Premier League: Man United slumps 0-3 to Bournemouth; Wolves get the better of Foxes
Premier League: Man United slumps 0-3 to Bournemouth; Wolves get the better of Foxes
Bournemouth thrashed Manchester United 3-0 in the Premier League at a chilly Old Trafford on Sunday thanks to goals from Dean Huijsen, Justin Kluivert and Antoine Semenyo, climbing to fifth in the standings.
Bournemouth’s fourth league victory in five matches moved it to 28 points after 17 games, while United is 13th with 22 points and will spend Christmas in the bottom half of the table for the first time in Premier League history.
Huijsen put the visitors on the score sheet when he out-jumped Joshua Zirkzee to head home Ryan Christie’s free kick in the 29th minute. United have been plagued by set piece issues, giving up two goals from corner kicks against Arsenal and then one to Nottingham Forest earlier this month.
While United peppered Bournemouth with shots late in the first half, including three from captain Bruno Fernandes, it was the visitors who put the game away with two goals within two minutes early in the second half.
Kluivert scored from the penalty spot in the 61st minute, awarded after Noussair Mazraoui brought down the Dutch winger, sending keeper Andre Onana the wrong way.
The delighted Bournemouth fans were still celebrating when Dango Ouattara swept a pass into Semenyo inside the box two minutes later. United defender Lisandro Martinez put up little resistance as Semenyo unleashed a hard shot past Onana.
“It’s an important win for us,” Bournemouth manager Andoni Iraola said. “We won 3-0 but it was more difficult than it looks when you see 3-0. I think we’ve been quite solid, it was a mature performance.”
Bournemouth’s supporters gleefully sang “Man United, it’s happened again” in the dying minutes, in reference to the Cherries’ victory by the same score at Old Trafford last season.
United looked completely out of sorts at both ends of the pitch for most of a game that came on the heels of their feel-good 2-1 derby victory over Manchester City a week earlier.
“It’s hard to push for two, three wins and we are trying,” United boss Ruben Amorim said. “This game was hard on us. We suffered again on set-pieces and we were a bit nervous, I felt it in the stadium. The penalty and another goal are really hard here. We tried to score some goals but it was a tough match so let’s move on.
“We have to focus on the job and not what you feel in the stadium. It’s the only way I know how to focus my players. We have to suffer again but we will try to win. We will do it until the end.”
United had 23 shots to Bournemouth’s 10, including the flurry right before the break that saw Fernandes fire a rocket from the top of the 18-yard box that sailed just wide of the net. Seconds later, Kobbie Mainoo beat three defenders before shooting just wide of the post.
Alejandro Garnacho squandered a terrific chance in the second half when he outsprinted two defenders before shooting at keeper Kepa.
Amorim left forward Marcus Rashford out of his squad for the third successive match amid rumours his time with the club could be limited.
The 27-year-old forward, who was at the stadium on Sunday but not on the bench, appears to have fallen out of favour, and said in an interview earlier in the week that he was ready for a “new challenge” away from the club
Wolverhampton Wanderers kicked off the Vitor Pereira era with an impressive 3-0 victory over Leicester City in the Premier League on Sunday to snap a four-match losing streak and move a step closer to the safety zone.
Pereira, who was appointed Wolves’ new manager on Thursday, made several changes to the starting line-up from Gary O’Neil’s last game in charge and the visitors played with courage and intent to score all three goals in the first half.
With goals from Goncalo Guedes, Rodrigo Gomes and Matheus Cunha, the victory gave Wolves’ fans some Christmas cheer as the side moved up to 18th, two points behind 17th-placed Leicester.
The fans sang Pereira’s name after the full-time whistle.
Wolves took the lead in the 19th minute when Guedes allowed a long ball from Nelson Semedo to bounce and the Portuguese forward took a shot from a tight angle without looking up to beat Danny Ward in Leicester’s goal.
Wolves were gifted a second goal when Leicester right back James Justin let Matt Doherty’s long diagonal ball go through, unaware that Gomes was stealing in behind him and the winger controlled the ball before poking it past Ward to make it 2-0.
Vardy nearly halved the lead before halftime but saw Toti Gomes clear the ball off the line and seconds later, Wolves made it 3-0 at the other end for the boos to only get louder.
A livid Nistelrooy made changes at halftime and Leicester had more of the ball in the second half, but Pereira’s Wolves were happy to sit back with a three-goal cushion.
Scores of Leicester fans headed for the exits as the clock wound down and it was the Wolves fans whose cheers echoed around the emptying stadium.
It was the perfect start for Pereira as Wolves kept their first clean sheet in 17 away games in the league, their last coming in January in Brighton.