West Ham end Liverpool run as Villa sack Smith
West Ham beat Liverpool 3-2 on Sunday to end the Reds' 25-match unbeaten run as struggling Aston Villa fired manager Dean Smith on a day of high drama in the Premier League.
Jurgen Klopp's Liverpool side were one game away from setting a new club record of 26 games unbeaten in all competitions but three costly errors from goalkeeper Alisson Becker cost them dear.
Elsewhere in the English top flight, Antonio Conte had a taste of the scale of his task at new club Tottenham as they laboured to a 0-0 draw at Everton.
Liverpool travelled to the London Stadium without a defeat in the league since March but they left frustrated as West Ham leapfrogged them into third spot in the table.
It was a day to forget for Brazilian goalkeeper Alisson, whose own goal put West Ham ahead 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 was not enough to preserve their long unbeaten streak.
"It's been hard to beat Liverpool over my career, they've been a very good side, so I was very pleased to get it today," West Ham manager David Moyes told the BBC.
"Even when it went to 3-1 it was never comfortable. Liverpool were very good and we had to work hard to keep them out."
Klopp said key moments went against his team.
"We were not that calm in the decisive moments... we were not patient enough," he told Sky Sports.
"We can be better, 100 percent. You cannot always play your best result, you have to grind out a result but they scored three goals and we didn't."
Spurs sacked Nuno Espirito Santo last week after five defeats in seven Premier League matches and turned to Conte, who has won league titles with Juventus, Chelsea and Inter Milan.
A game short on clear-cut chances could easily have ended in another league defeat for the visitors but for an intervention from VAR to overturn the decision to award Everton a second-half penalty.
Rafael Benitez's side thought they had won a spot-kick after Spurs goalkeeper Hugo Lloris dived at the feet of Richarlison and clipped the Brazilian.
But after a VAR review referee Chris Kavanagh overturned his original decision on the basis that Lloris got enough of a touch on the ball.
Mason Holgate was sent off for the home side in stoppage time but it was too late for Spurs to take advantage.
Conte can point to a first clean sheet in the league since August as a sign of progress but Tottenham's struggle to score goes on, with Harry Kane still stuck on one goal in the Premier League this season.