Mohamed Salah:
Thirteen seconds. That was all it took to turn panic into delirium, and end a goal drought that was starting to get more than a little worrying for Liverpool’s Egyptian King. Everton thought they had the lead when James Tarkowski climbed highest to meet Alex Iwobi’s high, hanging corner in the 35th minute, but by the time the clock struck 36 they were behind. Tarkowski’s header hit the post, Liverpool broke and Darwin Nunez picked the perfect pass for Salah, who took advantage of some woeful positioning from Jordan Pickford to prod in his 18th goal of the season, and spark wild celebrations on the Kop. He had a hand in his side’s second goal too, his pass allowing Trent Alexander-Arnold to set up Gakpo for a far-post tap-in, and while he was unable to inflict further damage, Klopp will have been delighted to see his star man back on the scoresheet, and back smiling.
Cody Gakpo:
And on the seventh day, Liverpool’s new boy introduced himself properly. It’s been a tough start to life at Anfield for Gakpo, but he’ll have gone to bed with a great big smile on his face tonight, having grabbed his first Reds goal, and in the game which matters most to his new supporters. The Dutchman was perfectly-placed at the far post to tap home Alexander-Arnold’s immaculate low cross and give his side what proved to be an unassailable two-goal lead. The relief was clear on the 23-year-old’s face, and also in his performance across the next half hour, as he tore into Everton with the kind of confidence, purpose and quality we associated with him in his time at PSV Eindhoven. He left to a standing ovation, and a bear hug from Klopp. Job done. The first one is usually the hardest, now we can really start to see what the £44 million ($53m) man is made of.
Stefan Bajcetic:
Liverpool’s present and its future, all wrapped up in one very special young footballer. To boss a game like this at 18 takes some doing, but Bajcetic accomplished it. He was brilliant from start to finish, reading the game expertly, taking the ball anywhere and tackling like it meant something. One challenge, on Alex Iwobi, led to Liverpool’s second goal, another interception and forward burst should have led to another for Salah. Everton, in Abdoulaye Doucoure, Idrissa Gueye and the highly-rated Amadou Onana, had legs and experience in midfield, but Liverpool had the game’s best player, with Bajcetic’s calmness and class bringing out improvement in both Jordan Henderson and Fabinho, who had their best games for a while. Older fans may remember a teenager called Billy Kenny dominating a derby match for Everton back in the early days of the Premier League. He was never able to fulfil his rich potential, as it turned out, but hopes are high that Bajcetic can become a star for Liverpool. Here, we saw why everyone at Anfield is so excited by him.