Man United held by Burnley as Newcastle hand Lampard first loss as Everton boss

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Manchester United slipped out of the Premier League’s top four after being held 1-1 by bottom-of-the-table Burnley at Turf Moor on Tuesday.

United’s troubled season hit another bump in the road when they were dumped out of the FA Cup by Championship side Middlesbrough on penalties on Friday.

The lessons from that defeat were not learned as again Ralf Rangnick’s men had more than enough chances to kill the game as a contest before half time before being punished for a slack piece of defending.

For the first time, the German left a fit Ronaldo out of his starting lineup for a league match after the 37-year-old played the full 120 minutes on Friday.

However, United’s first-half performance will add more fuel to the debate on whether they function better as a unit without the five-time Ballon d’Or winner.

The visitors had the ball in the net three times and missed a number of gilt-edged chances, but only had one goal to show for their dominance by half time.

Raphael Varane thought he had scored his first United goal when he leapt to power home Bruno Fernandes’ free kick on 15 minutes.

But after a lengthy VAR review, the goal was disallowed for Harry Maguire interfering with Rodriguez from an offside position.

Three minutes later, United did deservedly lead when Pogba thundered in Luke Shaw’s cross from the edge of the box.

Moments later, Burnley captain Ben Mee turned Marcus Rashford’s cross into his own net, but was handed a reprieve by a harsh foul given against Pogba in the buildup.

Even with decisions going against them, Rangnick’s men only had themselves to blame for not putting the game out of sight before the break.

Nick Pope saved Edinson Cavani’s header from point-blank range and stood up well to turn Rashford’s powerful drive behind.

Burnley had barely offered anything of note as an attacking force in the first half.

Sean Dyche had named an offensive-looking side with January signing Wout Weghorst supported by Rodriguez, Maxwel Cornet and Dwight McNeil.

And the Burnley boss got his reward in a fast start to the second half.

Weghorst left Harry Maguire trailing and slipped in Rodriguez, who held off the United captain, to dink the ball beyond David De Gea.

After being a spectator for 45 minutes, De Gea was then called into action again to prevent Weghorst completing the comeback with a powerful hit from outside the box.

Rangnick turned to Ronaldo for a goal 23 minutes from time but it was Varane who came closest to a winner with an inventive backheel that Pope turned behind.

Burnley’s 11th draw in 20 league games this season is not enough to move them off the foot of the table and the gap between the Clarets and safety stretched to four points on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, Newcastle moved out of the Premier League relegation zone with a vital 3-1 win over Everton that plunged Frank Lampard’s side deeper into trouble on Tuesday.

Eddie Howe’s team fell behind to Jamaal Lascelles’ own goal in the first half at St James’ Park.

But, on a pulsating Tyneside evening, the Magpies had the perfect response as Mason Holgate’s own goal sparked a rousing revival.

Ryan Fraser put Newcastle ahead after half time and Kieran Trippier’s superb free kick rounded off the hosts’ second successive win.

Mired in the bottom three for most of the season, Newcastle finally have their heads above water as they battle to avoid sinking into the Championship.