United lift Mourinho, Liverpool leave it late

AFP  |  London 

Manchester United put a smile back on Jose Mourinho's face as fine goals from and sealed a 2-0 win over Everton, while left it late to snatch a 2-1 victory at

Martial started in the absence of the injured Romelu Lukaku and the United forward broke the deadlock in the 57th minute at Goodison Park.


teed up Martial on the edge of the area and he stroked a sublime finish into the top corner for his ninth goal of the season.

Having struggled towards the end of 2017, United were more commanding in their first match of the new year and Lingard wrapped up the points with a superb solo strike in the 81st minute.

The beat several Everton players before curling home from 20 yards for his fourth goal in his last five appearances.

It was a welcome tonic for Mourinho amid reports the is beginning to lose the support of his players after branding them "childish" and "immature" and admitting the squad needs major investment to catch City.

United moved back into second place in the after ending a frustrating run of three successive draws during the congested period.

"Our pride, our effort, everything was top class and on top of it we played very well. It wasn't a performance of tired boys, with the worst possible calendar," Mourinho said.

"Jesse is more consistent, he is adaptable, he is going in a good direction."

United are 12 points behind leaders Manchester City, who host Watford on Tuesday, and two points ahead of third placed Chelsea, who play Arsenal tomorrow.

With and missing due to respectively and left on the bench, was the lone member of Liverpool's 'Fab Four' to start at rain-lashed Turf Moor.

Mane showed can thrive without his star team-mates as he opened the scoring in the 61st minute, hammering home from the edge of the area for his eighth club goal this season.

equalised with just three minutes left as Sam Vokes flicked on and pounced to slot home.

But Liverpool's headed on a free-kick four minutes into stoppage-time and defender poked home from close-range.

Liverpool's third successive win extended their unbeaten league run to 13 games as they cemented their place in the top four.

"A very difficult game, the weather made it so hard, windy, rainy," Klopp said.

"This is one of the toughest places to play all season. Did we deserve to win? I don't care. We got the three points."

manager faced calls for his sacking after a 1-0 home defeat against

Stoke's latest lacklustre display piled pressure on Hughes, whose gamble of fielding a weakened team in Saturday's 5-0 thrashing at Chelsea proved an unwise move.

took a deserved lead in the 73rd minute when Ayoze Perez stabbed past from close-range.

That triggered chants for Hughes's dismissal from fans, with a 'Hughes out' banner held aloft in the stands.

have won once in their last six games and sit two points above the relegation zone.

- High standards -

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Asked if he feared the sack, a defiant Hughes said: "Who else is going to do it?

"In terms of the knowledge of the group and the progress in my time here, I'm the best person to do it."

duo and Islam Slimani inspired Leicester's 3-0 win over Huddersfield.

Claude Puel's side took the lead through Mahrez in the 53rd minute, the meeting Marc Albrighton's cross with a well-taken volley for his eighth goal of the season.

With striker sidelined by a groin injury, Islam Slimani who marked only his second league start this season with his first league goal since April -- a chipped finish in the 60th minute.

Albrighton's 90th minute goal capped a good afternoon for Leicester, who ended a four-match winless run.

Callum Wilson's second goal in three games earned Bournemouth a 2-2 draw at south coast rivals Brighton.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, January 02 2018. 09:40 IST