Luis Suarez scored twice as Liverpool dominated 10-man Tottenham to move second in the Premier League table.
The Uruguayan's 16th goal of the season took him past
the total for the whole Spurs side when he found the bottom corner from
Jordan Henderson's flick.
Philippe Coutinho hit the bar before the excellent Henderson volleyed in.
Paulinho was then sent off for a high kick on Suarez
before goals from Jon Flanagan, Suarez and Raheem Sterling completed
Spurs' humiliation.
Liverpool were without injured skipper Steven Gerrard, who last week joined Daniel Sturridge on the
treatment table,
but they could have easily scored more as they took control early on
and never let it slip against a poor Tottenham team, who did not have a
shot on target.
This was Liverpool's first victory in seven visits to
White Hart Lane, while Tottenham ended a five-game unbeaten run with
another disappointing display in front of their
home fans.
Andre Villas-Boas's side have now won just one of their
last six matches at White Hart Lane and they must seek to overturn that
form if they are to establish themselves as
Champions League contenders, let alone fight for the Premier League title.
More prominently, this result will lead to further
questions about the Portuguese coach's future having already fielded
them after a
6-0 loss at Manchester City
last month.
Spurs came up against a Brendan Rodgers side led by the irrepressible Suarez, who took
his amazing scoring run to 14 goals in eight Premier League games and 17 overall this season.
But the South American, who was
captain for the day, was ably supported by the effervescence of
Henderson and Sterling, who tore shreds out of Kyle Naughton before the
Spurs left-back was replaced at half-time.
Henderson has had his critics at Anfield but appears to
be finding consistent form now and he played his part in the opener
after almost being played in by Suarez.
But with Michael Dawson sliding in to intercept, the
Premier League's top scorer collected the loose ball, danced around Kyle
Walker and slotted into the bottom corner.
Suarez, Coutinho and Glen Johnson all went close to
doubling the lead before the half hour, with Nacer Chadli heading over
from an isolated Spurs attack, but the visitors went 2-0 up before the
break with Sterling involved again.
His raking ball from the right found Coutinho, who
touched the ball to the onrushing Henderson. His first shot was saved,
but then after Hugo Lloris could only push Suarez's effort up into the
air, Henderson volleyed in.
Roberto Soldado, who retained his place after a midweek
hat-trick against Anzhi Makhachkala, then had the ball in the net but
referee Jonathan Moss believed the Spaniard fouled Liverpool goalkeeper
Simon Mignolet after a poor touch by the Belgian.
As the half-time whistle blew boos echoed around White Hart Lane, reflecting a woeful first period for the hosts.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, Ezekiel Fryers came on for
Naughton but Spurs could not contain Sterling, whose cross was headed
against the post by Mamadou Sakho from only two yards out.
And a nightmare afternoon for Spurs continued when
Paulinho received his marching orders for a high foot, which connected
with Suarez's chest.
A sign of how dominant Liverpool were came when
Flanagan smashed in off the bar for his first Liverpool goal, before
Suarez chipped in and Sterling steered home a crisp shot.
Liverpool's squad might not be as strong as some of the
other title contenders but when they play like this they will not fear
upcoming games against Manchester City and Chelsea before the year is
out.