West Ham punish Alisson blunders to end Liverpool’s unbeaten run
West Ham punished three costly mistakes from Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson Becker as the Redsâ 25-match unbeaten run was shattered in a 3-2 defeat at the London Stadium on Sunday.
Jurgen Kloppâs side would have broken the clubâs record unbeaten run in all competitions, which had stood since 1982, if they avoided defeat in east London.
But instead Alissonâs disastrous display condemned Liverpool to a first loss since Real Madrid beat them in the Champions League quarter-final first leg in April.
Liverpool hadnât lost in the league since Fulham won at Anfield in March.
It was an day to forget for Alisson, whose own goal put West Ham head in the first half.
Trent Alexander-Arnold equalised with a brilliant free-kick, but Alisson was at fault again as Pablo Fornals and Kurt Zouma struck for the Hammers after half-time.
Divock Origi got one back for Liverpool, but it wasnât enough to preserve their long unbeaten streak.
Liverpool dropped to fourth place in the Premier League as West Ham climbed above them into third place.
The Reds are four points behind leaders Chelsea, while West Ham are only three adrift of Thomas Tuchelâs men.
West Hamâs first league win against Liverpool since 2016 was also their manager David Moyesâ maiden league success against Klopp at the eighth attempt.
Moyes has worked wonders in his second spell at West Ham and a challenge for a Champions League place will be in their sights if they can maintain this level of performance.
It took just four minutes for West Ham to take the lead with a controversial opener.
Reds rocked
Fornalsâ inswinging corner raced towards Angelo Ogbonna, who got in front of Alisson with a jump that obstructed the Brazilianâs view.
Ogbonnaâs arm made contact with Alisson as the keeperâs flailing attempt to punch clear diverted the ball behind him and into his own net.
A lengthy VAR check following as Liverpoolâs players surrounded referee Craig Pawson to claim both a foul on Alisson and a handball by Ogbonna, but the goal was allowed to stand.
There was more VAR angst for Klopp moments later when Aaron Cresswell escaped a red card for an ugly foul on Jordan Henderson that caught Liverpoolâs captain on his knee.
Liverpool squandered their first sight of goal when the unmarked Diogo Jota headed over from Hendersonâs cross.
Kloppâs smile briefly returned in the 41st minute as Alexander-Arnold brought Liverpool level.
Mohamed Salahâs quick feet drew a foul from Declan Rice on the edge of the area and Alexander-Arnold curled a brilliant strike over the wall and into the top corner of Lukasz Fabianskiâs net.
Alexander-Arnoldâs first goal since April was just reward for an influential display from the right-back, who regularly moved into central midfield to help dictate Liverpoolâs attacks.
Having scored from their first corner, West Hamâs second nearly brought another goal soon after the interval when Craig Dawson headed against the bar from Fornalsâ corner.
Sadio Mane threatened with a volley from Andrew Robertsonâs cross, but the forwardâs effort was too close to Fabianski.
Liverpoolâs commitment to throwing bodies forward in search of the win came back to bite them in the 67th minute.
After Mane lost possession, Jarrod Bown embarked on a mesmerising run past a host of Redsâ challenges before slipping a pass to Fornals, whose low shot from the edge of the area slipped under Alissonâs weak attempted save.
Alissonâs nightmare wasnât finished yet and the keeper was caught out of position at the far post as the unmarked Zouma headed West Hamâs third goal from Bowenâs 74th minute corner.
Origi scuffed home after Salahâs shot deflected into his path in the 83rd minute.
Mane headed inches wide of the far post as West Ham survived a tense finale.