Sergio Aguero and Gonzalo Higuain and were both among the goals as Manchester City and Chelsea responded to their midweek difficulties in stunning style.

Here, we take a look at what we learned from the latest round of Premier League fixtures.

HATS OFF TO SERGIO

Sergio Aguero plundered a fine hat-trick to underline his enduring potency as Manchester City beat Arsenal 3-1 to erase the memories of their midweek defeat at Newcastle.

The Argentina international was in the right place at the right time firstly to head Aymeric Laporte’s first-minute cross past keeper Bernd Leno and then to strike from close range after Ilkay Gundogan and Raheem Sterling had combined superbly before completing his 10th Premier League treble by bundling home with a hint of handball.

HIGUAIN TO THE RESCUE

Gonzalo Higuain delivered on his full debut to earn some respite for Chelsea boss Maurizio Sarri after his midweek from hell.

The Italian clearly has issues at Stamford Bridge – not least those arising from his sporadic, public critiques of his team – but the fact is they remain active in all four major competitions and could have, in Higuain, a player capable of ending their long-standing search for a talismanic number nine.

SUPER SON

Son Heung-min’s goalscoring return for Tottenham illustrated just how much Mauricio Pochettino’s men have missed him during his Asian Cup campaign. But it also underlined Son’s status as surely the most under-rated player in the Premier League right now.

Having scored 14 goals already this season in spite of his absences, Son could – and probably should – soon be forcing his way into player-of-the-year contention.

RASH HOUR

Marcus Rashford continues to revel in the responsibility handed to him by Manchester United’s interim boss Ole Gunnar Solskjaer.

Minutes after squandering a gilt-edged opportunity to head United in front at Leicester, he collected Paul Pogba’s inviting ball over the top with a sublime first touch and then dispatched it past Kasper Schmeichel with a gleeful second to secure three points with big money signing Romelu Lukaku looking on enviously from the bench.

NO SILVA LINING

Many of Everton’s recent issues seem to stem from the gulf separating their ambitions and reality. A succession of managers have tried and failed to bridge that gap but by more modest measurements, Marco Silva is failing to hit the mark.

Defeat to Wolves was Everton’s sixth in nine games and illustrates the extent of the malaise at Goodison Park, as another season – and likely soon another manager – slips into the abyss.