News APP

NewsApp (Free)

Read news as it happens
Download NewsApp

Available on  gplay

This article was first published 7 years ago
Home  » Sports » EPL: Liverpool crush woeful West Ham

EPL: Liverpool crush woeful West Ham

November 05, 2017 08:08 IST
Get Rediff News in your Inbox:

Burnley go level on 19 points with Chelsea, Arsenal and Liverpool

Mohamed Salah

IMAGE: Mohamed Salah scores Liverpool's fourth goal against West Ham United on Saturday. Photograph: Eddie Keogh/Reuters

Liverpool cranked up the pressure on West Ham United manager Slaven Bilic with a 4-1 victory at the London Stadium, while Burnley’s remarkable start to the Premier League season continued thanks to a 1-0 victory at Southampton on Saturday.

Liverpool’s Egyptian forward Mohamed Salah maintained his rich goalscoring form by netting twice as Juergen Klopp’s side punished a woeful West Ham display to move sixth, level on 19 points with Chelsea, who host Manchester United on Sunday, and Arsenal.

Salah took his tally to seven, one fewer than Premier League top scorer Harry Kane, and was joined on the score-sheet for Liverpool by Joel Matip and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain.

“The result feels good,” said Klopp, who had started forward Sadio Mane despite the Senegalese having only returned to full training on Thursday after a month out with a hamstring injury.

“We changed our approach; it was a counter-attacking lineup to use our speed from the deep.”

Manuel Lanzini had briefly dragged West Ham into the game at 2-1, but they finished being booed off for the second home match in a row.

The result left them precariously perched above the relegation zone and sent Bilic into the international break with question marks hanging over his future.

“I‘m definitely not a broken man,” said Bilic, whose side will enter the drop zone if Everton beat Watford on Sunday.

“I‘m very strong, but the situation for West Ham is not good.”

Sam Vokes scores Burnley's only goal against Southampton

IMAGE: Sam Vokes scores Burnley's only goal against Southampton. Photograph: John Sibley/Reuters

Remarkably, Burnley are also level-pegging on 19 points with Chelsea, Arsenal and Liverpool as Sam Vokes pounced late on for Sean Dyche’s side against Southampton.

They are seventh, having already won three league matches on the road this campaign compared to one in the whole of last season.

“I am delighted to be where we are but there are a lot of challenges coming our way and the group know we will have to work hard for every point we get,” Dyche, who has been linked with the vacant Everton manager’s job, told the BBC.

“We still have to fight for every chance we get but we are willing to do the graft.”

Bournemouth grabbed a last-gasp winner at Newcastle United to move out of the bottom three. Swansea City dropped into the relegation zone after slumping to a home defeat by Brighton and Hove Albion.

Steve Cook sealed Bournemouth’s 1-0 win with a 90th-minute header while Brighton’s 1-0 win in south Wales came courtesy of Glenn Murray’s first-half shot.

Swansea have lost three in a row in the Premier League and were booed off at the end as they fell to 18th place with eight points from their opening 11 matches.

Huddersfield Town beat struggling West Bromwich Albion 1-0 at home to stay safely in mid-table -- Dutchman Rajiv van La Parra deciding it with a curling shot just before half-time.

The hosts hung on in the second half after having defender Christopher Schindler sent off in the 57th minute.

West Brom are without a win in nine Premier League games and, after an impressive opening to the season, are only two points above the relegation zone.

Substitute Peter Crouch ensured a 2-2 draw for Stoke City at home to Leicester City.

Vicente Iborra opened the scoring with his first goal for Leicester before Xherdan Shaqiri levelled.

Riyad Mahrez’s fine finish restored Leicester’s lead but Crouch headed in Shaqiri’s cross for the draw.

Get Rediff News in your Inbox:
Source: REUTERS
© Copyright 2024 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.

India In Australia 2024-2025