Rashford and Zirkzee double up as Manchester United dismantle Everton

Fans protested against hike in ticket prices but were delighted by what they saw on the pitch

Marcus Rashford of Manchester United celebrates scoring his team's third goal. Photograph: Gareth Copley/Getty
Marcus Rashford of Manchester United celebrates scoring his team's third goal. Photograph: Gareth Copley/Getty
Premier League: Manchester United 4 (Rashford 34, 46, Zirkzee 41, 64) Everton 0

“Amorim, Ruben Amorim, nananananananaaa,” the jubilant Manchester United fans chorused after the impressive Joshua Zirkzee’s second goal. Sung to the melody of KC and the Sunshine Band’s Give It Up, this was the last thing the new manager’s players did: fail to go after any apparent lost cause in case gold could be mined.

It was how Zirkzee struck United’s fourth. From deep in his area, the substitute Luke Shaw headed out. The ball came to Amad Diallo, who rolled it along the right wing into space. Over thundered Marcus Rashford, who failed to connect but, when the ball was passed back to James Tarkowski, there was Diallo harrying. Everton’s captain dawdled, the right wing‑back pilfered possession, sprinted ahead, squared left to United’s centre-forward and he rammed home.

Amorim explained beforehand why, after parachuting in with 11 Premier League games of the season gone, United are instantly playing his 3-4-3. “That would only postpone our problems,” the manager said, meaning that whatever is suffered short term would allow jam tomorrow.

On Sunday there was delight only. Rashford, too, scored twice, and though United were not perfect they were energetic and, just as vitally, up for what their new manager demands.

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The number 10 said: “It wasn’t as easy as it looked today. Amad did well to counter-press for two of the goals. He’s so sharp and he’s always got the intent to push the other team back, with and without the ball. It is for the players to understand the strengths of other players so we can feed off each other.

“He [Amorim] is definitely demanding but encouraging to bring your strengths into the game. That is when you get a really good team performance.”

As the truism goes, the best coaches improve players, and Zirkzee may become Exhibit A of the Portuguese’s smarts if this performance is replicated weekly. The Dutchman’s nascent United career had already been questioned yet the offering on Sunday showed a fine technician, brave in receiving the ball despite knowing an ankle chopping was always incoming.

If Amorim’s three games in charge have bedded him to his on-field task, the fan protest against the club’s ticket price hike – to a minimum £66 for child or adult – offers the same for the surrounding, never-ending subplots of the United soap opera.

Held before kick-off at the Trinity statue, supporters’ ire was directed at Jim Ratcliffe, who is responsible for the dizzying rise with junior admission having been £25. They urged the minority owner to “sell United and f**k off home” and informed him “we want our club back”. This was the polar opposite of the affection directed at Amorim as he oversaw what was a succession of chances from first kick to last.

Kobbie Mainoo, one of six changes, let fly at Jordan Pickford. Zirkzee, starting too for the first time under Amorim, dropped back to execute a sharp shoe-shuffle and sprayed the ball wide. Suddenly United were near the opposition area and we saw how Amorim-ball is designed to hurt.

Manchester United's Portuguese head coach Ruben Amorim looks on during the EPL game against Everton at Old Trafford. Photograph: Darren Staples / AFP via Getty Images
Manchester United's Portuguese head coach Ruben Amorim looks on during the EPL game against Everton at Old Trafford. Photograph: Darren Staples / AFP via Getty Images

Everton were bogged down in the middle third as red shirts would crowd around, nick the ball and launch another raid. This was the pattern when Bruno Fernandes received on the left and struck a pass with the outside of his right boot. In ran Rashford whose attempted chip of an onrushing Pickford failed.

Matthijs de Ligt also failed in an attempt at stopping the pacy Beto as he latched on to Dwight McNeil’s threaded pass. So the centre-back continued on, made himself a nuisance as Beto tried to round André Onana, and United escaped.

Everton did not when Fernandes swung in a corner. A training ground routine, the ball was floated to Rashford, whose half‑volley appeared to be goalward before Jarrad Branthwaite stuck out a leg and deflected it past Pickford.

Zirkzee’s second goal for the club was a product of what might be named the “Amorim press” – Branthwaite, again, the patsy. This time he hesitated, Diallo rushed him, nabbed the ball, Fernandes took over and, entering Everton’s area, fed Zirkzee: the 6ft 4in striker surged forward to smash in a left-footed finish.

The same urgency was evident in United’s third that came after the second-half kick-off. The ball was played to Pickford, who hoofed upfield and Amorim’s men took over. Zirkzee collected and swivelled and passed to Diallo who rushed forward and fed the overlapping Rashford: an instant hit beat Pickford and that was his first double in United colours since February 2023.

Fernandes, one of Amorim’s five substitutions, later sat with an ice pack on his left foot. A worry for the captain and United but the wider picture suggests this was a fine day for the Amorim project: a victory of dominance in the 39-year-old’s first home league outing.

Man Utd: Onana, Mazraoui (Shaw 56), De Ligt (Maguire 56), Martinez, Diallo, Mainoo (Mount 80), Casemiro (Garnacho 66), Dalot, Rashford, Fernandes (Ugarte 66), Zirkzee. Booked: Mainoo, Martinez.

Everton: Pickford, Young (Patterson 73), Tarkowski (O’Brien 82), Branthwaite, Mykolenko, Doucoure, Gueye (Mangala 67), Lindstrom (Harrison 67), McNeil, Ndiaye, Beto (Calvert-Lewin 67). Booked: Mykolenko, Gueye, Young.

Referee: John Brooks (Leicestershire).