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Liverpool kept its Premier League title hopes alive with a 3-1 win at Fulham on Sunday.
Goals from Trent Alexander-Arnold, Ryan Gravenberch and Diogo Jota were enough to get Jürgen Klopp's
The victory took Liverpool into second in the table with Manchester City not in league action this weekend.
Klopp made some big calls with his team selection too, with Mohamed Salah, Alexis Mac Allister and Darwin Núñez all dropping off.
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The decision ultimately paid off and saw Liverpool keep pace with Arsenal, who had returned to the top of the Premier League by beating Wolves on Saturday night.
Here's how our colleagues from the national press viewed the game as Klopp's team went level on points with the Gunners at the start of a crucial week in the title race.
Lewis Steele - Daily Mail
"Liverpool saw something in Ryan Gravenberch that Bayern Munich did not.
He had a few shaky touches to start and looked a yard off the pace, but grew in confidence and started to dictate proceedings from midfield."
Mark Jones - Daily Mirror
"It was one of those days when news of big Liverpool changes had begun to leak hours before the game, with Jürgen Klopp opting to try and freshen his side up after back-to-back Premier League disappointments.
"When one of those changes involves leaving Mo Salah on the bench then there's your headline, but in truth they were alterations that have been a long time coming, with Klopp unable to make them for far too long due to Liverpool's injury issues.
It was startling to look at the Reds' bench here and admire the strength of it, and how the Liverpool boss must have wished he'd had such options earlier in the campaign.
"And so Liverpool move back level with Arsenal, pushing Manchester City down to third on a weekend when it had cup commitments to attend to.
"It is still hugely likely that the ribbons on the Premier League trophy come the end of the season are sky blue once more, but as Pep Guardiola moans about fatigue and City face a couple of tricky away games, the hope for Liverpool is still there."
Alyson Rudd - The Times
"In a performance that was as contained as recent efforts have been almost unsightly in their degree of chaos, Liverpool moved level on points with Arsenal at the top of the Premier League.
And with it came renewed hope that, with five games remaining, the Premier League title can still be snaffled."
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