toptop
Liverpool
weathered a spirited second-half fightback as a 15th straight Premier League win
defeated Chelsea 2-1 and maintained their perfect start to the season.
Trent Alexander-Arnold's thunderbolt and Roberto Firmino's free header, either
side of a disallowed Cesar Azpilicueta equaliser, saw the league leaders open up
a two-goal lead inside half an hour at Stamford Bridge.
Chelsea midfielder N'Golo Kante's brilliant solo effort set up a tense final 19
minutes in which substitute Michy Batshuayi and Mason Mount spurned glorious
chances to earn Frank Lampard's side a point.
But Liverpool ground out a sixth Premier League win from six this season which
restores their five-point lead at the top of the table and extends their
unbeaten league run to 23 games - their longest run since November 1990.
Player ratings
Chelsea: Kepa (7), Azpilicueta (6), Tomori (7), Christensen
(4), Emerson (4), Jorginho (6), Kante (8), Kovacic (6), Mount (6), Willian (6),
Abraham (6).
Subs: Zouma (6), Alonso (6), Batshuayi (5).
Liverpool: Adrian (7), Alexander-Arnold (8), Matip (8), Van
Dijk (8), Robertson (7), Fabinho (6), Henderson (7), Wijnaldum (6), Salah (7),
Mane (7), Firmino (8).
Subs: Milner (5), Lallana (n/a), Gomez (n/a).
Man of the Match: Joel Matip.
How Liverpool withstood Chelsea fightback
If Manchester City's demolition of Watford on Saturday showed the champions
would not relinquish their crown without a fight, then Liverpool's navigation of
one of the Premier League's toughest away assignments proved yet again the Reds
are more than capable of going toe to toe with their title rivals.
It took just 15 minutes for the visitors to take the lead as Alexander-Arnold
lashed a venomous effort past Kepa Arrizabalaga into the top corner after
Mohamed Salah rolled a free-kick from the edge of the area into his path.
Tammy Abraham, an isolated figure as Chelsea's lone frontman against Virgil van
Dijk and Joel Matip, was presented with a gilt-edged chance to introduce himself
to the game on 24 minutes but, having latched onto Azpilicueta's through ball,
he failed to draw the hosts level, firing straight at Adrian in the Liverpool
goal.
Chelsea's visible improvement culminated with Azpilicueta finding the back of
the net after Fabinho failed to clear Willian's drilled cross into the area, but
VAR found Mount to be offside in the build-up, and the jubilation inside
Stamford Bridge evaporated in an instant.
And Liverpool rubbed further salt into Chelsea wounds two minutes later as some
suspect defending at a free-kick left Firmino unmarked in the box and he guided
Andrew Robertson's cross beyond Kepa with a header into the top corner - the
Reds' 34th league goal from a set-piece since the start of last season.
Chelsea could have reduced the arrears on the stroke of half-time but Abraham
glanced a header wide, while Marcos Alonso drilled crossed was gathered at the
second attempt by Adrian after his initial spill brought pressure from the
Chelsea attackers.
Liverpool looked to end the game as a contest early in the second period, but a
stunning diving save from Kepa to deny Firmino's brilliant volley into the turf
kept Chelsea clinging on.
Chelsea struggled to contain Liverpool as they grew in confidence, but they
grabbed a lifeline and swung the momentum in their favour on 71 minutes when
Kante waltzed through the defence and completed a stunning solo effort with a
curler into the top corner.
Kante's moment of magic inspired a late Chelsea revival but they failed to
capitalise on it as Batshuayi's wide glancing header and Mount's drive over from
Alonso crosses saw Liverpool win yet another game.
Liverpool's 15th straight win in stats
Liverpool are the first team in top-flight history to win their opening six
matches of a top-flight season in two consecutive seasons.
Liverpool weathered a spirited second-half fightback as a 15th straight Premier
League win defeated Chelsea 2-1 and maintained their perfect start to the
season.
Trent Alexander-Arnold's thunderbolt and Roberto Firmino's free header, either
side of a disallowed Cesar Azpilicueta equaliser, saw the league leaders open up
a two-goal lead inside half an hour at Stamford Bridge.
Chelsea midfielder N'Golo Kante's brilliant solo effort set up a tense final 19
minutes in which substitute Michy Batshuayi and Mason Mount spurned glorious
chances to earn Frank Lampard's side a point.
But Liverpool ground out a sixth Premier League win from six this season which
restores their five-point lead at the top of the table and extends their
unbeaten league run to 23 games - their longest run since November 1990.
Player ratings
Chelsea: Kepa (7), Azpilicueta (6), Tomori (7), Christensen (4), Emerson (4),
Jorginho (6), Kante (8), Kovacic (6), Mount (6), Willian (6), Abraham (6).
Subs: Zouma (6), Alonso (6), Batshuayi (5).
Liverpool: Adrian (7), Alexander-Arnold (8), Matip (8), Van Dijk (8), Robertson
(7), Fabinho (6), Henderson (7), Wijnaldum (6), Salah (7), Mane (7), Firmino
(8).
Subs: Milner (5), Lallana (n/a), Gomez (n/a).
Man of the Match: Joel Matip.
How Liverpool withstood Chelsea fightback
If Manchester City's demolition of Watford on Saturday showed the champions
would not relinquish their crown without a fight, then Liverpool's navigation of
one of the Premier League's toughest away assignments proved yet again the Reds
are more than capable of going toe to toe with their title rivals.
It took just 15 minutes for the visitors to take the lead as Alexander-Arnold
lashed a venomous effort past Kepa Arrizabalaga into the top corner after
Mohamed Salah rolled a free-kick from the edge of the area into his path.
Tammy Abraham, an isolated figure as Chelsea's lone frontman against Virgil van
Dijk and Joel Matip, was presented with a gilt-edged chance to introduce himself
to the game on 24 minutes but, having latched onto Azpilicueta's through ball,
he failed to draw the hosts level, firing straight at Adrian in the Liverpool
goal.
Chelsea's visible improvement culminated with Azpilicueta finding the back of
the net after Fabinho failed to clear Willian's drilled cross into the area, but
VAR found Mount to be offside in the build-up, and the jubilation inside
Stamford Bridge evaporated in an instant.
And Liverpool rubbed further salt into Chelsea wounds two minutes later as some
suspect defending at a free-kick left Firmino unmarked in the box and he guided
Andrew Robertson's cross beyond Kepa with a header into the top corner - the
Reds' 34th league goal from a set-piece since the start of last season.
Chelsea could have reduced the arrears on the stroke of half-time but Abraham
glanced a header wide, while Marcos Alonso drilled crossed was gathered at the
second attempt by Adrian after his initial spill brought pressure from the
Chelsea attackers.
Liverpool looked to end the game as a contest early in the second period, but a
stunning diving save from Kepa to deny Firmino's brilliant volley into the turf
kept Chelsea clinging on.
Chelsea struggled to contain Liverpool as they grew in confidence, but they
grabbed a lifeline and swung the momentum in their favour on 71 minutes when
Kante waltzed through the defence and completed a stunning solo effort with a
curler into the top corner.
Kante's moment of magic inspired a late Chelsea revival but they failed to
capitalise on it as Batshuayi's wide glancing header and Mount's drive over from
Alonso crosses saw Liverpool win yet another game.
Liverpool's 15th straight win in stats
Liverpool are the first team in top-flight history to win their opening six
matches of a top-flight season in two consecutive seasons.
Liverpool weathered a spirited second-half fightback as a 15th straight Premier
League win defeated Chelsea 2-1 and maintained their perfect start to the
season.
Trent Alexander-Arnold's thunderbolt and Roberto Firmino's free header, either
side of a disallowed Cesar Azpilicueta equaliser, saw the league leaders open up
a two-goal lead inside half an hour at Stamford Bridge.
Chelsea midfielder N'Golo Kante's brilliant solo effort set up a tense final 19
minutes in which substitute Michy Batshuayi and Mason Mount spurned glorious
chances to earn Frank Lampard's side a point.
But Liverpool ground out a sixth Premier League win from six this season which
restores their five-point lead at the top of the table and extends their
unbeaten league run to 23 games - their longest run since November 1990.
Player ratings
Chelsea: Kepa (7), Azpilicueta (6), Tomori (7), Christensen (4), Emerson (4),
Jorginho (6), Kante (8), Kovacic (6), Mount (6), Willian (6), Abraham (6).
Subs: Zouma (6), Alonso (6), Batshuayi (5).
Liverpool: Adrian (7), Alexander-Arnold (8), Matip (8), Van Dijk (8), Robertson
(7), Fabinho (6), Henderson (7), Wijnaldum (6), Salah (7), Mane (7), Firmino
(8).
Subs: Milner (5), Lallana (n/a), Gomez (n/a).
Man of the Match: Joel Matip.
How Liverpool withstood Chelsea fightback
If Manchester City's demolition of Watford on Saturday showed the champions
would not relinquish their crown without a fight, then Liverpool's navigation of
one of the Premier League's toughest away assignments proved yet again the Reds
are more than capable of going toe to toe with their title rivals.
It took just 15 minutes for the visitors to take the lead as Alexander-Arnold
lashed a venomous effort past Kepa Arrizabalaga into the top corner after
Mohamed Salah rolled a free-kick from the edge of the area into his path.
Tammy Abraham, an isolated figure as Chelsea's lone frontman against Virgil van
Dijk and Joel Matip, was presented with a gilt-edged chance to introduce himself
to the game on 24 minutes but, having latched onto Azpilicueta's through ball,
he failed to draw the hosts level, firing straight at Adrian in the Liverpool
goal.
Chelsea's visible improvement culminated with Azpilicueta finding the back of
the net after Fabinho failed to clear Willian's drilled cross into the area, but
VAR found Mount to be offside in the build-up, and the jubilation inside
Stamford Bridge evaporated in an instant.
And Liverpool rubbed further salt into Chelsea wounds two minutes later as some
suspect defending at a free-kick left Firmino unmarked in the box and he guided
Andrew Robertson's cross beyond Kepa with a header into the top corner - the
Reds' 34th league goal from a set-piece since the start of last season.
Chelsea could have reduced the arrears on the stroke of half-time but Abraham
glanced a header wide, while Marcos Alonso drilled crossed was gathered at the
second attempt by Adrian after his initial spill brought pressure from the
Chelsea attackers.
Liverpool looked to end the game as a contest early in the second period, but a
stunning diving save from Kepa to deny Firmino's brilliant volley into the turf
kept Chelsea clinging on.
Chelsea struggled to contain Liverpool as they grew in confidence, but they
grabbed a lifeline and swung the momentum in their favour on 71 minutes when
Kante waltzed through the defence and completed a stunning solo effort with a
curler into the top corner.
Kante's moment of magic inspired a late Chelsea revival but they failed to
capitalise on it as Batshuayi's wide glancing header and Mount's drive over from
Alonso crosses saw Liverpool win yet another game.
Liverpool's 15th straight win in stats
Liverpool are the first team in top-flight history to win their opening six
matches of a top-flight season in two consecutive seasons.
Chelsea have conceded 13 goals in their six Premier League matches this season -
their most after six league matches of a season since 1978-79 (also 13), when
they went on to finish bottom of the First Division.
Liverpool have won their last 15 league matches - the only team with a longer
winning run in top-flight history is Manchester City (18 between August and
December 2017).
What the managers said…
Jurgen Klopp: "It was a really good performance and we scored
two wonderful goals. It was an exciting game and it was intense. You will never
win at Chelsea without putting a proper shift in, and I think we deserved the
three points. 15 straight wins is exceptional, but what can I say? We try not to
think about it, we just do what we have to do in the next game and fight for
each ball and it is always really hard work."
Frank Lampard: "We didn't deserve to lose - we could have won.
I don't want to sound naïve but to concede from a cross for Firmino is
ridiculous. He shouldn't be having a free header in the box. I thought we were
the better team, that's why the crowd clapped the team off although we lost."
Man of the Match - Joel Matip
What's next?
The third round of the Carabao Cup sees Chelsea host Grimsby on Wednesday and
Liverpool travel to MK Dons - live from 7.30pm on Sky Sports Football; kick-off
7.45pm.Chelsea have conceded 13 goals in their
Click Here For Official Team Sheet
Teams
Chelsea Kepa; Christensen (Zouma 42), Tomori, Azpilicueta (c),
Emerson (Alonso 15), Jorginho, Kovacic, Kante, Willian, Mount, Abraham
(Batshuayi 77)
Subs Not Used Caballero, Alonso, Barkley, Pedro, Zouma, Pulisic
Booked Tomori, Kovacic, Alonso
Goals Kante 71
Liverpool Adrian, Alexander-Arnold, Matip, Van Dijk, Robertson,
Henderson (c) (Lallana 84), Fabinho, Wijnaldum, Salah (Gomez 90+2), Mane (Milner
71), Firmino
Subs Not Used Kelleher, Oxlade-Chamberlain, Shaqiri, Brewster
Booked Alexander-Arnold, Fabinho, Milner 86
Goals Alexander-Arnold 14, Firmino 30
Attendance 40,638
Referee Michael Oliver