The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Whats my name?

-

Man United ....................2 Liverpool ....................... 1

MARCUS RASHFORD yesterday chose a good day to remind Manchester United of his penetrativ­e qualities.

This was the first time since his debut, in February 2016, that he has scored twice.

He did it with Gareth Southgate, the England manager, watching from the Sir Bobby Charlton Stand and it was the one Mancunian on the pitch who, ultimately, conjured up the decisive moments in the battle of the Premier League’s second and third-placed teams.

While Rashford produced one of his better performanc­es of the season, restored to the team after a difficult period for him personally since Alexis Sánchez’s arrival, Liverpool’s problem was that none of their big hitters reached their usual levels.

Mohamed Salah, in particular, took a long time before he started to carry any real menace and it was unusual as well for Roberto Firmino and Sadio Mané to be so ineffectiv­e.

Jürgen Klopp would be entitled to think his players had enough of the ball in the second half to rescue themselves but for all their pressure in the closing stages, including six minutes of stoppage-time when the drama was at its highest, they continued to lack their usual wit and creativity and all they had to show for it was Eric Bailly’s eccentric own goal.

“The two goals made the game not easy,” Klopp told Sky Sports. “We had a lot of OK moments, two good moments in the first half where we could finish better. We didn’t score before halftime and then in the second half we chased the game.

“It is really difficult to do against a team like Manchester United.”

The Liverpool manager felt his side should have had a penalty in the 82nd minute when Sadio Mané was challenged by substitute Marouane Fellaini.

“It was a clear penalty with Fellaini on Mané, in situations like this you need the right decision,” Klopp said. “It is all about the result and we lost.”

José Mourinho believed United deserved the win despite Liverpool’s revival in the second half. “We can split the halves — United first half and Liverpool second but in my opinion our first half was a half with goals and danger,” the manager said.

“In the second half — in my opinion — was Liverpool controllin­g with the ball and United controllin­g without the ball.

“Our team was always in control. Even in set pieces, corners, dangerous situations we were in control, so I think we deserved it.

“Against Liverpool if you play bad when you have the ball you can be in trouble.

“In the second half it was not our intention — I cannot say this was the plan. Liverpool pushed us into defensive situations but we kept control.

“It was a complete performanc­e by us with two different halves. If people don’t think we deserved it, I don’t care.” — Guardian

 ??  ?? ON FIRE . . . Marcus Rashford salutes the crowd
ON FIRE . . . Marcus Rashford salutes the crowd

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe