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Jurgen Klopp called Mohamed Salah becoming Liverpool‘s new Premier League record scorer “really special” after Sunday’s win over Manchester United.

Salah scored twice in Liverpool’s historic 7-0 rout of United to reach 129 league goals during his time at Anfield, passing club legend Robbie Fowler in the process despite having played 61 fewer games.

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“It’s really, really special and we should not forget that just because we are used to him scoring a lot of goals,” Klopp said of the Egyptian. “He should be really proud of that.”

Klopp added: “A freak result and a top performance,” the German told reporters after Liverpool’s biggest ever win over United courtesy of braces for Salah, Cody Gakpo and Darwin Nunez and a late effort by Roberto Firmino.

The German manager could hardly stop smiling as he saluted the delirious Liverpool fans at a rocking Anfield, and who could blame him.

“I don’t think the second half could start any better with the two early goals and then from that moment we were flying and it was really difficult to play against us,” Klopp said.

Liverpool have now won four of their last five league games after a run of three defeats in four and, while coming back from a 5-2 first-leg defeat by Real Madrid in the Champions League round of 16 might be beyond them, they look to be back on track.

“It was one of the best performances for a long, long time,” Klopp said. “The main difference is that we now have pretty much all the players available.

“But we have to make these results count with the result of the next game. That’s what the plan is.”

Liverpool go to bottom-side Bournemouth next weekend having beaten the south-coast club 9-0 at Anfield earlier this season.

They are now just three points behind fourth-placed Tottenham Hotspur with a game in hand and are on a roll.

“A few months ago everyone thought it was a good moment to play Liverpool — you can’t say it publicly, but everyone thought it — because they felt we were struggling a lot, but now it is less of a good moment, we look more like ourselves,” Klopp said.

“It is important that everyone knows we are here and we are still alive.”

Information from Reuters was used in this story.

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