The Herald (South Africa)

Ibra sparks Man United as Lukaku lifts Everton

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EVERGREEN Manchester United striker Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c likened himself to film character Benjamin Button after inspiring his team to a 3-0 victory at English Premier League basement club Sunderland yesterday.

Ibrahimovi­c, 35, opened the scoring with his 28th goal of the season and after Seb Larsson had been sent off for Sunderland, goals from Henrikh Mkhitaryan and Marcus Rashford completed victory.

“I feel like Benjamin Button. I was born old and will die young,” Ibrahimovi­c said, citing the 2008 Brad Pitt film about a man who ages in reverse.

In the day’s other game, league top scorer Romelu Lukaku took his tally to 23 goals with a brace as Everton ended Leicester City’s six-game winning run with an entertaini­ng 4-2 victory.

United extended their unbeaten record to 21 league games and climbed to fifth place in the table, four points below fourth-place Manchester City, who have played a game more.

“The result was good,” United manager Jose Mourinho, whose side will return to sixth place if Arsenal win at Crystal Palace tonight, said.

United were without goalkeeper David de Gea due to a minor hip injury, with Sergio Romero deputising, but Mourinho expects the Spaniard to be fit for the visit of Chelsea next Sunday.

Ibrahimovi­c broke the deadlock on the halfhour at the Stadium of Light, fending off Billy Jones and whipping a low shot past Jordan Pickford from 20m for his 18th goal of the league campaign.

Sunderland then lost Larsson to a furiously contested straight red card after referee Craig Pawson decided the Swede’s challenge on Ander Herrera had been unduly reckless.

The hosts’ hopes of a comeback evaporated within 46 seconds of kick-off in the second half as Luke Shaw fed Mkhitaryan to drill a low, angled shot beyond Pickford’s dive.

Substitute Rashford completed the scoring late on, exchanging passes with Ibrahimovi­c and arrowing a low drive into the bottom-left corner.

United play Anderlecht in Brussels on Thursday in the first leg of their Europa League quarterfin­al.

Sunderland have lost six and drawn one of their last seven games and now lie 10 points adrift of safety, relegation to the Championsh­ip looming closer with each passing week.

“Today the result was helped by the referee,” Sunderland manager David Moyes said.

“Manchester United were playing well, but the red card was a decision that went against us.”

Everton drew level with sixth-placed Arsenal, having played three more games, after thwarting Leicester manager Craig Shakespear­e’s quest for a sixth successive league win and seventh in total.

Home-grown 18-year-old midfielder Tom Davies put Everton ahead after only 31 seconds following a dart into the box by Kevin Mirallas.

Demarai Gray released Islam Slimani to level in the fourth minute and six minutes later, Marc Albrighton’s free-kick put Leicester ahead.

Lukaku equalised in the 23rd minute, heading in a cross by Ross Barkley, and after Phil Jagielka headed in from a corner, Lukaku smashed in his second with half an hour to play. – AFP

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