So much for Liverpool struggling under the weight of its growing injury list.
Deprived of top scorer Mohamed Salah, captain Jordan Henderson and three-quarters of their first-choice defense, the champions still easily dealt with Leicester -- the team that came into the weekend in first place in the Premier League -- in an impressive 3-0 win at Anfield on Sunday.
In fact, so intense was the pressing, so threatening was the team's attacking game and so comfortable was the pieced-together backline, you'd never know this was a makeshift lineup fielded by Liverpool manager Jürgen Klopp.
Leicester, coached by former Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers, had won all four of its away games this season but was two goals down by halftime following an own-goal by Jonny Evans in the 21st minute and a glancing header by Diogo Jota in the 41st.
With that goal, Jota -- signed from Wolverhampton in the offseason -- became the first player in Liverpool's history to score in his first four home top-division appearances.
Liverpool struck the goal frame three times in the second half -- twice through Roberto Firmino and then through Sadio Mane -- while a defense that contained midfielders James Milner and Fabinho never really looked like conceding, shackling the threat of danger man Jamie Vardy.
Firmino got the goal his overall display deserved when he headed in a corner from Milner.
It was a statement performance from Liverpool, on a weekend Manchester City and Manchester United -- two of its possible title rivals -- again failed to impress. The champions climbed above Leicester and into second place, behind Tottenham only on goal difference, and are now unbeaten in their last 64 home games in the top flight, which is a club record.