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LIVERPOOL, England -- With a beaming smile, Mohamed Salah assumed his place on the Anfield advertising hoardings and soaked up the applause from his adoring public.
The 33-year-old had just put Liverpool 2-0 up in their UEFA Champions League opener against Atletico Madrid, having provided Andy Robertson with the assist for his team's first goal only minutes earlier.
On a night when British-record signing Alexander Isak made his Liverpool debut, the Reds' Egyptian King showed he has no intention of abdicating his throne just yet, as the hosts won 3-2.
Against Atletico, Salah became the only player in Champions League history to both score and assist inside the opening six minutes of a match for an English club.
The Dutchman's thumping header in front of the Kop continued Liverpool's staggering trend of claiming miraculous late victories, with all five of their competitive games this season having come with game winners in the final 10 minutes.
For Isak, who watched the late celebrations from the bench after being substituted in the 58th minute, there could not have been a more fitting welcome to Anfield.
All of the headlines in the build-up to the game had centered around whether the Sweden striker would be fit to feature, having been omitted from the matchday squad against Burnley on Sunday.
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There was plenty of excitement, then, when the team sheets were circulated and it was confirmed Isak had been handed a start against Diego Simeone's side.
While the 25-year-old didn't manage to find the back of the net, there were enough flashes of quality to get the crowd excited about the club's new £125 million man before he was replaced by fellow summer signing Hugo Ekitike shortly before the hour mark.
Isak had barely had time to take in his new surroundings before Liverpool scored their opener on Wednesday night, with Salah's shot deflecting off Robertson and past Atletico goalkeeper Jan Oblak inside four minutes.
Salah then doubled the hosts' advantage less than two minutes later, shimmying past three defenders and slotting coolly past Oblak to hand Liverpool their earliest ever two-goal lead in a Champions League game.
On a night when the spotlight shined brightest on Alexander Isak, it was Mohamed Salah who showed why he is one of the world's best. Marc Atkins/Getty Images
Having enjoyed a stellar individual season last term -- winning both the Premier League Player of the Season and PFA Player of the Year awards -- Salah hasn't quite been able to recapture his blistering form in the early weeks of the new season.