Klopp urges Liverpool to believe chase of Man City is possible

JURGEN Klopp insisted Liverpool will not give up the chase of Manchester City at the top of the Premier League after bouncing back to winning ways to beat Brentford 3-0 on Sunday.

Fabinho, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain and Takumi Minamino scored the goals as the Reds coped without the absence of Mohamed Salah and Sadio Mane at the Africa Cup of Nations.
Takumi Minamino and Roberto Firmino celebrate a goal for Liverpool. (By Liverpool Twitter).

Victory lifts Klopp's men up to second, within 11 points of the runaway leaders, but they also have a game in hand on City.

"We don't have to convince anybody outside (the club). People who are with us, they want to enjoy the ride," said Klopp.

"This is not the situation to talk about a title race, 11 points with one game in hand. In a normal world (City win the league), but what is normal nowadays?"

Liverpool failed to take advantage of an extra man for over an hour as Thursday's League semi-final, first leg against Arsenal ended 0-0, sparking fears of how they will cope for the rest of the month without two of their main sources of goals.

And Klopp was happy to quieten the "noise" over the absence of Salah and Mane.

"We can cut off the public noise. We knew against Arsenal what was not right," added Klopp. "That a couple of world class players aren't here, we know that. We knew we didn't have to make a lot of it."

Klopp made just two changes from the Arsenal stalemate as Curtis Jones and Oxlade-Chamberlain were recalled to add extra creativity and dynamism to the midfield.

He was rewarded with a bright start as Diogo Jota headed over, Trent Alexander-Arnold flashed a shot just off target and Alvaro Fernandez made a brilliant save to deny Virgil van Dijk.

However, the Anfield crowd were growing restless until Brentford allowed Alexander-Arnold's corner to bounce inside the area and Fabinho headed in at the back post.

"We were unbelievable in the first half against one of the best teams in the world," said Brentford boss Thomas Frank.

"We kept them quiet. If we had gone to half time 0-0 it would have been a different story, but if we want to get points here we can't concede from set pieces."

The Bees went toe-to-toe with Liverpool in a pulsating 3-3 draw when the sides last met in September.

But the visitors only created one big chance to get back in the game when Bryan Mbuemo turned Joel Matip and shot inches wide.

Jota hit the post and then should have scored when firing too close to Fernandez in a one-on-one.

There was no doubt over the outcome, though, once Oxlade-Chamberlain's diving header turned Andy Robertson's perfect cross into the bottom corner.

Brentford were architects of their own downfall for the third goal as Fernandez's pass out from the back was seized upon by Roberto Firmino and he teed up Minamino to slot home from close range.

The home fans could relax for the final 15 minutes and pointedly took the chance to chant the name of former manager Rafael Benitez, who was sacked by rivals Everton on Sunday.

The Toffees are in danger of falling into a relegation battle after one win in 13 league games.

Brentford, by contrast, still enjoy a 10-point cushion over the bottom three in their first season in the top-flight for 74 years but remain in 14th.

Harrison hat-trick fires Leeds to victory at West Ham

Jack Harrison hit a hat-trick as Leeds boosted their bid for Premier League survival with a 3-2 win against West Ham on Sunday.

Harrison put Leeds ahead at the London Stadium and netted again after Jarrod Bowen's equaliser.

When Pablo Fornals hauled West Ham level in the second half, Harrison had an instant response as the midfielder completed his treble.

Marcelo Bielsa's side made it two successive league victories to climb nine points clear of the relegation zone.

It was sweet revenge for Leeds, who were knocked out of the FA Cup in the third round at West Ham just a week ago.

"It was a beautiful game and very representative of the Premier League. It was a very tight triumph but it was deserved," Bielsa said.

"I'm very happy for Jack he puts in a lot of effort."

West Ham had won three consecutive league games and four in all competitions, but their bid to finish in the top four suffered a major setback thanks to Harrison.

David Moyes' team remain fourth, however they are now just two points ahead of Arsenal, who have two games in hand, while Tottenham are four points back with four games extra to play.

Bemoaning a packed schedule that saw West Ham play three times in seven days, Moyes said: "People who play against Leeds will know the intensity you need to play.

"The players have been having a good go at it, today we were short but there were some mitigating circumstances.

"We had no games rearranged. I can't understand the Premier League squeezing a game in."

Leeds had scored just eight goals in nine away league fixtures this season, but Bielsa's men made a flying start and took the lead in the 10th minute.

Adam Forshaw found Harrison in the West Ham area and he drilled a fine finish that gave Lukasz Fabianski no chance.

Leeds' ongoing injury crisis was underscored by the presence of 15-year-old Archie Gray on the bench.

They suffered yet more fitness misery when Forshaw and Junior Firpo were both forced off with what looked like hamstring problems midway through the half.

Leeds' weakness at set-pieces was exposed in the 34th minute as Bowen headed West Ham's equaliser from another corner.

But Harrison had the perfect response three minutes later.

Luke Ayling headed the ball into Harrison's path and he bundled home from close-range.

West Ham equalised in the 52nd minute as Michail Antonio found Fornals, who got behind Ayling and guided a clinical finish past Illan Meslier.

But Harrison wasn't finished yet and the midfielder restored Leeds' advantage on the hour.

Raphinha slid a defence-splitting pass towards Harrison, who calmly clipped his shot over Fabianski to bag his treble.

Meslier made a superb double save to deny Vladimir Coufal and Bowen in a tense finale.

Andriy Yarmolenko had one last chance to equalise in stoppage-time but Meslier was equal to it as Leeds held on. (AFP)

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