The Jerusalem Post

Liverpool coasting as City loses at United

Reds take commanding lead of Premiershi­p with victory at Bournemout­h • Leicester tops Villa

- • By NEIL ROBINSON

LONDON (Reuters) – Liverpool took a giant step towards its first title since 1990 on Saturday when its 3-0 win at Bournemout­h combined with Manchester United’s 2-1 victory at Manchester City to leave the reigning champion 14 points adrift of the Premier League leader.

With second-place Leicester, which beat Aston Villa 4-1 on Sunday, eight points behind Liverpool, Jurgen Klopp’s side is the clear odds-on favorite to finally secure the silverware that has eluded it for so long.

On a dramatic league Saturday, individual honors went to Tottenham Hotspur’s Son Heung-min, who dribbled almost the length of the pitch to score in his side’s 5-0 rout of Burnley, and Everton caretaker manager Duncan Ferguson, who inspired a 3-1 win over Chelsea in his first game in charge.

United, which beat Spurs in midweek, blew City away with a dazzling first-half performanc­e at the Etihad, which was capped by a VAR-awarded Marcus Rashford penalty and a strike from Anthony Martial.

Although David De Gea had to be at his sharpest to keep City at bay after the interval, when City scored through Nicolas Otamendi, United was well worth the victory – Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s first as player or manager in a Manchester derby.

“We’ll remember this one, we look so dangerous when we get the ball and go forward against arguably the best team in the world,” said Solskjaer.

Guardiola, whose team has dominated the Premier League with back-to-back title wins, was reluctant to talk about his team’s position in the league.

“It is not time to think about that. We have to think about what we have to do and think about the next game. Doesn’t matter if six, eight or 14 points, we have to continue. We are a fantastic team,” he said.

The only sour note for United, which is now fifth, came in the second half when midfielder Fred appeared to be hit by a missile thrown from the crowd as he went to take a corner in front of agitated City supporters. The Brazilian was not seriously hurt.

Fred was also the target of what appeared to be a racist gesture from a fan in the crowd, captured by television images.

City said it was working with police to identify the fans involved in the incidents and said the club had a “zero tolerance” approach to discrimina­tion and “anyone found guilty of racial abuse will be banned from the club for life.”

Liverpool, which won 4-0 on its previous two visits to Bournemout­h, again shuffled its side, making seven changes from the midweek Merseyside derby.

Two of Liverpool’s lesser lights, Alex

Oxlade-Chamberlai­n and Naby Keita, responded with goals before Mohamed Salah completed the formalitie­s in a win which saw Liverpool keep a clean sheet for the first time in 14 games.

An injury sustained by defender Dejan Lovren was the only blot on Liverpool’s day, but Klopp said he was hoping it was just a touch of cramp.

At Goodison Park, Everton looked nothing like the side that had subsided so abjectly at Liverpool, obviously re-energized by the fiery presence of Duncan Ferguson in place of Marco Silva in the dressing-room.

The Scot’s decision to switch formation was instantly rewarded with a goal for Richarliso­n before Dominic Calvert-Lewin added a double to send the crowd wild.

Although Ferguson said he had thoroughly enjoyed his first game in charge, he will not be asking for the job full-time.

“Honestly, I won’t be going asking for the job. I’m just here for Everton. It was an unbelievab­le experience; one I’ll never forget. We want the very best managers in the world at Everton Football Club. It’s one game. It’s one result.”

The win moved Everton away from the relegation zone, with most of its rivals

playing on Sunday.

At the Tottenham Hotspur stadium, Spurs delivered exactly the sort of response to their defeat at Manchester United that manager Jose Mourinho wanted.

Although Harry Kane scored twice to make it eight goals in nine games against Burnley, Son took the headlines with a superb effort that started just outside his own area and saw the South Korean slalom through half the opposition before slotting home from inside the box.

Lucas Moura and Moussa Sissoko completed the scoring against a Burnley side that has conceded nine goals in four days.

“Sonny stole the show today,” said Kane, who is not often overshadow­ed in front of goal. “An unbelievab­le goal, a great counter attack. All he wants to do is work hard and play for the team. He has great quality and works hard for the team.”

Struggling Watford ended a string of three straight defeats against Crystal Palace in a scrappy game watched by incoming manager Nigel Pearson, whose first game in charge could not be harder – a trip to Liverpool next Saturday.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? MANCHESTER UNITED’S Marcus Rashford (center) celebrates after scoring the Red Devils’ first goal on Saturday night in their 2-1 away victory over Pep Guardiola (inset) and Manchester City in their Premier League derby.
(Reuters) MANCHESTER UNITED’S Marcus Rashford (center) celebrates after scoring the Red Devils’ first goal on Saturday night in their 2-1 away victory over Pep Guardiola (inset) and Manchester City in their Premier League derby.
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