MANCHESTER, England — Teenage striker Marcus Rashford continued the dream start to his Manchester United career, scoring two goals and setting up another in a 3-2 win over title-chasing Arsenal in the Premier League on Sunday.
Only playing because of United’s chronic injury crisis, the 18-year-old Rashford marked his league debut by scoring in the 29th and 32nd minutes to put his team 2-0 ahead — three days after a double in the Europa League against FC Midtjylland on his senior United debut.
After former United striker Danny Welbeck replied for Arsenal, Rashford set up Ander Herrera for a shot from the edge of the area that deflected in off Laurent Koscielny.
Mesut Ozil made it 3-2 in the 69th but fifth-place United held on comfortably to move three points off the top four. Arsenal, which put in an off-colour performance against a young and injury-hit United side, dropped five points behind leader Leicester and hasn’t won in the league at Old Trafford since 2006.
United manager Louis van Gaal, under much pressure amid the team’s troubles this season, delivered some light relief when he fell to the ground theatrically while remonstrating with the fourth official in the technical area. The Old Trafford crowd roared with laughter and finished the match singing Van Gaal’s name, adding to an atmosphere that was buoyant throughout the game as United’s youngsters proved too energetic for Arsenal.
That was particularly the case with Rashford, who must think professional soccer is easy. In his first two games as a pro — both of them high-profile ones — in the space of three days, the striker has scored as many goals as Radamel Falcao did in a whole year for United last season.
"I could imagine the first game he did that because he is a striker coming in to score goals and the first match is always good," Van Gaal said. "The second match he has to do what the manager is willing him to do, and he did it fantastically."
Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger was also impressed with Rashford, who hadn’t started a game above under-19 level before Thursday.
"The timing and intelligence of his movement was great," Wenger said. "He could be a very positive surprise for Man United."
With his direct running and composure, Rashford is showing no fear on the biggest stage and demonstrated to Van Gaal that the Dutchman has had a goal poacher at his disposal all along during the team’s rough patch this season. Injured pair Wayne Rooney and Anthony Martial are among the strikers unavailable to Van Gaal at present.
Rashford was given a standing ovation by United fans when he was substituted after 80 minutes.
For his first goal, the young striker was lurking 12 metres out as Gabriel failed to adequately clear Guillermo Varela’s cross. A first-time shot was too pacey for Arsenal goalkeeper Petr Cech as Rashford became United’s third-youngest Premier League scorer.
Three minutes later, Rashford was celebrating again after heading home a clipped right-wing cross from Jesse Lingard from just outside the six-yard box. Wenger, who said Friday that he hadn’t heard of Rashford, threw up his hands in disgust.
Arsenal was flat, strangely, and its passing lacked the usual crispness. But the team managed to reduce the deficit before halftime when Welbeck got behind marker Morgan Schneiderlin at a free kick and headed in Ozil’s cross.
Rashford wasn’t finished. In the 65th, with Arsenal’s defence backing off him in apparent panic, the teenager laid the ball off for the inrushing Herrera to shoot first time. The ball was heading for the far corner until it deflected off Koscielny’s chest to wrong-foot Cech.
Ozil replied four minutes later, volleying in after David de Gea saved from Welbeck, but Arsenal didn’t threaten De Gea in the final 20 minutes.
Arsenal has 11 games to make up ground on Leicester, and is also three points behind second-place Tottenham.
"It is still possible," Wenger said of Arsenal’s title chances, "but the answer will have to come quick and strong."
Tottenham title pursuit goes on with 2-1 win vs Swansea
LONDON — Tottenham kept up its pursuit of Premier League leader Leicester by rallying to a 2-1 victory over Swansea thanks to two goals in eight minutes on Sunday.
Left back Danny Rose was the surprise match-winner for Spurs, scoring in the 77th minute after Swansea failed to clear a corner properly.
Tottenham had 34 attempts on goal, prompting its manager Mauricio Pochettino to tell Spurs TV: "What more you need to do for (to) score? … This is the way that we want to play and you know sometimes football is not mathematical."
Nacer Chadli cancelled out Swansea’s opener by Alberto Paloschi in the 19th minute as the visitors paid for their defensive approach in the second half at White Hart Lane.
Tottenham is now in second place outright, three points clear of Arsenal after its north London rival’s loss at Manchester United on Sunday. Leicester leads by two points and few at the start of the season could have imagined the current top two with 11 games remaining.
Swansea goalkeeper Lukasz Fabianski made several impressive saves in the game and it was almost 3-1 when Harry Kane — playing with a mask to protect his broken nose — set up Kyle Walker for a goal that was ruled out for offside.
Pochettino praised Spurs fans for lifting the team after Swansea went ahead.
"This was very important for us," Pochettino said. "’Thank you’ our supporters, they were brilliant and ‘thank you’ the players because the performance and the effort was unbelievable after that Europa League game (Thursday) against Fiorentina."