Man Utd break losing streak
Manchester United moved to the brink of Champions League qualification with a 2-1 win at Crystal Palace on Saturday, while Burnley's relegation from the Premier League was confirmed.
Juan Mata put United ahead with a 19th-minute penalty after Scott Dann was adjudged to have handled the ball, before Luke Shaw, who took a blow to the face, and Wayne Rooney, who appeared to hurt his thigh, were forced off.
Jason Puncheon equalised with a 57th-minute free-kick that nicked off Daley Blind, but 12 minutes from time Palace goalkeeper Julian Speroni got caught beneath Ashley Young's left-wing cross and Marouane Fellaini headed in the winner.
The victory took United seven points clear of Liverpool, who will be unable to overhaul Louis van Gaal's side if they lose at freshly crowned champions Chelsea on Sunday.
Even if Liverpool do prevail at Stamford Bridge, United will need only three points from their final two games at home to Arsenal and away at Hull City to rubber-stamp a top-four finish.
While United ended a run of three straight defeats, they were once again indebted to goalkeeper David de Gea, who produced a pair of stunning point-blank saves to thwart Glenn Murray either side of Fellaini's winner.
Burnley were relegated despite winning 1-0 at fellow strugglers Hull, which left them seven points from safety with only two games remaining.
Promoted from the Championship last season, Burnley gave themselves hope of avoiding the drop by stunning defending champions Manchester City 1-0 in March, but they subsequently went six games without winning, losing five.
Danny Ings stopped the rot with a 62nd-minute winner at the KC Stadium, crashing home left-footed after Hull failed to clear a corner to end a 1,036-minute goal drought for Sean Dyche's side, but it was to no avail.
"We did what we had to do today, but we have not done it enough over the course of the season," said Burnley manager Dyche. "Of course relegation is disappointing, but I believe we're in decent shape to bounce straight back."
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