Quote Originally Posted by IBK View Post
Nope - I meant unfavourably - ie to our disadvantage...

unfavourably
/ʌnˈfeɪv(ə)rəbli/
adverb
1.
to the disadvantage of someone or something.
"the plan unfavourably impacted on sales"
2.
with a lack of approval or support.
"his books were viewed unfavourably and fell out of print"



...and I was referring to Liverpool's goals, not performances...
Yes I know what it means thank you

So you've put it the wrong way round - if Liverpool's record is better than Arsenal's it compares favourably, not unfavourably, with Arsenal's