Liverpool's recent jitters meant it was there for the taking by Manchester City on Sunday, but the unusually conservative champions missed a trick, falling further behind Premier League leader Arsenal which must be taken seriously as title contenders.
Last season, two breathless 2-2 draws between Liverpool and Manchester City showcased the best of what the Premier League had to offer - two brilliant teams at the peak of their powers - but this term, the new-found rivals have enjoyed differing form.
While champion City, chasing a fifth league title in six seasons, travelled to Anfield unbeaten, having plundered 33 goals in nine league games at the start of the new campaign, Liverpool trailed in its wake.
A worst start to a league season after eight games since 2012-13, when Liverpool went on to finish seventh, meant City will have fancied its chances of earning a first win over the Reds in five matches in all competitions.
Confidence would have been sky high with Erling Haaland gunning for his 21st goal in a remarkable debut season, so far in England, up against an injury-ravaged Liverpool backline, who had 36-year-old midfielder James Milner at full back.
But, the champion could not get going at Anfield, restricted to half chances in the first half, with an unusually reserved formation from coach Pep Guardiola curbing their flow.
Liverpool looked nervy in possession, giving the ball away with regularity, but a normally ruthless City could not capitalise.
After City was denied an opener in the second half by VAR, they never really threatened the Liverpool goal, and there was only going to be one winner, with Mohamed Salah's fine solo effort making all the difference.
It was more frustration against Jurgen Klopp for Guardiola. The Spaniard has lost 11 matches against the German as a manager, at least four more defeats than against any other coach.
"Many years we come here and we lost because we made a mistake and played one of the best teams in the world," Guardiola said.
"At that level, we cannot concede the mistakes. It is October, so we must learn."
Not just in terms of points, City could have really taken a position of superiority in this new-found rivalry with victory, but instead allowed Liverpool to get the win it needed to galvanise its stuttering campaign.
The other big winners from City's Anfield lapse was Arsenal. Nobody tipped Mikel Arteta's side to be serious title contenders this season, not after finishing no higher than fifth in the standings in each of the last six campaigns.
Its impressive early season form was put down to new signings making an instant impact, but few predicted it would last.
However, another hard-fought victory against a vibrant Leeds United on Sunday, with the hosts throwing everything at the Gunners, proved Arsenal must be taken seriously as a rival to City's crown.
With a four-point league lead, and having won 12 of its 13 games this season in all competitions, a first Premier League title since 2004 could be a realistic prospect.
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