The Citizen (Gauteng)

United get out of jail, but frustratio­n builds

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– Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c marked his return from suspension with a 94th-minute equaliser as Manchester United were held to a 1-1 draw with Everton last night on another frustratin­g night at Old Trafford.

A deliberate handball by Ashley Williams, who was sent off, allowed Ibrahimovi­c to cancel out Phil Jagielka’s opener and extend United’s unbeaten run in the Premier League to 20 matches.

But it remained an unwelcome result for Jose Mourinho’s side, who have now drawn nine games at home this season and trail fourth-place Manchester City by

Manchester

four points.

Ibrahimovi­c’s last-gasp spotkick – his 27th goal of the season – meant United held on to fifth place, three points above Arsenal and Everton having played a game more than the former.

The Europa League looks increasing­ly like their best hope of securing a return to the Champions League next season.

They face Belgian side Anderlecht in a two-legged quarter-final later this month, with the winner of the competitio­n assured of a place at Europe’s top table.

United manager Mourinho welcomed top scorer Ibrahimovi­c and Ander Herrera back from suspension, while Paul Pogba returned to the bench following a hamstring injury.

His side fell behind in the 22nd minute when Williams flicked on Kevin Mirallas’s right-wing corner and centre-back Jagielka held off Marcos Rojo to poke a volley between David de Gea’s legs.

Everton goalkeeper Joel Robles, much criticised after his side’s 3-1 derby loss at Liverpool, produced flying saves to repel a Daley Blind free-kick and a rasping Herrera drive.

Pogba came on at half-time and headed against a post from an Ashley Young free-kick, while Ibrahimovi­c had a 71st-minute header chalked off for a marginal offside.

But in the fourth minute of injury time, Williams was penalised for parrying a shot from substitute Luke Shaw – brought in from the cold by Mourinho – and Ibrahimovi­c dispatched the penalty.

Elsewhere, Leicester City’s resurgence under Craig Shakespear­e continued as they beat bottom club Sunderland 2-0 to record a sixth successive win since the dismissal of manager Claudio Ranieri.

Champions Leicester are now 10th, a healthy nine points above the bottom three.

Substitute Islam Slimani opened the scoring with a 69th-minute header before Jamie Vardy smashed in his sixth goal in seven games.

Defeat completed a miserable week for Sunderland manager David Moyes, who was caught on camera threatenin­g to “slap” a female television reporter.

George Boyd struck as Burnley boosted their survival hopes by beating Stoke City 1-0, while goals from M’Baye Niang and skipper Troy Deeney earned Watford a 2-0 home win over West Brom. –

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