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Mercurial Salah
Liverpool ended a miserable sequence of results to stay in the Champions League places with victory against Fulham in the Premier League at Anfield.
Head coach Arne Slot and his players came under increased scrutiny after they were thrashed by Manchester City in the FA Cup quarter-final before producing a cowering performance when losing at Paris St-Germain in the Champions League.
Slot rang the changes, making five ahead of the Champions League quarter-final second leg against PSG at Anfield on Tuesday - and was rewarded with an improved display.
Rio Ngumoha and Mohamed Salah, who was dropped in Paris, were in the starting line-up, and both were on target with similar precise curling finishes inside four minutes in the first half.
Liverpool's win leaves them in fifth, a position which now qualifies for a place in next season's Champions League.
The victory came amid protests from home fans before and during the game, expressing their anger against owners FSG over proposed increases in ticket prices.
Liverpool's fans needed something to lift their misery after those dismal losses to Manchester City and PSG, as well as mounting discontent over ticket price rises announced by the club's owners.
The Kop carried an unfamiliar look, with the flags that are such an integral part of Anfield's atmosphere removed as part of the protest.
And after the game started, a group of fans marched in front of The Kop carrying a large banner emblazoned with the message: "No To Ticket Price Increases".
It was against this backdrop that Liverpool finally produced something for a fanbase that has watched the champions' remarkable decline this season to cheer.
And central to that was 17-year-old Ngumoha, who was in dazzling form on Liverpool's left-flank, crucially producing the opening goal after 36 minutes with a perfect right-foot finish just as Fulham started to threaten.
Salah provided a flash of the old magic four minutes later with a carbon copy finish from the other side of the area.
Ngumoha was given a deserved standing ovation when he was replaced by Alexander Isak after 69 minutes.
Liverpool still face a mammoth task to overturn a 2-0 deficit against PSG on Tuesday, but at least this win will give Slot's team a much-needed lift in confidence.
Marco Silva's Fulham arrived at Anfield with Liverpool's confidence low after damaging defeats and discontent swirling around a fanbase dissatisfied with events on and off the field.
It carried all the hallmarks of the perfect opportunity to strike a wounded opponent and record a rare Anfield victory.
Instead, Fulham lacked urgency when it mattered, even when it was clear Liverpool's rearguard was vulnerable, with some opportunities to take the lead, or at least claw back the goal that might have had nerves jangling among players and fans alike, not taken.
Indeed, Fulham had 19 attempts in this defeat, the joint most Liverpool have faced in a Premier League game since records started in 2003/04.
Fulham will look back on this with regret because this was a clear chance to cause Liverpool trouble and it was missed. (BBC)