Liverpool 'joy to watch' in thumping win over West Ham - Mase Kaleby

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Sunday, 25 February 2018

Liverpool 'joy to watch' in thumping win over West Ham


Liverpool were a "joy to watch" as they thumped West Ham United 4-1 to move above Manchester United into second place in the Premier League, said manager Jurgen Klopp.

Forwards Mohamed Salah, Roberto Firmino and Sadio Mane all scored in the second half in a resounding Anfield win for the Reds.

Klopp told BBC Sport: "You hope for a game like this, and you want to see it, but it's really rare that you get it.

"Today we got it and it's unbelievably important for us because of the situation in the table and the period of the season we are in."

Emre Can headed Liverpool ahead from a corner - the Reds' 100th goal this season - after Salah had been denied by a post.

Salah made it 2-0 with an instinctive, low finish after a delicious pass by Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, before Firmino added the third after a mistake by goalkeeper Adrian.

Substitute Michail Antonio's quality, low finish gave West Ham hope - but Mane, who had hit the post moments before, completed a fine Liverpool win.

"The quality of the players Liverpool have got at the moment caused us big problems," said Hammers boss David Moyes.

What happened in the Premier League on Saturday?
Liverpool 4-1 West Ham - as it happened

Will Liverpool finish best of the rest?

On the eve of the Carabao Cup final, Klopp is still chasing his first major trophy since taking charge of Liverpool in October 2015.

But at least the league table makes healthy reading for the German, whose side have one foot in the quarter-finals of the Champions League after a 5-0 thrashing of Porto.

On 22 October, Klopp's side were battling to stay in the top half after a 4-1 defeat against Tottenham at Wembley left them ninth behind teams such as Burnley, Watford and Newcastle.

Four months on, Liverpool lead the 'best of the rest', one point ahead of third-placed United and 15 behind runaway leaders Manchester City.

With 10 matches remaining, Liverpool are on course for their highest league finish since 2013-14, and their trip to Old Trafford on 10 March will go a long way to deciding whether they can take second spot.

"Can we stay second? That depends on the other results," added Klopp.

"We have to focus on ourselves. The next game is Newcastle and Rafa Benitez is one of the best managers in the world."

Liverpool's clinical finishing and counter-attacks again proved the difference, though not until Firmino made it 3-0 were the hosts able to really relax.

When they did, they conceded, but even Antonio's goal could not take the shine off this win.

Liverpool are now unbeaten in 16 matches at home in the league - hitting excellent form at the right time of the season.

"We defended well and attacked well," said Klopp. "Our counter-attacking was outstanding, the work-rate was outstanding and the attitude was fantastic."

Moyes' Anfield frustration continues

With the game goalless, Marko Arnautovic produced an outrageous lob which was tipped onto the bar by Loris Karius, and the Liverpool keeper was later tested from outside the area by the Austrian.

Yet positives were few and far between for Hammers boss Moyes, who gave a debut to former Manchester United full-back Patrice Evra.

His side are down to 13th in the table, their safety cushion cut from four points to three with 10 matches remaining.

Fifteen years on from his first visit to the venue as a manager, Moyes has yet to win at Anfield. This was his 15th game at Liverpool's home - and his eighth defeat.

Yet the Scot was keen to focus on the positives after seeing his team ripped apart by Liverpool's front three.

"We knew how hard it was going to be but I thought we played well in the first half," said Moyes. "We were never going to get loads of chances here, we knew that."

Time will tell whether this heavy defeat was a blip or something more troubling.

West Ham came within seven minutes of a draw at Manchester City on 3 December, while they have beaten Chelsea and drawn with Tottenham and Arsenal since Moyes took charge in November.

But this was a day to forget.

Man of the match - Mohamed Salah (Liverpool)


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