Liverpool down Everton 3-1

Liverpool down Everton 3-1

Everton's Ross Barkley and Liverpool’s Emre Can vie for the ball during their English Premier League match at Anfield on Saturday. (EPA Photo)
Everton's Ross Barkley and Liverpool’s Emre Can vie for the ball during their English Premier League match at Anfield on Saturday. (EPA Photo)

LIVERPOOL: Philippe Coutinho illuminated a scrappy Merseyside derby with a stunning individual goal to inspire Liverpool to a 3-1 win over Everton on Saturday, helping the red half of the city maintain its recent dominance over its neighbour.

Liverpool's decision to hire a private jet to rush the Brazil playmaker back from international duty in South American qualifying paid off, with Coutinho scoring his team's second goal after a weaving run and also setting up Divock Origi for the clinching third in the 60th minute.

The victory lifts Liverpool into second place, even with Tottenham Hotspur, pending the outcome of Spurs' match at Burnley later on Saturday. Everton remain in seventh place with 50 points.

The result also made Jurgen Klopp the first Liverpool manager to win his first three Merseyside derbies in the Premier League.

Liverpool have now gone 13 league matches without defeat (six wins and seven draws) against Everton -- equalling a club record -- and secured an important win in the context of Champions League qualification, as Klopp's side consolidated its place in the top four.

Sadio Mane put Liverpool ahead in the eighth minute with another solo effort, before later going off with a left leg injury, and Matthew Pennington equalised against the run of play for an Everton side that came to Anfield in seventh place and as the league's form team.

Liverpool handled the occasion better than its rival.

It was a typically combustible match -- there have been more red cards in the Merseyside derby (21) than any other Premier League fixture -- and Everton midfielder Ross Barkley will count himself fortunate to finish the game. He avoided a booking for a bad early foul on Emre Can and then only got a yellow card for a crude, studs-first lunge on the left ankle of Dejan Lovren.

Barkley struggled for composure in a frenetic game, unlike Liverpool counterpart Coutinho, who oozed class and assuredness -- not least when he sent Barkley skidding on his backside with a wonderful shimmy early in the second half.

Coutinho's goal was the standout moment, overshadowing Mane's goal as Everton paid for standing off the Senegal forward. Exchanging a one-two with Roberto Firmino, Mane shrugged off Tom Davies, drove past Ashley Williams and slid a low, angled shot into the far corner.

Everton equalised as Pennington marked his first appearance of the season for Everton by scoring his first-ever goal for the club, slotting home from close range after Phil Jagielka flicked on a corner at the near post.

Coutinho, a scorer for Brazil in midweek, then took centre stage. He reclaimed the lead for Liverpool in spectacular style by picking up the ball 40 metres out, drifting past Idrissa Gueye, cutting inside Pennington and curling brilliantly into the top corner.

More skill from Coutinho led to the third goal, the Brazilian following a jinking run with a pass inside to Origi. The striker -- on the field only three minutes as a substitute for Mane -- took a touch and sent in a 30-meter shot that appeared to wrong-foot goalkeeper Joel Robles and flew into the net.

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