Man City fume as VAR 'joke' fuels Man Utd win, Brighton rock Liverpool
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On a dramatic day of Premier League action, Everton boss Frank Lampard was pushed closer to the sack as his struggling side were beaten 2-1 by relegation rivals Southampton
Manchester United fought back for a dramatic 2-1 win against Manchester City that left their arch rivals fuming over a controversial VAR decision to allow Bruno Fernandes' equaliser, while troubled Liverpool crashed to a shock 3-0 defeat at Brighton on Saturday.
On a dramatic day of Premier League action, Everton boss Frank Lampard was pushed closer to the sack as his struggling side were beaten 2-1 by relegation rivals Southampton.
With just 12 minutes left at Old Trafford, United were trailing to Jack Grealish's 60th minute header in the season's second Manchester derby.
But City's title defence suffered a damaging blow as Portugal midfielder Fernandes equalised in hugely debatable fashion before Marcus Rashford bagged United's 82nd minute winner.
Fernandes' goal was the turning point and City boss Pep Guardiola and his players were seething after the flag went up for offside when Rashford ran on to Casemiro's pass.
Rashford did not touch the ball and was deemed by VAR not to have interfered with play, but City were adamant the England forward clearly distracted the defenders and goalkeeper Ederson.
"The first goal is a joke that it can be allowed," City defender Manuel Akanji told BBC Sport.
"He runs for 30 metres, he's chasing the ball. In the situation, I played him (Rashford) offside. I understand he doesn't touch the ball, but for me it is clearly offside."
Guardiola insisted there was no doubt Rashford's run impacted the reactions of Akanji and Ederson.
"The decision is the referee's, the VAR, but our defenders make a line for Rashford," he said.
"If we know it's Fernandes we don't make the line, we follow the action, and after the action the interference for Ederson."
Third placed United are now just one point behind second placed City, who are in danger of losing substantial ground in the title race this week.
A win for leaders Arsenal at north London rivals Tottenham on Sunday would put the Gunners eight points clear.
While City splutter, United are in fine form following their ninth successive victory in all competitions.
Asked if they are in the title race, boss Erik ten Hag said: "The fans may dream but we are not. We have improved, that is obvious. There is still a long way to go."
Dismal Liverpool
Liverpool's hopes of salvaging a top four finish from a difficult campaign suffered a major hit as Brighton swept to victory on the south-coast.
After dominating the first half without making the breakthrough, Brighton deservedly took the lead in the 47th minute.
Joel Matip carelessly surrendered possession to Alexis Mac Allister and he found Kaoru Mitoma, whose cross was perfectly weighted for the unmarked Solly March to tap in.
Liverpool were in disarray and six minutes later, March crashed a fine finish into the far corner from just inside the area.
Danny Welbeck wrapped up the victory, flicking March's pass over Joe Gomez and volleying home.
Beaten at Brentford in their previous league game, Liverpool are languishing in ninth place, seven points adrift of the top four, and look a shadow of the team that nearly won the quadruple last term.
"Bad. Really bad. I can't remember a worse game. It was a very organised team against a not very organised team," Klopp said.
Liverpool's Merseyside rivals Everton are in even more dire straits after Southampton's 2-1 win at Goodison Park.
Everton's board of directors did not attend the game because of a "real and credible threat to their safety".
Everton have won only one of their last 13 matches in all competitions and banners calling for owner Farhad Moshiri to sell up were unfurled before kick-off.
Amadou Onana gave Lampard's men the lead, but James Ward-Prowse struck twice for Southampton and thousands of Everton fans staged a sit-in protest after the final whistle.
Southampton remain bottom of the table but they are now behind second bottom Everton only on goal difference.
"It's clear in football that sometimes if you aren't winning games it can become contagious in terms of confidence and we know we are in that spot," Lampard said.
West Ham fill the final place in the bottom three after a 1-0 defeat at Wolves that saw the hosts move above the hapless Hammers.
Nottingham Forest beat Leicester 2-0, while Brentford defeated fourth bottom Bournemouth 2-0.