Mancini was generous about Kenny Dalglish's side as he prepares for a return to the stadium tonight (NZT) which, as the place where he also publicly resigned the managership of Internazionale after an ignominious Champions League defeat in 2008, is surely not one of his favourite places.
"Liverpool might be 11 or 12 points behind us but they have a team good enough to win the Premier League," he said. "It's a really strong team."
But the evidence of the season so far suggests this was flattery. Liverpool's journey since the sides met in April has been rather less steady. Andy Carroll, who scored his first two goals in a Liverpool shirt in that win, is yet to find the net at Anfield again. While the contributions of Charlie Adam and Jordan Henderson in last weekend's 2-1 victory at Chelsea were encouraging, no one is getting carried away.
Dalglish has also been left to muse over why his side have performed so modestly at Anfield.
There have been three successive draws and another this weekend would be the first time they have drawn four since a goalless stalemate with City in January 1971.
"Our home record could be better," Dalglish admitted. "You are not going to dismiss it as a quirk. You have got to work at it and improve it."
Liverpool can take most encouragement from Craig Bellamy's glittering display against Chelsea. The Welsh striker has a habit of scoring against his former clubs - Blackburn Rovers, Newcastle United and Norwich City will tell you about it - and he has even more incentive to put one over City, given the public way Mancini made it clear he was persona non grata in Manchester.
City also carry the baggage of Wednesday's 2-1 defeat to Napoli, a result which had Mancini suggesting that his side are not among the top four in Europe.
"We have to be realistic," he said. "I don't think we have a team to win the Champions League because Real Madrid, Barcelona, Bayern Munich and Milan maybe are better and have more experience than us in the Champions League.
"But I hope we can stay in it because the Champions League can be strange. If you get to the second stage, you can meet Apoel Nicosia or Bayer Leverkusen. You don't know what can happen."
Tonight rings the most stringent test of whether City have an esprit de corps to go with that dazzling array of talent, having lost a little of their lustre in the Bay of Naples. Defeat to Bayern Munich in September was followed by nine straight wins, though as Mancini was honest enough to point out, a trip to Blackburn Rovers followed the disaster in the Allianz Arena, which is not quite the same thing as Liverpool at Anfield. Dalglish's side are unbeaten in nine games in league and cup, too, their longest run for three years, and Dalglish has built firm defensive foundations first. Liverpool share the best defensive record in the Premier League with City and Newcastle and in the current form of Daniel Agger and Martin Skrtel they have individuals whom City will need to be at their best to breach.
History is against City, who have won once in their past 20 league visits. But it was Milner this week who pointed out that a seismic event five days after that April defeat at Anfield - the FA Cup semifinal defeat of Manchester United - revealed how £800 million of Sheikh Mansour's money has bought mental resilience as well as individual brilliance.
- INDEPENDENT