Jose Mourinho may have taken charge of Chelsea for the final time this afternoon, as his post match press comments didn't exactly fill supporters with confidence that he will be staying on in his job.
"I have nothing to say" was the response of the Portugese following his side's 3-1 home defeat to Liverpool.
Ramires had given Chelsea an early lead after he headed home a Cesar Azpilicueta cross. But, on the stroke of half-time, some slack defending by Ramires gave Phillipe Coutinho the chance to draw level, and boy did he take it.
His curling left foot effort from the edge of the box brought the score to 1-1 and inspired his team to kick on even further. Liverpool came out a team transformed in the second half and in with just 15 minutes remaining Coutinho popped up again. A smart dummy from Adam Lallana gave the Brazilian space and he fired home from close range.
Second half substitute Christian Benteke rounded off the scoring with five minutes remaining to give Klopp his first league win as Liverpool manager.

Liverpool's Christian Benteke scores his side's third goal. Image: Adam Davy / PA Wire/Press Association Images
Manchester City left it late against Norwich City, running out 2-1 winners courtesy of a Yaya Toure penalty.
Nicolas Otamendi gave his side the lead on 67 minutes, his header proving too powerful for John Ruddy to stop.
However, visitors Norwich showed resolve and it looked as if they had snatched a point six minutes from time when Cameron Jerome pounced on a Joe Hart blunder.
Yaya Toure's 89th minute penalty got City across the line, and they maintain their spot at the top of the table for another week.
Arsenal kept up their pursuit of top spot and put in another convincing performance as they beat Swansea 3-0.
Olivier Giroud, Laurent Koscielny and Joel Campbell all got second half goals to take the spoils at the Liberty Stadium. Garry Monk will have to go back to the drawing board after his side were well beaten, with Swansea now sitting 13th in the table despite looking very promising at the start of the season.
Odion Ighalo kept up his impressive form for Watford, as the Nigerian scored twice to give his side a 2-0 win over West Ham United.

Watford's Odion Ighalo celebrates after scoring their second goal. Image: Scott Heavey / PA Wire/Press Association Images
The goals bring him up to second in the leading scorers chart with seven goals and his two assists make him an indespensible member of the promoted side.
For Watford, it was their second win on the bounce, particularly impressive given that it came against a team who have proven to be better away from home than they are in front of their own fans.
Jamie Vardy got the winner and scored in his eighth consecutive game to guide Leicester City to a sixth league win of the season.
It finished 3-2 at the Hawthorns, and Tony Pulis' side threw away a one-goal lead after Salomon Rondon scored the opener.
The Foxes now sit third, only four points behind joint leaders Manchester City and Arsenal.
Elsewhere this afternoon, there were scoreless draws between Newcastle and Stoke, as well as at Selhurst Park, where Manchester United continued to struggle in front of goal, this time against Crystal Palace.

Another disappointing evening for Manchester United striker, Wayne Rooney. Image: Steve Paston / EMPICS Sport