<p>Jurgen Klopp labelled Mohamed Salah "incredible" after the Egypt star ended his Premier League goal drought in style with two superb finishes to inspire Liverpool's 3-1 win at West Ham on Sunday.</p>.<p>Salah had gone six league games without scoring until he broke West Ham's resistance in the second half with his first goal in the competition since December.</p>.<p>The 28-year-old followed that fine strike with another eye-catching effort and his masterclass ensured Liverpool made it two successive league wins.</p>.<p>Salah is the first player to score at least 20 goals in all competitions in four consecutive seasons for Liverpool since Ian Rush in the 1980s.</p>.<p>Georginio Wijnaldum grabbed Liverpool's third as Klopp's side moved above Leicester into third place.</p>.<p>"What Mo made of Shaqiri's pass was incredible. The first touch was unbelievable," Klopp said of Salah's second goal.</p>.<p>Liverpool are four points adrift of leaders Manchester City, who have a game in hand, and one behind second-placed Manchester United.</p>.<p>After five league games without a win, the champions showed signs of emerging from their winter slump in Thursday's 3-1 success at Tottenham and this was another step in the right direction.</p>.<p>"These boys are a really good group. They're not happy at not being successful. They always have the right attitude," Klopp said.</p>.<p>"We spoke about it in the last few weeks and maybe in the last week we have spoken about the right stuff.</p>.<p>"We have found a way to be uncomfortable again for other teams. It was a great game, very professionally controlled against a flying side."</p>.<p>Liverpool's previous away league wins this season had come at Chelsea and Crystal Palace and they inflicted more capital punishment on West Ham in their latest trip to London.</p>.<p>West Ham had won their last six games in all competitions and were unbeaten in their last six league matches.</p>.<p>But Liverpool squashed that streak emphatically, proving that the group who swept to the title last season shouldn't be written off yet.</p>.<p>The Reds are rounding into form just in time for next Sunday's crucial clash with Manchester City, which is preceded by a home game against Brighton on Wednesday.</p>.<p>Liverpool forward Sadio Mane was absent due to a muscle injury suffered against Tottenham, while Roberto Firmino was left on the bench as Divock Origi and Xherdan Shaqiri started in attack.</p>.<p>With Virgil van Dijk, Joe Gomez, Joel Matip and Fabinho all out injured, Nat Phillips came in alongside midfielder Jordan Henderson in Liverpool's makeshift central defence.</p>.<p>At least Liverpool's full-backs remain healthy and Andrew Robertson combined with Trent Alexander-Arnold to set up Wijnaldum for a shot that flashed just over.</p>.<p>Liverpool didn't manage a single shot on target until first-half stoppage-time when Salah's speculative effort was held by Lukasz Fabianski.</p>.<p>But Salah almost broke the deadlock early in the second half as the Egyptian met Origi's cross with a close-range shot that was blocked by Aaron Cresswell's last-ditch challenge.</p>.<p>Leading the Liverpool charge almost single-handed, Salah shot narrowly wide from 20 yards.</p>.<p>Antonio was inches away from putting West Ham in front on the counter, the forward shooting just wide on the turn.</p>.<p>Salah finally ended his drought in the 57th minute as he took Curtis Jones' pass in the Hammers area and showed typically deft footwork to open space for a superb curler into the far corner.</p>.<p>West Ham had no answer for Salah's clever movement and he put the result beyond doubt in the 68th minute.</p>.<p>Picked out by Shaqiri's brilliant long pass into the area, Salah controlled superbly before clipping a clinical finish past Fabianski from close-range.</p>.<p>Firing on all cylinders now, Liverpool struck again in the 84th minute when Wijnaldum capped a flowing attack by tapping in Firmino's pass.</p>.<p>Craig Dawson's 87th-minute goal, finished from close-range, was little consolation for out-classed West Ham.</p>
<p>Jurgen Klopp labelled Mohamed Salah "incredible" after the Egypt star ended his Premier League goal drought in style with two superb finishes to inspire Liverpool's 3-1 win at West Ham on Sunday.</p>.<p>Salah had gone six league games without scoring until he broke West Ham's resistance in the second half with his first goal in the competition since December.</p>.<p>The 28-year-old followed that fine strike with another eye-catching effort and his masterclass ensured Liverpool made it two successive league wins.</p>.<p>Salah is the first player to score at least 20 goals in all competitions in four consecutive seasons for Liverpool since Ian Rush in the 1980s.</p>.<p>Georginio Wijnaldum grabbed Liverpool's third as Klopp's side moved above Leicester into third place.</p>.<p>"What Mo made of Shaqiri's pass was incredible. The first touch was unbelievable," Klopp said of Salah's second goal.</p>.<p>Liverpool are four points adrift of leaders Manchester City, who have a game in hand, and one behind second-placed Manchester United.</p>.<p>After five league games without a win, the champions showed signs of emerging from their winter slump in Thursday's 3-1 success at Tottenham and this was another step in the right direction.</p>.<p>"These boys are a really good group. They're not happy at not being successful. They always have the right attitude," Klopp said.</p>.<p>"We spoke about it in the last few weeks and maybe in the last week we have spoken about the right stuff.</p>.<p>"We have found a way to be uncomfortable again for other teams. It was a great game, very professionally controlled against a flying side."</p>.<p>Liverpool's previous away league wins this season had come at Chelsea and Crystal Palace and they inflicted more capital punishment on West Ham in their latest trip to London.</p>.<p>West Ham had won their last six games in all competitions and were unbeaten in their last six league matches.</p>.<p>But Liverpool squashed that streak emphatically, proving that the group who swept to the title last season shouldn't be written off yet.</p>.<p>The Reds are rounding into form just in time for next Sunday's crucial clash with Manchester City, which is preceded by a home game against Brighton on Wednesday.</p>.<p>Liverpool forward Sadio Mane was absent due to a muscle injury suffered against Tottenham, while Roberto Firmino was left on the bench as Divock Origi and Xherdan Shaqiri started in attack.</p>.<p>With Virgil van Dijk, Joe Gomez, Joel Matip and Fabinho all out injured, Nat Phillips came in alongside midfielder Jordan Henderson in Liverpool's makeshift central defence.</p>.<p>At least Liverpool's full-backs remain healthy and Andrew Robertson combined with Trent Alexander-Arnold to set up Wijnaldum for a shot that flashed just over.</p>.<p>Liverpool didn't manage a single shot on target until first-half stoppage-time when Salah's speculative effort was held by Lukasz Fabianski.</p>.<p>But Salah almost broke the deadlock early in the second half as the Egyptian met Origi's cross with a close-range shot that was blocked by Aaron Cresswell's last-ditch challenge.</p>.<p>Leading the Liverpool charge almost single-handed, Salah shot narrowly wide from 20 yards.</p>.<p>Antonio was inches away from putting West Ham in front on the counter, the forward shooting just wide on the turn.</p>.<p>Salah finally ended his drought in the 57th minute as he took Curtis Jones' pass in the Hammers area and showed typically deft footwork to open space for a superb curler into the far corner.</p>.<p>West Ham had no answer for Salah's clever movement and he put the result beyond doubt in the 68th minute.</p>.<p>Picked out by Shaqiri's brilliant long pass into the area, Salah controlled superbly before clipping a clinical finish past Fabianski from close-range.</p>.<p>Firing on all cylinders now, Liverpool struck again in the 84th minute when Wijnaldum capped a flowing attack by tapping in Firmino's pass.</p>.<p>Craig Dawson's 87th-minute goal, finished from close-range, was little consolation for out-classed West Ham.</p>