Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Brilliant Newcastle claim huge win over frail Manchester United to climb into third

Tom Pritchard
Newcastle celebrate scoring
Newcastle celebrate scoringAFP
Just 35 days after losing 2-0 to Manchester United in the Carabao Cup final, Newcastle United returned the favour at St. James’ Park, making it three league victories in a row and moving back into third place at the Red Devils’ expense.

March’s international break arguably came at the wrong time for Newcastle, who had started to regain the sort of pre-Christmas form that initially opened up the possibility of a first UEFA Champions League appearance in 20 years. Regardless, they were able to continue that momentum via an impressive first-half display, and Eddie Howe’s side could well have taken a deserved lead as early as the 16th minute. Jacob Murphy’s chipped ball into the area was met by Alexander Isak, who headed on target but saw his effort pushed away by David de Gea, before Joe Willock’s effort on the rebound was fired straight at the Spaniard.

Backed by a typically-vocal home crowd, the Magpies continued suffocating their visitors as the minutes ticked towards HT. Yet, they remained bereft of a killer instinct in the final third, as Sean Longstaff’s speculative effort from 25 yards out flew just wide of the left post. There was still time for another good Newcastle chance before HT though, as the ever-threatening Allan Saint-Maximin pulled the ball back to Willock, but the midfielder’s effort from inside the area went over the crossbar, as ten Hag’s men breathed a sigh of relief.

Perhaps feeding off the emotion of a crowd that had seen Newcastle pipped to a maiden PL title by the Red Devils on three occasions in the 1990s, the Tynesiders’ superiority continued after HT, and it was only a matter of time before they took the lead. They eventually did just that when Bruno Guimarães chipped a ball to the back post, allowing Saint-Maximin to nod back for the unmarked Willock, who headed home from a couple of yards out to send the Geordie faithful into raptures.

That proved to be the Frenchman’s last contribution in a solid personal performance, as Joelinton replaced him from the bench as part of a double substitution. Benefitting from fresh legs, substitute Callum Wilson rounded the game off in style late on, heading in a flighted Kieran Tripper free kick to send the ball in off the far post. Newcastle duly leapfrog their opponents into third place after ending a near four-year wait for success in this fixture, while a sorely below-par Man United have now failed to score in three straight league games for the first time since 2020.

Flashscore Man of the Match: Bruno Guimarães (Newcastle United)

See stats from the match at Flashscore