Chelsea again have outright possession of top spot in the Barclays Premier League following a 2-0 victory over Newcastle at Stamford Bridge.
Jose
Mourinho's side started the day ahead of Manchester City simply via
alphabetical order given the remarkable identical records of both sides
after 20 matches of a so far captivating campaign.
But whilst Chelsea maintained their 100 per cent league record on home soil with a 10th successive victory, City could only manage a 1-1 draw at Everton and are now two points adrift.
For
Chelsea, Oscar made the all-important breakthrough three minutes before
half-time with a right-foot drive from 10 yards before Diego Costa
netted his 15th goal of the season in the 57th minute to seal the win.
At
Goodison Park, Manuel Pellegrini's side had to settle for a point, with
Fernandinho's 74th-minute opener cancelled out within four minutes by
Steven Naismith.
At the bottom of the table, Leicester are just two points adrift of safety as they beat Aston Villa 1-0 at the King Power Stadium, and have now taken seven points from their last three matches.
Paul
Konchesky, sent off in the 2-1 defeat at Villa in early December after a
clash with Alan Hutton - a decision later overturned on appeal - netted
the only goal in first-half injury time.
There were further red
cards in the dying stages of another feisty encounter when City's Matty
James and Villa's Ciaran Clark were both dismissed following a
centre-circle melee.
In another vital relegation battle at Turf Moor, it was hosts Burnley who clinched the three points with a 2-1 win to lift themselves out of the bottom three and drop QPR back into the danger zone, with Harry Redknapp's side setting a new Premier League record of 10 successive away defeats.
Scott
Arfield scored his first goal since the opening-day with a strike in
the 12th minute, only for Charlie Austin to equalise from the spot just
after the half hour.
Picking himself up after being brought down
by Dean Marney, Austin scored his 13th goal of the campaign, but his joy
was shortlived as Danny Ings scored what proved to be the winner four
minutes later.
In his first league match in charge of West Brom, head coach Tony Pulis conjured up a 1-0 victory over Hull at The Hawthorns thanks to Saido Berahino.
Berahino,
who failed to celebrate any of his four goals in Albion's 7-0 FA Cup
romp over Gateshead last weekend, certainly did so on this occasion when
he fired home the only goal from 12 yards in the 78th minute.
West Ham found themselves managerless for the day with Sam Allardyce absent with a chest infection, and had to settle for a 1-1 draw with Swansea at the Liberty Stadium.
The Hammers opened the scoring in the 43rd minute when Andy Carroll floated home a superb strike.
But
Swansea, without Wilfried Bony in their line-up with their top scorer
away on international duty in the African Nations Cup, grabbed a
deserved point when pressure saw Mark Noble net an own goal 16 minutes
from time.
In the early kick-off at the Stadium of Light, Lazar Markovic's ninth-minute opener was just enough for Liverpool to claim a 1-0 win 10-man Sunderland, who had Liam Bridcutt sent off early in the second half.
Despite
the numerical advantage for the Reds, who lost captain Steven Gerrard
to a hamstring injury at half-time, it was the hosts who came closest to
adding to the scoring when Adam Johnson struck the crossbar from 30
yards.
Brendan Rodgers' side, however, managed to hold on for
their third league win in four games to move within four points of the
top four.
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