Jurgen Klopp hailed a “professional and mature” performance after Liverpool continued their relentless march to a first title in 30 years with a comfortable 3-0 win at struggling Bournemouth.

Goals from Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, Naby Keita and Mohamed Salah in a devastating 19-minute spell either side of half-time saw the Reds make it 33 Premier League games unbeaten to move 11 points clear at the top of the table.

Bournemouth’s cause was not helped by a hamstring injury to key defender Nathan Ake moments before Oxlade-Chamberlain’s opener, while Cherries striker Callum Wilson limped off in the second half on a miserable afternoon for Eddie Howe’s out-of-form hosts.

With a commanding three-goal lead after 54 minutes, Klopp was afforded the luxury of not taking unnecessary risks as he negotiates a packed December fixture list and interest in five different competitions.

Asked if it was a perfect day, the Liverpool boss replied: “Yeah, it was, 100 per cent.

“I really feel for him (Howe) because you can lose against us, obviously that can happen, but losing Ake and Wilson in the same game is of course a major blow.

“We scored wonderful goals, we had more chances, did really well, were really uncomfortable to play (against).

Mohamed Salah scores Liverpool's third goal
Mohamed Salah scores Liverpool’s third goal (Adam Davy/PA)

“From 3-0 on we controlled the game absolutely and nothing really happened anymore.

“The players didn’t like it too much, they wanted to be really loud in these moments, but I didn’t want to see any unnecessary risk.

“It was maybe not the most exciting but necessary. It was an absolutely super performance, super individual performances and the team performance was just really mature and professional, just what we needed.”

Klopp made seven changes at the Vitality Stadium following the emphatic midweek Merseyside derby win.

The German opted to give Sadio Mane a well-earned rest on the bench, while Divock Origi was also given a breather following his heroics against Everton as the Reds cantered to a first clean sheet in 14 games, without conceding an attempt on target.

The only sour note on the south coast came when defender Dejan Lovren had to be replaced by Trent Alexander-Arnold in the 40th minute.

Klopp, who was also without Georginio Wijnaldum and Adam Lallana because of minor issues, does not believe the Croatian’s injury to be severe ahead of Tuesday’s crucial Champions League clash with RB Salzburg.

“You don’t always know exactly but it looks not too serious, it looks like a bit of cramp,” Klopp said of Lovren.

“It’s similar to Gini Wijnaldum and Adam Lallana, not serious but serious enough to keep them out.

“We have two days to make sure that they can go again. I don’t know 100 per cent.”

Bournemouth boss Howe felt Ake’s early departure was the turning point of the game and believes his side are facing their toughest spell since promotion in 2015 because of a lengthy injury list.

Defeat for the Cherries, who were already missing the likes of Steve Cook, Charlie Daniels, David Brooks and Joshua King, was a fifth in succession to leave the club a point above the relegation zone.

“The game seemed to hinge on Nathan’s injury, to that point we’d looked relatively solid,” said Howe

“He gets his injury and we concede seconds later, it was a hammer blow, a double whammy with the injury and then the goal and we never recovered.

Nathan Ake was forced off at 0-0
Nathan Ake was forced off at 0-0 (Adam Davy/PA)

“I don’t want to make the excuse of injuries being behind everything but you just look at the number we have, with the quality of players we’re missing.

“I’m not sure there are many Premier League teams that could cope with that.

“It’s probably the biggest challenge we’ve ever faced since we came into the Premier League.”

Asked for an update on Ake, he replied: “I’ve got no idea. I saw what you saw on the pitch. I’ve not spoken to him, it looks like a hamstring injury, it looked quite serious, he knew straight away, so it doesn’t look good.”

Speaking about Wilson, he replied: “I’m, not 100 per cent sure what Callum’s problem was. It was a sprint to the corner, I saw him stop sprinting, was concerned that he said he had to come off.”