Jamie Vardy’s stunning volley set Leicester on its way to a 2-0 victory over Liverpool on Tuesday, keeping the unlikely title challengers top of the Premier League on a night Manchester United rediscovered its scoring touch at Old Trafford.
Manchester
City and Tottenham also won to stay in touch with Leicester, but
Arsenal was held 0-0 by Southampton and dropped to fourth place.
Leicester preserved its three-point lead
over City and its title charge shows no sign of slowing – nor does
Vardy’s prolific form this season.
The
British striker volleyed in a looping shot from 25 metres before adding
another goal in the second half to sink Liverpool at King Power Stadium
and take his tally to 18 this campaign.
“We are free of pressure,” Leicester manager Claudio Ranieri said. “The players have a good feeling.”
United
beat Stoke 3-0, scoring in the first half at home for the first time
since September. Jesse Lingard, Anthony Martial and Wayne Rooney – with
his seventh goal in his past seven games – scored for United, which
trimmed the gap to the Champions League qualification places to five
points.
Criticized for much of the season for its risk-averse attacking approach, United has scored six goals in its past two games.
“A
result like that settles the nerves of the fans, the players, even the
manager,” Lingard said. “Hopefully now we can go on a run.”
Sergio
Aguero was the match winner for City in a 1-0 victory at Sunderland in
the team’s first game since announcing the hiring of Pep Guardiola as
coach starting next season. Aguero looks back to his sharpest, having
scored eight goals in as many games in 2016.
Tottenham
won 3-0 at Norwich thanks to a double from Harry Kane and another goal
from young midfielder Dele Alli. The win lifted Spurs to third, above
north London neighbour Arsenal on goal difference.
Also,
Aston Villa had forward Jordan Ayew sent off in the 17th minute for
elbowing an opponent in a 2-0 loss at West Ham, which left the league’s
last-place team 10 points adrift of safety. West Bromwich Albion scored
two minutes into injury time to draw 1-1 against Swansea, and
Bournemouth won 2-1 at Crystal Palace.
With
14 games left this campaign, Leicester is closing in on a Champions
League qualification place – the team is 10 points clear of United – and
must now be seen as a definite title contender.
Few
thought a team that only narrowly avoided relegation last season could
keep up its challenge at the other end of the standings, but the Foxes
are proving everyone wrong.
“It’s not a
coincidence we’re top of the table,” Leicester midfielder Danny
Drinkwater said. “This is team spirit at its highest. We won’t stop
believing. We’re staying on the ground, but if we carry on the way we
are, then why not have the belief [to win the league]?
“It would go down in history, surely.”
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