Championship after just a season in the top flight.
The loss to Palace meant the Welsh team is four points adrift of fourth-to-last Brighton with just one game remaining. Brighton, which plays Arsenal on Sunday, can celebrate a third straight year in the Premier League.
It couldn't really have gone any worse for Tottenham at Vitality Stadium.
Not only did the team lose, it also had Son Heung-min and Juan Foyth sent off in a five-minute span around halftime, and then spoiled a doughty defensive effort with nine men by conceding in the first minute of stoppage time.
A tiring match for Spurs' players came four days before they play the second leg of their Champions League semifinal against Ajax, which leads 1-0 from the first match.
In other games, Wolverhampton Wanderers beat Fulham 1-0 to virtually seal a seventh-place finish, which could earn a berth in next season's Europa League, and West Ham eased past Southampton 3-0.
(Published in an arrangement with the Associated Press.)
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