Watford leapfrog Arsenal and Chelsea into fourth place; the Gunners drop to sixth
Manchester City steer clear at the top
Watford climbed into the top four of the English Premier League after Tom Cleverley’s 92nd-minute goal gave them a 2-1 victory over Arsenal at Vicarage Road on Saturday.
Per Mertesacker headed Arsene Wenger’s side into a 39th-minute lead from a corner but Troy Deeney equalised from the penalty spot in the 71st minute after Hector Bellerin had bundled over Richarlison.
The game looked set to end in a draw until Cleverley pounced on a loose ball in the penalty area and drilled a shot high into Petr Cech’s goal.
Watford have now leapfrogged both Arsenal and Chelsea into fourth place, on 15 points, while the Gunners fell one place to sixth and remain on 13 points.
Wenger left Alexis Sanchez out of his matchday squad after his Chile side's loss to Brazil on Tuesday ended their hopes of World Cup qualification. Mesut Ozil was sent on as a second-half substitute for Danny Welbeck but was largely ineffective.
Wenger was unhappy about Watford being awarded the penalty, saying: "It was a scandalous decision and there is little we can do about it."
He added: "We panicked a little bit in the last seconds."
Watford head coach Marco Silva said: "We are obviously happy. Our second half was really good. We have three important points and we want to stay in this moment."
Earlier, Manchester City opened up a two-point lead over their neighbours Manchester United at the top of the Premier League thanks to another display of scintillating brilliance in a 7-2 thrashing of Stoke City at the Etihad Stadium.
After the earlier high noon showdown between Liverpool and a United side lacking in any great ambition ended in goalless stalemate at Anfield, City cashed in with a third straight league match at the Etihad in which they have struck at least five goals.
Pep Guardiola's men became the first team to net 29 goals in their first eight league games of a top-flight campaign in England since Everton 1894-95.
Their sixth consecutive league win moved them to 22 points with United on 20 and Tottenham Hotspur maintaining third position on 17 after finally earning their first home win at Wembley Stadium, 1-0 over Bournemouth.
Sensation of the day came at Selhurst Park where Crystal Palace, hitherto without a goal and point to their name, downed champions Chelsea 2-1 with Wilfried Zaha, returning from injury, their hero thanks to a brilliant goal just before the break.
Palace's new manager Roy Hodgson celebrated his first win in charge but the defeat left Chelsea nine points behind leaders City, who are playing a brand of kaleidoscopic football at the moment.
Gabriel Jesus, with a brace, Raheem Sterling, David Silva, Fernandinho, Leroy Sane and Bernardo Silva all found the target in the demolition of Stoke.
Yet the orchestrator of the triumph did not even trouble the scorers, Kevin de Bruyne again the man of the match.
Their dazzle was a stark contrast to their neighbours' negativity in the underwhelming Anfield game which the only Manchester United highlight was David de Gea's great save to deny Joel Matip.
Liverpool, despite being much the better side, were blunt in attack, failing to convert any of their 19 attempts on goal.
"Manchester United came here for a point and got it," said Liverpool manager Juergen Klopp with a sigh.
"It was a good performance, I thought worthy of three points. We were unlucky in at least two, maybe three situations.
Chris Wood earned an 85th-minute equaliser for Burnley in a 1-1 draw at home to 10-man West Ham United, who had Andy Carroll sent off in the 27th minute after a couple of elbowing offences earned him two yellow cards.
Swansea City forged clear of the relegation zone with only their second league win of the season, a 2-0 victory over Huddersfield Town.