Solskjaer In Man United Record Books As Winning Streak Continues
3rd January 2019
The victory, secured after Lukaku scored with his first touch of the game in the 64th minute, clinched a fourth win in as many games for United's interim manager

- Ole Gunnar Solskjaer joined Matt Busby in the Manchester United record books on Wednesday as his inspirational decision to bring on Romelu Lukaku as a substitute paid immediate dividends in a 2-0 victory against Newcastle
- And Solskjaer now joins United's iconic former leader Busby as the only other manager in the club's proud history to have started his career with four wins
- Lukaku pounced after Martin Dubravka had failed to hold onto Marcus Rashford's ambitious 25-yard free-kick, the Newcastle keeper spilling the ball for the alert substitute to covert from close range.
- The Belgian also had a role in United's second, in the 80th minute, along with Alexis Sanchez, the former Arsenal striker who has been out for over a month and was brought on, along with Lukaku
NEWCASTLE, United
Kingdom- Ole Gunnar Solskjaer joined Matt Busby in the Manchester United
record books on Wednesday as his inspirational decision to bring on Romelu
Lukaku as a substitute paid immediate dividends in a 2-0 victory against
Newcastle.
The victory, secured after Lukaku scored with his first
touch of the game in the 64th minute, clinched a fourth win in as many games
for United's interim manager.
And Solskjaer now joins United's iconic former leader Busby
as the only other manager in the club's proud history to have started his
career with four wins.
Lukaku pounced after Martin Dubravka had failed to hold onto
Marcus Rashford's ambitious 25-yard free-kick, the Newcastle keeper spilling
the ball for the alert substitute to covert from close range.
The Belgian also had a role in United's second, in the 80th
minute, along with Alexis Sanchez, the former Arsenal striker who has been out
for over a month and was brought on, along with Lukaku.
The two subs combined passes, as Newcastle pressed upfield
in search of an equaliser, and Sanchez's precise pass found Rashford in space,
the young England striker having the poise to calmly roll the ball past
Dubravka.
After a miserable first half to the season under Solskjaer's
predecessor Jose Mourinho, the win simply adds to the growing adoration being
shown by United supporters towards their former player.
United's executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward, widely
criticised for his part in the club's woes since the retirement of Alex
Ferguson and their decline from the summit of the English game, had at least
spotted the wisdom in his timing of Mourinho's dismissal earlier this month.
It presented the interim manager with three eminently
winnable games against Cardiff, Huddersfield and Bournemouth -- victories which
Solskjaer duly collected in some style.
But the visit to St James's Park, at the end of a busy
holiday period, was always going to be one that offered a far greater challenge
to the "new-look" United and the opening half certainly served as a
timely reminder of how much work Solskjaer still has to do if he is to elevate
this season to anything above the instantly forgettable.
Pogba factor
Paul Pogba, involved in seven goals in the three games since
Solskjaer took over, again looked a different player away from the stifling
micro management of Mourinho.
His early shot tested Dubravka in the home goal but while
there was plenty of intent on United's part there was little that truly
concerned Rafa Benitez's side.
Instead, it was the struggling hosts who enjoyed the better
of that first half, reminding Solskjaer, in case he needed it, of just how
frail his new side can be defensively.
Twice, in quick succession midway through the first half,
Christian Atsu pounced on poor defending although without really testing David
de Gea.
United defender Phil Jones also contributed to the general
unease at the back, needlessly giving the ball away on the edge of his own area
before making up for the error with a brilliant tackle on Salomon Rondon.
The second half saw United step up their attacking game,
Rashford soon twisting in from the by-line and shooting across the face of the
goal.
And, although there was another promising flurry of
Newcastle pressure, and a penalty appeal after Victor Lindelof tangled with Atsu,
Solskjaer's double substitution proved pivotal.
Atsu, Newcastle's most dangerous performer, shot just wide
of the United goal from a half-cleared free-kick after 75 minutes but
Rashford's goal soon removed any lingering hope of a comeback.
And had Pogba not found the side-netting, instead of the
goal, from a tight angle after rounding the keeper deep in injury-time, it
might have been an even more emphatic victory.