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Five games that won Norwegian the job with Devils

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LONDON: Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has been rewarded by Manchester United for engineerin­g a remarkable turnaround in the club’s fortunes since he took over from the sacked Jose Mourinho in December.

As well as famously guiding the Red Devils to the Champions League quarter-finals after an astonishin­g comeback against Paris St Germain, Solskjaer has hauled United back into contention for a top-four finish in the Premier League.

AFP Sports looks at five key wins that landed Solskjaer his dream job:

Cardiff 1 Man Utd 5

The calibre of opposition may have been meagre, but on the ground where his only previous experience as a Premier League manager went badly wrong, Solskjaer got the flying start he needed to kickstart his time in charge.

Banished towards the end of Mourinho’s reign, Paul Pogba was instrument­al with a part in four of the visitors’ five goals, while Marcus Rashford, Anthony Martial and Jesse Lingard all seemed to immediatel­y thrive when given more licence to attack.

Tottenham 0 Man Utd 1

When Mourinho was sacked, Mauricio Pochettino was immediatel­y installed as the favourite for the Old Trafford hotseat.

The Argentine has worked wonders to make Tottenham top-four regulars on a far more restricted budget than his competitor­s.

But Solskjaer won his first headto-head battle with the Argentine at Wembley thanks to a combinatio­n of smart tactics and the brilliance of David de Gea.

The gameplan to spring Rashford’s pace on the counter-attack worked to perfection for the only goal just before half-time.

Thereafter De Gea made 11 saves to keep Tottenham at bay and haul United back into the race for a topfour finish.

Chelsea 0 Man Utd 2

A quest for FA Cup glory may have ended in quarter-final defeat to Wolves, but impressive wins at Arsenal and Chelsea in the earlier rounds showed Solskjaer’s victory at Tottenham was not a flash in the pan.

Ander Herrera and Pogba scored two wonderfull­y crafted goals and despite Chelsea’s dominance of possession, United defended well and had far more punch in attack.

Man Utd 3 Southampto­n 2

“It is like the old days,” said Solskjaer, a legendary scorer of late goals in his playing days, after Romelu Lukaku’s late winner swung a five-goal thriller United’s way.

A home win over Southampto­n is not normally a cause from great celebratio­n, but the manner of victory in coming from behind with an injury-ravaged squad proved vital for building United’s momentum for what was a momentous midweek to come.

PSG 1 Man Utd 3

The French champions inflicted the sole defeat of Solskjaer’s first 17 games in charge with what seemed like a statement 2-0 win at Old Trafford in the first leg of their Champions League last-16 tie.

No side had ever overturned a 2-0 first leg home defeat in European Cup history and United travelled to Paris bereft of 10 first team players, including Pogba through suspension.

Solskjaer’s men had their share of luck, benefiting from glaring errors by Thilo Kehrer and Gianluigi Buffon and a highly controvers­ial stoppage-time penalty awarded with the help of VAR for a handball by Presnel Kimpembe.

But this was the night when any doubts over who would get the job on a permanent basis disappeare­d.

Solskjaer was canny to remain cautious and ensure United stayed in the tie long enough to prey on PSG’s nerves. And the belief he instilled in a young team, demonstrat­ed by Rashford’s confident spot-kick, was richly rewarded as the club celebrated one of their best-ever European nights. — AFP

 ?? — AP ?? Revenge exacted: Manchester United’s Marcus Rashford scoring his side’s third goal from the penalty spot during the Champions League last16, second leg match against Paris St Germain on March 6.
— AP Revenge exacted: Manchester United’s Marcus Rashford scoring his side’s third goal from the penalty spot during the Champions League last16, second leg match against Paris St Germain on March 6.

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