Liverpool's Fabio Carvalho celebrates scoring their side's eighth goal of the game against Bournemouth. Photo / AP
After a winless start to the season and a dispiriting loss to their rival, Liverpool needed to make a statement against Bournemouth today.
A 9-0 win, equalling the record for the biggest victory in the English Premier League, sends a loud message indeed.
Liverpool blew away Bournemouth at Anfield, with Roberto Firmino scoring two goals and setting up three more.
After opening the campaign with two draws and a loss, it was the kind of performance that will erase many of the questions about whether Jurgen Klopp's team had lost their edge.
"In the end it was the perfect football afternoon for us," Klopp said. "Wonderful goals, fantastic situations and we all know that we needed something like that."
Firmino lost his starting place to new signing Darwin Nunez this season, but showed he can still be a vital part of Liverpool's attack. With Nunez serving a suspension, Firmino set up Liverpool's opening three goals before netting the fourth himself in the 31st minute. The blowout against visiting Bournemouth continued, and when Luis Diaz netted his second to make it 9-0 in the 85th it looked like Liverpool could become the first league team to score 10 goals in a game.
As it was, Klopp's team settled for a share of the record for biggest win held by Man United — who have won 9-0 twice — and Leicester. Perhaps the only thing as remarkable as the scoreline was the fact that Liverpool star forward Mohamed Salah didn't register either a goal or an assist in the rout.
Manchester City also showed they can never be counted out after the defending champions found themselves trailing by two goals for the second straight game. Erling Haaland netted a second half hat-trick as City rallied to beat Crystal Palace 4-2 at home — having managed to salvage only a 3-3 draw at Newcastle last weekend.
Pep Guardiola's team have fallen two goals behind in four of their last six league games, but have not lost any of them.
"We score a lot of goals but the problem I have now is we concede a lot," Guardiola said. "We are lucky to come back."
This time City trailed 2-0 after just 21 minutes against a clinical Palace side after an own-goal by John Stones and a header by Joachim Andersen.
After Bernardo Silva pulled one back eight minutes into the second half, Haaland took over with three goals in the space of 20 minutes to take his tally to six in his first four league appearances.
"These games are why I'm here, to turn things around when there are difficult times," Haaland said.
Arsenal needed a late comeback against Fulham to remain the only team yet to drop points. Arsenal defender Gabriel made up for a defensive howler that gifted Fulham the lead by scoring an 86th-minute winner. His goal was a simple tap-in into an empty net after Fulham goalkeeper Bernd Leno failed to punch away a corner, the first mistake from the German after a handful of good saves on his first return to Emirates Stadium since his offseason move across London.
Until then, he had been beaten only by a shot from Martin Odegaard that took a big deflection off a Fulham defender in the 64th.
Arsenal top the standings with 12 points from four games, two ahead of Man City and surprise package Brighton, who beat Leeds 1-0, while Manchester United and Chelsea also won on a good day for the traditional powers.
Raheem Sterling netted his first two goals for Chelsea following his offseason move from Manchester City, as the Blues bounced back from their 3-0 loss to Leeds, overcoming the early sending off of Conor Gallagher to beat Leicester 2-1.
Sterling broke the deadlock just after halftime with a shot from the edge of the area, and doubled the lead in the 63rd with a tap-in from Reece James' cross at the far post. Leicester pulled one back through Harvey Barnes three minutes later, but Jamie Vardy and Ayoze Perez both missed chances for an equaliser.
United made it back-to-back wins in the league for the first time since February by beating Southampton 1-0 away thanks to a second-half goal by Bruno Fernandes. Fernandes has been serving as Man United's stand-in captain since manager Erik ten Hag decided to drop Harry Maguire to the bench, and the Portugal midfielder seems to be relishing wearing the armband. Fernandes steered in a cross from Diogo Dalot in the 55th as United followed up Tuesday's win over Liverpool with another morale-boosting performance.
It was also the team's first clean sheet, thanks in part to David de Gea's reflex save to keep out a header from Joe Aribo in the 66th.
It's a result that will give a bit more breathing space to ten Hag, the manager who faced a torrent of criticism and skepticism after the team's dismal start to the campaign.
Elsewhere, Brentford drew at home against Everton 1-1.