Mohamed Salah scored a late equaliser from a penalty kick to help Liverpool escape Old Trafford with a single point in a 2-2 draw with Manchester United, climbing level on points with Premier League leaders Arsenal.
Salah stroked home in the 84th minute for his sixth league goal at Old Trafford, the most of any visiting player in the league's history, overtaking Steven Gerrard's five.
With seven games remaining in the neck-and-neck title race, Liverpool and Arsenal have 71 points with the Gunners leading on goal difference. Defending champions Manchester City is third on 70 points.
"It feels like a loss, it is our fault again," Liverpool skipper Virgil van Dijk told the BBC.
"We had so many chances and we should finish the game off."
Luis Diaz got Liverpool on the scoreboard in the 23rd minute when Dominik Szoboszlai swung in a corner that Darwin Nunez headed to the unmarked Colombian who hooked in a volley from close range.
But Bruno Fernandes scored a wild goal — the United skipper's 50th league goal for the side — with their first shot on target in the 50th minute when he latched on to a loose Liverpool pass and lobbed the ball from the centre circle past keeper Caoimhin Kelleher.
Kobbie Mainoo had the Old Trafford faithful roaring with his rocket from just inside the 18-yard box that sailed into the far top corner in the 67th minute.
Mainoo was the first 18-year-old to score a league goal against Liverpool since Cesc Fabregas for Arsenal in 2005, and the delighted teenager sprinted to the corner flag to salute the crowd in celebration.
"It's an unbelievable feeling to score my first Old Trafford goal and to do it in this fixture was even more special," Mainoo told Sky Sports, adding that he was disappointed about the result.
"We didn't get the three points and that's the main thing. I think we performed really well in the second half. The lads made minor mistakes and if we iron them out then we win the game."
Liverpool was awarded its match-saving penalty when Harvey Elliott was taken down in the box.
It was the second time in recent weeks that Erik ten Hag's team had struck a blow against Liverpool, dispatching the Reds from the FA Cup with a dramatic 4-3 quarterfinal home win in extra time last month.
But it was also the third consecutive game that United had given up late goals, in a 1-1 draw at Brentford and 4-3 loss at Chelsea.
The match marked the first time Liverpool had failed to win a league game in which it held a lead since October against Brighton.
"We should have won the game, that is clear," Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp told Sky Sports.
"We should have had other goals in the first half already. As far as I'm concerned, we have a point more than we did before. They put an extra shift in, that's how it is.
"We don't have many home games left. The team who wins the league in the end should deserve it. We are in the race and I'm absolutely fine with it."
Tottenham Hotspur boosted its Champions League qualifying hopes with a 3-1 home win over relegation-battling Nottingham Forest on Sunday to move into fourth spot in the Premier League.
Second-half goals from Micky van de Ven and Pedro Porro, after Forest's Chris Wood had cancelled out Murillo's own goal in the opening period, helped Spurs capitalise on rivals Aston Villa and Manchester United dropping points this weekend.
Tottenham's victory puts it level with Villa on 60 points but with a game in hand.
Spurs coach Ange Postecoglou, however, told reporters that he "couldn't care less about the race for fourth, what I care about is the way the team is progressing".
"I thought we lost our way a little bit towards the back end of the first half, but super reaction and I thought the whole second half we dominated," the Australian said.
Tottenham led after 15 minutes when Brazilian Murillo, who minutes earlier almost scored an audacious goal from inside his own half, turned Timo Werner's cross into his own net.
Brennan Johnson then nearly doubled the home side's lead against his former club but the forward's effort was stopped by the strong hand of goalkeeper Matz Sels.
Spurs were rampant and a second goal seemed like an inevitability until Forest equalised against the run of play in the 27th minute through Wood's fourth goal in four games.
The New Zealand striker should have had a second 10 minutes before the break but smashed his shot against the post from close range.
Forest felt Spurs should have been down to 10 men shortly before half-time after James Maddison appeared to strike Ryan Yates off the ball but VAR declined to intervene.
Dutch defender van de Ven hit a thunderbolt from the edge of the area to restore Spurs' lead after 52 minutes before Porro produced a great finish six minutes later.
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Reuters