Manchester City beats Brighton, wins epic Premier League title race, and makes Liverpool cry

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Manchester City beats Brighton, wins epic Premier League title race, and makes Liverpool cry

Manchester City, who won the Premier League

Photo by Mike Hewitt/Getty Images

Manchester City celebrates at Brighton and Hove Albion.

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  • Manchester City has just been crowned the Premier League's champion.
  • For a 10 minute period in the first half, City had surrendered the championship trophy to Liverpool FC.
  • This is because City had gone 1-0 down at Brighton and Hove Albion, while Liverpool stormed into an early 1-0 lead against Wolverhampton Wanderers.
  • But City equalized in the first half, scored again before half-time to go 2-1 up, then punished Brighton in the second half to make a championship-winning statement.
  • It was City's 14th consecutive win, and its second league trophy in a row.
  • Visit Business Insider's home page for more stories.

Manchester City won the 2018-2019 Premier League title race after beating Brighton and Hove Albion at the Amex Stadium.

To ensure it remained ahead of its nearest rival Liverpool FC, City had to win 14 league matches in a row - a remarkable run that stretches back to January, when Newcastle United defeated Pep Guardiola's team thanks to a 2-1 slip at St James' Park. Remarkably, Newcastle is the last team to take league points from City, a record that will now stretch into the new season in August.

Fortified by a strong spine that included the goalkeeper Ederson, intelligent defender Aymeric Laporte, midfield enforcer Fernandinho, goalscoring attacker Raheem Sterling, and the merciless striker Sergio Aguero, City hardly ever wobbled in the four months between the Newcastle loss and the final day of the Premier League season.

But there was 10 minute period on May 12 where City were one goal down to Brighton.

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As there was only one point separating City from Liverpool before kick-off, and because the Reds stormed into an early 1-0 lead against Wolverhampton Wanderers, City - should they fail to have beaten Brighton - would have surrendered the championship to Liverpool.

It would have crowned a remarkable week for Liverpool, having come back from 3-0 down to 4-3 up in its aggregate win over FC Barcelona in the UEFA Champions League semi-final. Such a scenario would mean an open-top, champagne-soaked bus parade through the streets of Liverpool, its first since 1990.

The squad would have been jubilant on the top deck and the domestic league trophy would get passed from player to player, from Mohamed Salah to Sadio Mane and Jurgen Klopp smiling from ear to ear. Fans would have packed tightly into each road, ecstatically snapping photographs before uploading them to Instagram.

Raucous celebrations ensued at Anfield, the home crowd could sense that parade, but the feel-good atmosphere did not last long.

When goals from Aguero and Laporte took City ahead of Brighton, chants of "City" bellowed around Liverpool's ground, as Wolves supporters were all too happy to let their hosts know they'd be leaving the pitch with no coronation should results stay as they were.

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At 2-1, there was perhaps a glimmer of hope in Liverpool that Brighton could snatch a dramatic equalizer, meaning the trophy would tilt back into Liverpool's hands, but City - that near unstoppable soccer force that has punished so many sides this year - grabbed a third, then a fourth, as Riyad Mahrez and Ilkay Gundogan struck in the 63rd and 72nd minutes.

City defended its status as Premier League champions, and that bus parade would be happening in another northern sporting powerhouse - Manchester.

Though Liverpool scored a second goal against Wolves, its final day victory mattered little. The team failed to win the league despite its promising position earlier in the season. Its fans could even be seen crying in the stands as the minutes wound down on the matchday clock.

At Brighton, though, the mood was a stark contrast. The City supporters who had made the trip to the south coast partied before a ball had even been kicked, and now those celebrations will go on long into the night.

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