West Ham United and Southampton maintained their unlikely but impressive starts to the season when the Hammers beat champions Manchester City 2-1 and Saints moved up to second with a 1-0 win over Stoke City.

Chelsea, who visit Manchester United tomorrow, lead the Premier League title chase with 22 points from eight matches while Saints are second with 19 from nine games.

Manchester City are third on 17 after losing at West Ham through goals from Morgan Amalfitano and Diafra Sakho. The champions could trail Chelsea by eight points on Sunday night if Jose Mourinho's men triumph at Old Trafford.

Elsewhere, Arsenal won 2-0 at Sunderland, Liverpool were held to a goalless draw at home by Hull City, Swansea City defeated Leicester City 2-0 and West Bromwich Albion fought back from 2-0 down to draw 2-2 at home to Crystal Palace.

West Ham did not have it easy against Manchester City who dominated possession but hit the bar twice through Yaya Toure and only scored once through David Silva.

Frenchman Amalfitano put the Hammers ahead with a tap-in after a brilliant low spinning cross from Enner Valencia after 21 minutes.

Senegalese Sakho became the first West Ham player to score in six successive Premier League games when he made it 2-0 with a goal given after goalline technology showed his header had crossed the line in the 75th.

Silva pulled one back for City with a great solo effort as he weaved through the defence two minutes later.

"It wasn't a lucky victory by any stretch of the imagination today because our commitment and desire to play against the big boys and the present league champions was there for all to see," West Ham manager Sam Allardyce told BT Sport.

"After David Silva scored their outstanding goal, for me it was about the squad's determination to make sure of what is a famous victory for us."

City manager Manuel Pellegrini denied he was under any more pressure after his side also let slip a 2-0 lead against CSKA Moscow to draw 2-2 in the Champions League in midweek.

VERY UNLUCKY

He said: "I always feel the pressure exactly the same from the first day to today.

"West Ham played very well especially in the first half and they did not allow us to move the ball but we were very unlucky because we had a lot of chances."

Southampton's fairytale start to the season is turning into a credible challenge for a top-four finish after they beat Stoke.

Although they were never likely to reproduce last week's 8-0 win over Sunderland, Sadio Mane's 33rd-minute strike separated the teams at St Mary's as Southampton won for the sixth time in nine matches.

"The first half was fantastic," said manager Ronald Koeman. "We played very well and dominated the game, scored a good goal and had other good opportunities in the first half but we did not kill the game and it was difficult to the last seconds."

Last week Southampton scored their biggest league win since 1921 when they thrashed Sunderland but Koeman said: "Maybe this win is more important than last week's because it's not always that easy and you have to fight for it".

Arsenal won for only the second time in eight league matches, beating Sunderland with Alexis Sanchez scoring twice.

Liverpool's woes continued when they were held by Hull with Mario Balotelli missing an open goal with almost the last kick.

West Brom rallied against Palace who led at halftime thanks to a volley from Brede Hangeland and a penalty by Mile Jedinak.

Albion hit back in the second half with a header from substitute Victor Anichebe and a stoppage-time penalty by Saido Berahino.

Swansea ended a run of five league games without a win when they beat Leicester at the Liberty Stadium with a goal in each half from Wilfried Bony.

They are now sixth while Leicester, without a win in four matches since a 5-3 defeat of Manchester United a month ago, have slipped to 16th, two points above the relegation zone.

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