Mario Balotelli finally scored his first Premier League goal for Liverpool to seal a dramatic 3-2 win over Tottenham, while Arsenal moved up to fourth place with a 2-1 victory against Leicester on Tuesday.
Balotelli has endured a miserable time at Anfield since his pre-season move from AC Milan, but in his 13th league appearance for the Reds he picked the perfect moment to break his goal drought with an 83rd minute winner after coming off the bench.
The Italian striker had only scored twice previously for Liverpool, with his last coming against Swansea in the League Cup in October.
Balotelli’s headline-grabbing intervention provided a fitting finale to an entertaining encounter which saw Liverpool lead through Lazar Markovic’s 15th minute goal before in-form Tottenham forward Harry Kane continued his hot streak with a 26th minute equaliser to take his goal tally for the season to 23.
Just hours after the Premier League announced a staggering 70 per cent increase in the value of its British television rights for the 2016-19 seasons, with Sky and BT Sports paying a combined £5.1 billion ($7.8 billion, 6.9 billion euros) to show games, this was a thriller to justify that huge outlay.
Steven Gerrard’s 53rd minute penalty, awarded for Danny Rose’s trip on Daniel Sturridge, restored Liverpool’s lead before Mousa Dembele bundled in Kane’s cross eight minutes later.
That set the stage for Balotelli, who replaced Sturridge in the 74th minute and netted nine minutes later when he tapped-in Adam Lallana’s cross.
Brendan Rodgers’ side stay seventh but move within one point of sixth placed Tottenham in the battle to qualify for the Champions League via a top-four finish.
“Mario Balotelli has been working hard in training and for the last couple of weeks he’s been ill so it’s great that he scored the winner,” Liverpool assistant manager Colin Pascoe said.
Arsenal stole a march on their top-four rivals with an edgy success against bottom of the table Leicester at the Emirates Stadium.
Leicester manager Nigel Pearson remained in charge despite reports of his dismissal on Sunday, 24 hours after he grabbed Crystal Palace midfielder James McArthur around the throat on the touchline during his side’s 1-0 defeat.
But it was his Arsenal counterpart Arsene Wenger who was celebrating when French defender Laurent Koscielny swept home from Mesut Ozil’s corner in the 27th minute.
Theo Walcott doubled Arsenal’s lead in the 41st minute when he finished off the rebound after Leicester goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer had parried Ozil’s shot.
Leicester’s club record signing Andrej Kramaric netted in the 61st minute with his first goal since joining the Foxes, the £9 million signing lashing home from a Riyad Mahrez cross, but Arsenal survived late pressure to climb above Manchester United, who can reclaim fourth with a win against Burnley on Wednesday.
“We had some good moments in the game and a good spirit. We dropped in the second half and became a bit nervous. I’m surprised Leicester are bottom of the league,” said Wenger, who admitted he was concerned by a late “muscular” injury to Wales midfielder Aaron Ramsey.