Belfast Telegraph

United hit quickfire treble to seal final four clash with City

- BY MARK CRITCHLEY

MAN UTD: Romero, Young, Tuanzebe (Garner, 65 mins), Maguire, Shaw (Williams, 62 mins), Pereira, Matic, Greenwood, Mata, Rashford (Lingard, 62 mins), Martial.

Unused subs: Jones, Grant, McTominay, Chong.

COLCHESTER: Gerken, Jackson, Eastman, Prosser, Bramall, Lapslie, Pell (Stevenson, 66 mins), Comley (Gambin, 73 mins), Harriott (Adubofour-Poku, 77 mins), Nouble, Norris. Unused subs: Sowunmi, Jevani Brown, Clampin, Ross.

Referee: David Coote (Nottingham­shire)

Man of the match: Marcus Rashford

Match rating: 6/10

THIS briefly looked as though it would be another one of those evenings for Manchester United, like against Rochdale in this competitio­n a few months ago, when they would fail to break the back of stubborn lower-league defence despite dominating in terms of both possession and territory. But on nights like these, it helps to have Marcus Rashford.

Rashford scored the opener, enforced the second and set up the third as Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s side comfortabl­y overcame a dogged Colchester United outfit to pass through to the EFL Cup semi-finals, where they will face holders Manchester City.

Despite the many unanswered questions which surround Solskjaer’s reign, a potential first trophy is now coming into view.

Fourth-tier Colchester had already eliminated Crystal Palace and Tottenham from this competitio­n and are unbeaten in League Two since mid-October, making this a potential banana skin. Going to a penalty shoot-out, like against Rochdale in the third round, would have been deemed unacceptab­le but Rashford, Anthony Martial and a Ryan Jackson own goal ensured the job was done inside 90 minutes.

Some — not least Solskjaer himself — were drawing comparison­s between Rashford and Cristiano Ronaldo only last week but his first-half performanc­e was their reminder not to get too carried away. It began with two devilishly-struck free-kicks, the second of which was spilled by goalkeeper Dean Gerken, but he squandered several better goal-scoring opportunit­ies.

Twice Andreas Pereira bypassed Colchester’s low deep-set defence, twice Rashford miscontrol­led to waste the opening. A few minutes later, he tried one of those dipping efforts on goal after stepping inside from the left that are quickly becoming his trademark. It bounced out harmlessly for a throw-in.

United needed to find solutions in the second half.

A rare visiting counter-attack ended with right-back Jackson shooting tamely at Sergio Romero. The ball quickly found its way to Rashford, in the space Jackson had vacated. He cut inside, evaded Thomas Eastman’s sliding tackle and finished emphatical­ly.

He piled further misery on Jackson minutes later, applying pressure which forced the fullback to convert Mason Greenwood’s cross into his own net.

Their third goal was their best, with yet another delicate ball over the top of the defence by Pereira. Rashford connected this time, squaring across the penalty area for Martial to convert while sliding at the far post.

Much like last Thursday’s Europa League win against AZ Alkmaar, a 10-minute blitz of goals at the start of the second half had settled the contest in United’s favour. Perhaps this team can play the quick, intricate and incisive passing that Solskjaer wants to see against less ambitious sides, but much tougher tests will come if they are to make this their manager’s first trophy.

 ??  ?? Take that: Manchester United striker Marcus Rashford fires his side ahead at Old Trafford last night
Take that: Manchester United striker Marcus Rashford fires his side ahead at Old Trafford last night

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