Manchester United vs. Newcastle result: Ronaldo and sloppy Red Devils held by feisty Magpies

It must feel like ages since Manchester United fans last watched their team play a match, but they didn’t see the performance they were probably hoping for in a 1-1 draw against second-from-bottom Newcastle United.

The Red Devils were finally back on the pitch after a pair of COVID-19 postponements, the first league match for the club since December 11, and the rust showed with Newcastle taking advantage through an early Allan Saint-Maximin goal. An Edinson Cavani strike with 20 minutes remaining was enough to secure the draw as Ralf Rangnick’s men take the point and go back to the drawing board.

The Magpies were the more dangerous side for much of the match, and will feel incredibly unlucky not to get more from the match. Fans surely would have taken a draw before the match started, but after the 90 minutes during which Newcastle dominated for long stretches, it felt like two points lost. The draw also came at a very high price, as Saint-Maximin and lead striker Callum Wilson both exited with injuries that looked troublesome.

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The Magpies, thanks to the brilliance of Saint-Maximin, enjoyed a 1-0 halftime advantage over a Manchester United side void of creativity and shape and at times even appearing petulant. Both in the attack and defending the counter, Man United look thoroughly confused and lacking cohesion. 

Rangnick presided over a pair of 1-0 victories in his first two Premier League matches, but suddenly all momentum from that winning start has been halted with plenty to correct moving forward.

Manchester United vs. Newcastle final score

  1H 2H Final
Newcastle   1   0  1
Man United   0   1  1

Goals
7′ — Newcastle — Allan Saint-Maximin
71′ — Man United — Edinson Cavani

(All times Eastern)

Final: Newcastle 1, Manchester United 1

FULL TIME: That’s it, the points are shared. A delightfully exciting game for neutrals, and an excrutiatingly sloppy one for supporters of both sides. Newcastle will have taken the point before the match, but on the final whistle, the Magpies will feel absurdly unlucky not only to come away with just a draw, but also to have lost both Callum Wilson and Allan Saint-Maximin to injury. It’s a very costly point for the Magpies, but the performance overall will be encouraging. For Manchester United…my oh my. David de Gea’s late goalkeeping heroics were enough to avoid further embarrassment, but the team looked abolutely lost for most of the match. Rangnick with far more questions than answers after these 90 minutes.

92nd min.: It’s all Newcastle now, into six minutes of added time. Joelinton has a pop and the shot rips Raphael Varane square in the outstretched arm, but the referee says no and VAR doesn’t produce a check. It’s definitely a debatable one, even tho it occurred just outside the penalty area.

88th min.: OH MY! Newcastle SO  unlucky not to go in front! A curler by Murphy stings the far post after beating De Gea, and the follow-up from substitute Almiron produces nothing short of a world-class save from De Gea. Manchester United so fortunate not to be behind late. St. James’ Park is THUMPING.

82nd min.: Oh no. Saint-Maximin is down and it looks bad. This could be a costly point for Newcastle. On the ball looking to skip past an opponent, ASM felt something yank and pulled up. He limps off very slowly and is immediately replaced by Dwight Gayle. This happened against Liverpool last week and he returned to the starting lineup after one substitute appearance, but the way Saint-Maximin pulled up will leave Newcastle fans very worried.

75th min.: Cavani nearly scored his second after a stunning slow-roller assist from Marcus Rashford, but the Uruguayan somehow bundles the chance at the far post. Miguel Almiron is on for Newcastle, while Nemanja Matic is preparing to come on for Manchester United in place of McTominay.

71st min.: GOAL! Manchester United! The Red Devils are all over the place, but Edinson Cavani provides the moment they’ve been looking for. It’s a total carbon copy of the earlier chance he scuffed, and while this time the initial hit was blocked, the rebound is right back to his feet and the Uruguayan doesn’t miss. Third time’s a charm and we’re level — credit Diogo Dalot for finding Cavani wide open. Harsh on Newcastle overall, but there’s more in this with 20 minutes to go.

68th min.: To some it doesn’t feel like Manchester United has a new manager.

65th min: Stop me if you’ve heard this one before…Newcastle on the break, Saint-Maximin with a vicious attempt on goal, De Gea a nice save. Manchester United has brought on two subs but not much has changed.

Bruno Fernandes into the referee’s book for dissent, Emil Krafth also carded for a tackle. Maguire carded for scything down Saint-Maximin by the touchline. Both teams at 110 percent effort, but it’s all a bit sloppy.

57th min.: Ronaldo is the first in the book for utterly pulverizing Ryan Fraser, earning a yellow card for a late attempt to clear the ball but leaving his leaping body to cannon through the Newcastle player. Ronaldo isn’t keen about the call, and neither, somehow, is the NBC analyst, but it’s most certainly a booking for a very dangerous play.

55th min.: Manchester United with maybe its best move of the match so far and its two substitutes combining. Sancho down the right feeds Cavani all alone above the penalty spot but he mishits the shot attempt and scuffs it weakly to Newcastle ‘keeper Dubravka. A better hit could have leveled the match.

49th min.: Rashford has a hit from distance and it’s a very good one. A knuckler that ducks and weaves, Dubravka is left to make a fabulous leaping save to tip it over the bar.

47th min.: It should be 2-0. How it’s not, I don’t know. A fabulous cross right to the doorstep sees Saint-Maximin all alone with the goal gaping, but his touch is right down the middle and that’s all De Gea needed to stop the chance. The Red Devils are hanging on by a thread and the second half has only just begun. Raphael Varane looks like a defender who hasn’t played since October.

46th min.: Rangnick has made a pair of substitutions to start the second half, an indication of how the Man United boss feels things have progressed. Greenwood and Fred off, Cavani and Sancho in. Looks like Cavani will go up front next to Ronaldo in a like-for-like swap with Greenwood, while McTominay slides into a lone No. 6 role and the rest of the United attack pours forward.

A new half, the same Saint-Maximin, who is released down the left and runs right at Varane. The former Real Madrid defender does just enough to slow Saint-Maximin down so Fernandes can recover and end the threat, but Newcastle picking up where it left off in the first half. Worrying for Manchester United.

Halftime: Newcastle 1, Manchester United 0

Halftime: The better team leads at the break, and it’s not the one we expected at all. Allan Saint-Maximin’s brilliant goal is the marker, but Newcastle was clearly the more envigorated and more cohesive side in the first 45 minutes.

It’s not even that Newcastle has defended exceptionally well, Manchester United just appears to be utterly lost in the attacking half. Defensively the visitors pulled it together for the most part, but still things don’t appear to be terribly at ease. Maguire was caught out more than once, and Bruno Fernandes was unable to coordinate the attack up front. A new plan is needed for the second half.

Gary Neville: “They’re a bunch of whinge bags” ????

45th min.: With halftime looming, Callum Wilson is the latest Newcastle player down, and it does look to be a significant problem. Wilson limps off slowly under his own power. Hefty four minutes of stoppage time added prior to the break, which is punctuated by Joelinton nutmegging Rashford before a Saint-Maximin shot. The latter can’t help but let a wry smile betray his otherwise firm match demeanor.

Wilson is really struggling, it appears to be a left calf problem, which is concerning. He’s pleading with Howe to take him off before halftime, and the manager obliges, bringing on Jacob Murphy. Replays show it could be a nasty, non-contact one suffered while completing a nice turn on the ball.

41st min.: Man United finally has a big chance, coming off a free kick, but Dubravka just gets to the bouncing ball ahead of Greenwood who comes flying in with a ninja kick that catches the goalkeeper instead of the ball. Dubravka, who has been one of Newcastle’s best players for the last few seasons, is in some pain. Joelinton also goes down in the aftermath and needs treatment.

38th min.: Callum Wilson has the ball in the back of the net, but the offside flag is up. Wilson was  furious but the replay does show he was quite a bit offside, so not sure what his argument was about. Still, the Magpies send another warning shot across Manchester United’s bow. A second would truly trouble United.

35th min.: Harry Maguire, already a culprit on Saint-Maximin’s opener, commits a blatant foul to hand Newcastle a great free-kick opportunity outside the top left corner of the box. Fraser whips it in, and Telles turns it behind for a corner which is subsequently defended well. Newcastle has been the better side in this first half, there is no debating.

33rd min.: Ronaldo makes a fool of himself trying to keep the ball in play on the end line, and the crowd lets him have it. Newcastle has absorbed pressure incredibly well since the opener, and the visitors at St. James’ Park have struggled to produce much of anything in the attacking third. Ronaldo has received 10 total passes to this point.

23rd min.: The aforementioned Shelvey roller coaster hits a peak, as he body bags Fred and tests De Gea from a great distance out. The Spaniard saves acrobatically. McTominay requires treatment, and Ronaldo uses the stoppage in play to dramatically eviscerate his teammates for their poor first 20 minutes. He also has a go at the referee.

20th min.: Manchester United earns a pair of corners, but they come to nothing. The Red Devils are finally asserting a bit of possessional dominance on the match. NBC crew shares a somewhat ambiguous stat that United hasn’t scored a goal from a corner this season out of almost 100 corners on the year.

12th min.: Joelinton has a go and just puts it wide right. If you couldn’t see the jerseys, you wouldn’t know which team was in the relegation zone and which was challenging for a Champions League position. It’s clear there is some rust for the Red Devils to shake off.

7th min.: GOAL! Newcastle!

Sean Longstaff absolutely PILFERS the ball off Raphael Varane, and immediately feeds Allan Saint-Maximin who produces a brilliant solo effort. The Frenchman is a one-man wrecking crew, slicing through the top of the box and delivering a fabulous effort while falling down that leaves De Gea rooted to the spot.

6th min.: Jonjo Shelvey, the world’s most hot-and-cold player (at least it feels like it), gets absolutely pickpocketed in midfield and subsequently commits a foul. A bright start for Newcastle overall, but Shelvey can’t be making mistakes like that if the Magpies are to survive today.

1st min.: We’re underway! Newcastle nearly had a chance within seconds, but a ball through for Ryan Fraser was just inches too deep and the chance evaporated. Expecting this to be a cagey opening 15 minutes or so.

2:51 p.m. ET: Studio analysts on NBC pre-match show have suggested Newcastle will need to win one in every two matches down the stretch to stay up this season. Not quite sure it’s *that* daunting, as there are quite a few bad teams in the Premier League this season, and the 40-point mark for safety is surely more like 33 as a result. But it does put into perspective the situation they are currently facing, and it will be a tall task to achieve safety. Spending in the winter will come with plenty of risk.

2:45 p.m. ET: Rangnick confirmed that Victor Lindelof tested positive for COVID-19 and thus cannot take part for the forseeable future, hence his absence from the Manchester United squad.

2:03 p.m. ET: Lineups are in. Full lineups below.

Eddie Howe makes a whopping eight changes from the Newcastle lineup that was thumped by Manchester City last time out, shuffling almost his entire defense and changing to a 4-2-3-1. Manchester United has a nearly 100% fit squad, meaning Raphael Varane comes back in at center-back, while Marcus Rashford moves out wide to allow Mason Greenwood to partner with Cristiano Ronaldo. Jadon Sancho is the odd man out, left to the bench.

1:36 p.m. ET: Your matchday program at St. James Park, if that’s your kind of thing.

1:33 p.m. ET: Boxing Day was an all-timer when it comes to goals scored. Will this match follow in those footsteps, or will it be less explosive?

1:25 p.m. ET: It’s not on Boxing Day proper, but Manchester United manager Ralf Rangnick getting his first taste of managing around the Christmas holiday, and he’s looking forward to it.

1:00 p.m. ET:  While the Newcastle boss looks focused on getting his team something to savor from a festive period otherwise fully Grinch’d, Manchester United manager Ralf Rangnick discusses how he managed to keep the team sharp despite significant disruption due to COVID-19.

1:00 p.m. ET: Eddie Howe had a look back at Newcastle’s heyday in the late 90’s when the Magpies battled Manchester United for positions at the top of the table. The fixture doesn’t quite reach those levels as each occupies opposite ends of the standings.

Newcastle vs. Manchester United lineups

Newcastle makes a whopping eight changes from the heavy defeat to Manchester City, chief among them a return for Jonjo Shelvey, who has struggled with a lack of fitness and was the victim of some load management by manager Eddie Howe, but recovered enough to start today. Shelvey had previously played all but six minutes since returning from a two-month calf injury in late October.

Federico Fernandez and Jamal Lewis are both ruled out due to thigh problems, while Paul Dummett has returned to training but is not ready to see game minutes. Isaac Hayden is suspended for yellow card accumulation, meaning Sean Longstaff is introduced to the side. Allan Saint-Maximin is back in the starting lineup after coming off the bench in the last match due to a knock.

Newcastle starting lineup (4-2-3-1):  Dubravka (GK); Krafth, Lascelles, Schar, Manquillo; Shelvey, Longstaff; Fraser, Joelintin, Saint-Maximin; Wilson.

Manchester United has dealt with a COVID-19 outbreak over the past few weeks, but it now appears to be a thing of the past, with no known players currently out with a positive COVID-19 test or lingering symptoms. That means manager Ralf Rangnick has a mostly fit squad to choose from, with only Paul Pogba still waiting to fully recover from his groin injury in November.

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Anthony Martial, a potential January transfer departure, does not make the bench, but Aaron Wan-Bissaka returns among the substitutes. Raphael Varane is also available from his thigh injury in late November and starts.

Left back Luke Shaw hasn’t played since late November as well, and he is on the bench with Alex Telles holding down his starting left-back spot.

Man United starting lineup (4-4-2):  De Gea (GK); Telles, Maguire, Varane, Dalot; McTominay, Fred, Fernandes, Rashford; Ronaldo, Greenwood.

How to watch Manchester United vs. Newcastle

  • Date:  Monday, Dec. 27
  • Time: 3 p.m. ET
  • TV channel:  USA Network
  • Spanish-language TV:  Universo
  • Streaming: fuboTV (free 7-day trial) , NBCSports.com (authenticated users)

The Monday afternoon match between Manchester United and Newcastle from St. James’ Park will be broadcast on USA Network (English) and Universo (Spanish) in the USA.

Both channels can be streamed on fuboTV and new users can take advantage of a free 7-day trial .

Man United vs. Newcastle betting tips, picks

Odds courtesy of DraftKings

Manchester United is obviously a heavy favorite, but not  as  heavy as one might expect going up against a squad that’s shipping goals across its Premier League schedule; the COVID-19 layoff seems to be weighing on bettors. 

The Red Devils haven’t played in two weeks, and they’re also going to have a very difficult calendar to navigate in the coming months. For that reason, it wouldn’t be surprising to see Rangnick play a tad more conservatively in games the Red Devils don’t need a full frontal assault to collect all three points.

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We’d have hoped for a bigger differential on the handicap, so the tastier option may be the total goals under. With three games in seven days, Man United could opt to manage the game — and its energies — against an opponent it should easily dominate. There are tougher fixtures on the horizon.

Pick:  Under 2.5 total goals (+125)

Prediction: Newcastle 0, Manchester United 1

  • Moneyline:  Newcastle +600 / Draw +380 / Man United -220
  • Spread:  Man United -1.5 (+140) / Newcastle +1.5 (-160)
  • O/U 2.5 total goals:  Over -150 / Under +125
  • Both teams to score:  Yes -130 / No +100

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