Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta admitted his side got what they deserved in their 3-0 loss to Liverpool on Saturday.

It was Arteta's 50th Premier League fixture in charge of the Gunners and before the game he called for the them to take the game to Liverpool, having won the corresponding fixture last year with a mixture of guile, guts and luck.

But with the injured quartet of David Luiz, Granit Xhaka, Bukayo Saka and Emile Smith Rowe missing, the Spaniard admitted his side got what they deserved.

He said: "I think Liverpool completely deserved to win the game, probably with a bigger margin because they were much better than us in every single department and we were extremely poor today.

"I don't know if it was the worst (performance of my reign), but probably one of the worst and the one that really shocked me.

"I think every defeat is different. This one hurts deeply because of the image that we showed today and the lack of clarity that we wanted to get out from this game.

"We need to apologise to our people, to our fans, and this standard is nowhere near what we want. I am fully responsible for that."

Asked about his missing players, Arteta was bullish in his reply, adding: "I don't care who is missing, that is excuses. The international (break) is excuses and I hate excuses.

"They were much better than us in every single department. And they fully deserved to win the
match by a bigger margin.

"I am fully responsible for that. The rest, about one player (missing), two players, three players, is just excuses."

Jurgen Klopp hailed Liverpool's fine win as a "very important statement" as the Reds looks to salvage their Premier League campaign by securing a top-four finish.

Manchester City's win at Leicester earlier in the day meant Liverpool's hopes of retaining their title were mathematically over after a season of mixed performances, poor results and terrible injury problems.

But they were back to their scintillating best at the Emirates Stadium as they dominated Arsenal and secured a 3-0 win courtesy of a brace from substitute Diogo Jota either side of a Mohamed Salah strike.

The victory leaves Liverpool fifth in the table and two points behind Chelsea as they battle to end the season in the Champions League positions.

"We need to show that we are really fighting for it, we can't only talk about it we have to show it on the pitch," said Reds boss Klopp.

"For us it was a very important statement. If we defend like this tonight we are difficult to break down, then we have a good basis to play football.

"In our position it is clear, everything that has happened to us this season means we don't have it (a top-four finish) in our hands.

"We have to win our games and others have to lose but we have to make pressure on them. That is what we did with the result but we are still not in. We have to fight and we will fight and that is the statement for us and nobody else."

Liverpool were on top from the get-go as the visitors showed their class - specifically in midfield where Thiago and Fabinho were at their best.

But despite dominating the contest it took until Jota's introduction for their superiority to show.

He needed less than three minutes to break the deadlock as he headed home a fine Trent Alexander-Arnold cross and would then tuck in a third for Liverpool after Mohamed Salah rolled in his 18th league goal of the season.

"He was in a really good moment," Klopp said of his forward. "He played a little bit too much for Portugal for my taste. No criticism, just that he was long injured and he played too much for us already.

"He went to Portugal and the last two games were intense and he felt it a little bit."