That was much more like it. Liverpool enjoyed the penultimate home game of Jurgen Klopp's reign with an impressive 4-2 win over Tottenham Hotspur on Sunday.
Mohamed Salah, Andy Robertson, Cody Gakpo and Harvey Elliott all scored as the Reds cemented their top-three finish and kept alive very faint hopes of winning the Premier League title.
It made for a memorable afternoon at Anfield. And here's how the national media, and the ECHO's own Paul Gorst, viewed another entertaining day in the season for Klopp's side.
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Paul Joyce of The Times - and formerly of this parish - detailed how home supporters knowingly ignored the usual requests of Klopp.
"On a billboard across from the Kop, there is a giant picture of Klopp with the accompanying slogan: 'Some journeys live forever'," he says. "As the sun shone down and with Champions League football next season secured along with the Carabao Cup trophy, the prevailing sense was that the final fortnight of his reign should be savoured and the moment simply enjoyed.
"Just after the midpoint of the opening half, the crowd launched into a rendition of the ditty Jurgen Is A Red, knowing that he hates when it is sung before the result is a foregone conclusion. It lasted fully two minutes, the singing rhythmically repeated, and no one remotely cared if it annoyed him as it was about showing appreciation."
Andy Hunter, another formerly of this publication and now at The Guardian, questioned the assertion from Tottenham that they had played well.
"Ange Postecoglou found comfort in Tottenham 'at least
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