London: It's like the clock has been wound back 35 years with Liverpool and Everton as the English league frontrunners.
Seeing Liverpool at the top of the Premier League is a more familiar sight. A 7-0 rout of Crystal Palace on Saturday was the type of ruthless attacking display that helped Jurgen Klopp end the team's 30-year title drought last season.
Everton hasn't won the league since 1985 and 1987 when they sandwiched a runner-up season to its neighbour. A 2-1 victory over Arsenal was Everton's third success in eight days, taking Carlo Ancelotti's side up to second, five points behind the champions.
Everton can be overtaken by either Tottenham or Leicester, who meet on Sunday.
Staying in the top four would be significant not only as a sporting achievement but also financially for Everton, given the club reported losses of 140 million pounds (USD 185 million) in the last financial year in part due to the pandemic.
"We are not in this moment playing fantastic attacking football," Ancelotti said.
"But the spirit of the team is really strong."
Liverpool and Everton are among only four of the 20 Premier League clubs allowed fans albeit only 2,000 - due to coronavirus restrictions. Southampton was also allowed a crowd on Saturday but still lost to Manchester City 1-0.
Surprisingly, though, it is Southampton in fifth place a place and a point ahead of Pep Guardiola's expensively-assembled City side that won the 2018 and 2019 titles.
SALAH, FIRMINO DOUBLES
An emphatic victory at Palace was a stylish way to end a five-game winless for Liverpool, which could even start with Mohamed Salah on the bench.
The league top scorer still managed two goals after coming on in the second half, and set up one of Roberto Firmino's double.
Salah was one of seven different players to provide the assists starting with Sadio Mane for Takumi Minamino inside two minutes, allowing the Japan forward to net his first Premier League goal a year after his transfer was announced.
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Firmino set up Mane to net on the turn in the 35th before scoring himself before halftime after being released by Andy Robertson.