Mark Hughes says fightback will give QPR survival belief

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QPR gave Liverpool too much respect - Hughes

QPR boss Mark Hughes insists the fightback his side produced to beat Liverpool 3-2 will give them renewed belief in their relegation battle.

The Loftus Road side came back from two goals down to beat the Reds.

"This is just the beginning as we have a huge job in front of us but this will give us great belief," said Hughes.

"The players know we are in a huge battle to stay in the league but if we play like we did in the last 20 minutes we have a good chance."

The victory moved QPR out of the relegation zone and provided only a second league win for Hughes since he took over from Neil Warnock in January.

The win came on the back of a 2-1 loss against Bolton when QPR felt aggrieved at a goal being disallowed when Clint Hill's header appeared to have crossed the line.

But Hughes added: "Today [against Liverpool] maybe there was a shift in the amount of luck we possessed. We just weren't to be denied."

A spectacular Sebastian Coates volley and a Dirk Kuyt effort had put Liverpool in a comfortable position before QPR's comeback.

Shaun Derry and ex-Liverpool forward Djibril Cisse pulled QPR level before Jamie Mackie struck an injury-time winner.

"We've come back from a situation where we looked dead and buried," said Hughes, whose side have still have to play the top five in the Premier League.

"I didn't think we deserved to be 2-0 down. We had nothing to lose and thought 'lets go for it', which is what we did.

"We took the game back to Liverpool. Recently we have felt aggrieved as things have gone against. But that will give us huge belief now.

"There was some great performances and everybody deserves a mention. I thought the crowd were fantastic as they never lost faith in us. Once we got a little bit of momentum they drove us over the line."

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No explanation for defeat - Dalglish

Liverpool have lost four of their last five league game in the midst of winning the Carling Cup and progressing to the FA Cup semi-finals.

Reds boss Kenny Dalglish was left as stunned as his players at his team's capitulation, which leaves them 12 points behind a top four place.

"It's very difficult to explain," said the Scot. "We played some fantastic football. We were deserving of our lead and we weren't even under pressure.

"With a bit of care and better finishing we might have been three or four up at half-time.

"You just couldn't see a goal coming from them and maybe the luck they didn't get against Bolton they got here."

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