With a 3-1 victory over Newcastle, Mohamed Salah equaled another Premier League record, as Liverpool became the first side in English football to reach 2,000 Premier League victories.
On Thursday, Jonjo Shelvey scored after only seven minutes at Anfield, but Diogo Jota quickly equalized, giving Liverpool a club-record 32nd game in a row in all competitions.
Salah then put Jurgen Klopp’s side ahead four minutes later, equaling Jamie Vardy’s Premier League record of 15 consecutive goals or assists, before Trent Alexander-Arnold sealed the win with a sensational second-half shot.
Liverpool, who achieved the 2,000-win landmark in 4,227 games, moved three points clear of third-placed Chelsea – held by Everton – and within one of leaders Manchester City, leaving Newcastle still three adrift of safety.
Jota was thwarted by Martin Dubravka in a positive start by Liverpool, but a defence missing Virgil van Dijk following a suspected positive COVID-19 test conceded first when Shelvey whipped into the bottom-left corner from range.
Jota equalised in contentious fashion as he smashed in a close-range rebound to his own header with Isaac Hayden down inside the box, before Salah rifled Liverpool ahead after Dubravka had denied Sadio Mane.
Salah almost doubled his account in the first half but uncharacteristically dragged wide.
Dubravka was called upon again after the break to stop Mane’s header, while Jacob Murphy drilled narrowly off target with a rare Newcastle opportunity.
Shelvey then curled a free-kick just wide of Alisson’s goal, but Alexander-Arnold sealed victory when he arrowed into the top-left corner from outside the area in the closing stages.
What does it mean? Reds keep pace as Newcastle’s Anfield woes persist
Newcastle have not won in the top flight at Anfield since April 1994 (26 matches); only against Manchester United (29 winless games) have the Magpies endured a worse away league run, although they briefly threatened an upset when Shelvey curled in.
Eddie Howe’s relegation-threatened side were perhaps unfortunate to see that advantage wiped out with Hayden down holding his head but could have few complaints about the final scoreline as Liverpool remained in pursuit of City at the top of the league.
Super Salah continues to fly
Not only did Salah equal Vardy’s record with his first-half finish, but the Egypt international now has 24 Premier League goal involvements this season (15 goals, nine assists).
Only former Newcastle striker Alan Shearer in 1994-95 has been involved in more goals before Christmas (25 – 16 goals, nine assists), while Salah has scored in five consecutive home appearances against Newcastle in the competition.
Howe can you win like that?
Shelvey may have put his side ahead with his third Premier League goal against his former side – only Nicolas Anelka (five) has scored more times against Liverpool as a former Red – but Newcastle again paid for their mistakes.
After the contentious Jota goal, Shelvey gifted the ball to Liverpool before Salah scored. Goalkeeper Dubravka at least impressed, making five saves, although his 50 touches were the most of any Newcastle player, showing their inability to muster a sustained response after falling behind.
Key Opta Facts
– Newcastle are winless in their past 26 Premier League away games against Liverpool (D5 L21), their second longest ever winless away run against an opponent in their league history (29 vs Man United between 1973 and 2012).
– Salah has either scored or assisted a goal in 15 consecutive Premier League appearances, equalling the longest such run in the competition set by Vardy between August and December 2015.
– Jota netted his ninth Premier League goal of the season, equalling his best ever return in a single campaign in the competition (also nine in 2018-19 and 2020-21).
– Of Alexander-Arnold’s 10 Premier League goals for Liverpool, seven have come from outside the box (70 per cent). Of all players to score at least 10 for the Reds in the competition, only Xabi Alonso netted a higher share from distance (79 per cent – 11 of 14).
What’s next?
Liverpool travel to Tottenham on Sunday, while strugglers Newcastle’s task does not get any easier as they host leaders Manchester City on the same day.