Glen Johnson, Dirk Kuyt and Maxi Rodriguez each scored first-half goals as Liverpool coasted to a comprehensive 3-0 victory over West Ham at Anfield last night.

Johnson prodded the hosts in front from a corner before Kuyt added a second from the spot after Danny Gabbidon was penalised for an obvious handball.

Rodriguez headed in a third for Roy Hodgson's side to put the game well beyond the east Londoners, who have now won just once in 14 English Premier League matches this season and are rooted to the bottom of the table.

The visitors have not won at Anfield since 1963 and supporters called for manager Avram Grant to be sacked as their team slipped to another miserable defeat.

Liverpool, who saw a six-match unbeaten run ended with a 2-0 defeat at Stoke last weekend, will now go into next Sunday's trip to Tottenham with renewed confidence.

Johnson marked his return to action with a quick response to the criticism he received from Hodgson last week.

The England defender was picked out by a Kuyt pass and broke into the area, staying on his feet despite a strong challenge from Herita Ilunga and sending a cross to the far post that was headed to safety by Lars Jacobsen.

The pressure from the hosts continued with David Ngog cutting in from the left and hitting a low shot that was turned away by goalkeeper Robert Green.

Argentina winger Rodriguez then missed with a powerful long-range drive with Liverpool keen to make a purposeful start.

Ngog continued to impress and withstood a foul from Gabbidon to slip a pass to Fernando Torres, whose shot flew wide of goal.

West Ham were continually cut apart and when Kuyt rolled Ngog into space and the Frenchman crossed, Torres was only denied by a block from Radoslav Kovac.

Then Green palmed over the bar from a drive from Raul Meireles.

But from the corner that followed, Johnson controlled on his chest and then fired past Green with a low shot for his first goal of the season, 18 minutes in.

Soon the advantage was doubled following more dreadful defending from West Ham.

No-one even attempted to clear Netherlands forward Kuyt’s bobbling cross, which ran all the way through to Torres.

The Spain striker attempted to lift the ball into the West Ham area only for Gabbidon to handle twice.

Even though Kuyt's 27th-minute penalty was far from convincing, Green dived the wrong way to take Liverpool two goals in front.

Carlton Cole finally threatened for the visitors, heading straight at goalkeeper Pepe Reina from a Luis Boa Morte cross.

But soon Liverpool made it three after Green made a low save from Torres.

West Ham failed to clear and Paul Konchesky's curling cross was glanced into the corner of the net by Rodriguez 38 minutes in.

Mark Noble drilled wide from distance as the visitors attempted some sort of response.

But Kovac pulled off another fine block from Ngog to keep the deficit at three goals.

And then Torres failed to hit the target with another effort from just outside the area.

Rodriguez then drove over the bar as the Reds continued to create openings whenever they tried.

Reina had an anxious moment when he was forced to tip over his bar from Frederic Piquionne.

Rodriguez just missed the far corner after breaking down the left and clipping an effort across goal and substitute Fabio Aurelio was also just off-target with a powerful shot from 25 yards.

MANCHESTER UTD PILE THE PRESSURE AS CHELSEA LOSE

Manchester United piled the pressure on Chelsea with a 2-0 win over nine-man Wigan, while the Premier League leaders crashed to a 1-0 defeat at Birmingham.

Sir Alex Ferguson's second-placed side are now level on points with Chelsea and only goal difference is keeping United behind the champions, who suffered their third defeat in four matches.

Elsewhere, Tottenham staged a stunning fightback from two goals down to clinch a 3-2 win over bitter rivals Arsenal in the north London derby.

At St Andrew's, Carlo Ancelotti's Chelsea, without injured England stars John Terry and Frank Lampard, fell behind in the 17th minute when Lee Bowyer produced a fine finish from Cameron Jerome's header to notch his first goal in nearly a year.

The Blues laid seige to Birmingham's goal after that but couldn't find a way past England goalkeeper Ben Foster as their poor run continued.

Ancelotti said: "We played good football with good spirit and good attitude and made a lot of chances, but it is not enough as sometimes you need to be lucky. This is football."

At Old Trafford, United took the lead on the stroke of half-time when French left-back Patrice Evra headed in Park Ji-Sung's cross for his first Premier League goal in four years.

Wigan self-destructed after half-time as Antolin Alcaraz and Hugo Rodallega were sent off in quick succession for needless challenges.

Alcaraz got his marching orders for a second yellow card after a foul on Darren Fletcher, then Rodallega saw red after a two-footed lunge on Rafael da Silva.

Mexico striker Javier Hernandez ensured United pushed home their numerical advantage when he headed home Rafael's cross in the 77th minute, while Wayne Rooney came on to make his long-awaited return from an ankle injury after his contract row.

"Wayne got a great reception and that has taken a lot of pressure off the boy," Ferguson said. "He will play a full 90 against Rangers on Wednesday and that will help his fitness."

At the Emirates Stadium, Harry Redknapp's Tottenham trailed to goals from Arsenal's Samir Nasri and Marouane Chamakh at half-time.

But Gareth Bale reduced the deficit for the visitors, who equalised through Rafael van der Vaart's penalty before Younes Kaboul headed the winner with five minutes left to give Spurs their first victory at Arsenal since May 1993.

"It's a fantastic achievement. To come back showed great character," Redknapp said.

"We were either going to get beat 5-0, or have a go. That's what we did because that's my nature. I've said to my players that we can beat anybody."

Bolton maintained their fine form with a 5-1 rout of 10-man Newcastle at the Reebok Stadium.

Kevin Davies fired fourth-placed Bolton in front from the penalty spot in the 18th minute after former Wanderers midfielder Kevin Nolan was penalised for handball.

Owen Coyle's team, who are unbeaten in four matches, scored again when South Korea midfielder Lee Chung-Yong drove home in the 39th minute.

Johan Elmander netted five minutes after half-time and the in-form Bolton striker struck again in the 72nd minute after Andy Carroll's consolation for Newcastle.

Fabricio Coloccini was sent off for elbowing Elmander late on and Davies added another penalty in stoppage-time.

Blackpool climbed further away from the relegation zone with a 2-1 win over second-bottom Wolves at Bloomfield Road.

Ian Holloway's side went ahead in the third minute when Luke Varney smashed in a dipping volley and Marlon Harewood poked in their second after a mistake by goalkeeper Marcus Hahnemann just before half-time.

Kevin Doyle's 86th minute strike for Wolves came too late to spark a fightback.

Stoke's Jon Walters scored twice to inspire a 3-0 win at West Bromwich Albion.

Tony Pulis's side snatched the lead in the 55th minute through Matthew Etherington's spot-kick and Walters converted their second penalty in the 85th minute before netting again in the 90th minute.

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