Southampton (0) 0 Manchester United (1) 3
                      Yorke 11, Cole 59, Cruyff 74.
                      Southampton: Jones, Warner, Benali, Palmer, Monkou, Lundekvam
                      (Gibbens 55), Howells, Ripley (Beattie 63), Ostenstad, Le Tissier, Bridge.
                      Subs not used:Hiley, Basham, Moss.
                      Booked:Palmer.
                      Manchester United: Van Der Gouw, P. Neville, Stam, G. Neville, Irwin
                      (Brown 78), Beckham, Keane, Butt, Yorke (Cruyff 72), Cole, Blomqvist
                      (Sheringham 72).
                      Subs not used: Berg, Solskjaer.
                      Booked: Keane.
                      Att: 15251
                      Ref: D Elleray (Harrow-on-the-Hill)


                      Southampton (0) 0 Manchester United (1) 3

                      FOR the first time in four seasons, the
                      Dell held no demons for Manchester
                      United yesterday. At the cramped, south
                      coast ground, where losing had started to
                      become something of a costly habit for
                      the northern giants, United gradually
                      squeezed the life out of a Southampton
                      side already gasping for air at the bottom
                      of the Premiership.

                      Goals from Dwight Yorke and Andy
                      Cole, who thrived as a partnership in only their second outing together, laid
                      the foundations for United's first win here for five years, then Jordi Cruyff
                      clinched it with a spectacular third. Cruyff's lively performance as a
                      second-half substitute was one of several that offered United consolation for
                      their vexing and tiring trip to Munich in midweek.

                      Before the game, the Dell was awash with statistics, more of them
                      unfavourable to United than usual. Three defeats on the trot here, 10 goals
                      conceded and only four scored, for instance. They are still talking in these
                      parts about that 6-3 win of Southampton's two seasons ago, when United
                      manager Alex Ferguson blamed his team's away strip of grey for the
                      dŽb‰cle and changed the shirts at half-time.

                      But the home side could show little form to suggest they were capable of
                      extending that successful run against United. With only one point from their
                      first seven League games, and 18 goals conceded, it sounded suspiciously
                      like a bit of whistling in the dark when manager David Jones said in his
                      programme notes that his team had shown definite signs of gelling as a unit at
                      West Ham during the week.

                      Still, there was encouragement for Southampton in the absence of some big
                      names from the United line-up. Ryan Giggs and Ronny Johnsen were still
                      unavailable because of injury, while Peter Schmeichel and Paul Scholes had
                      picked up injuries in the disappointing Champions' League draw away to
                      Bayern Munich. Ferguson also chose to replace Teddy Sheringham with
                      Cole.

                      Southampton were not at full strength, either, since suspension prevented
                      Mark Hughes from making an appearance against his old club. Even without
                      'Sparky', though, the Saints nearly made an electrifying start, David Howells
                      sending a free header wide from a marvellously accurate centre by Egil
                      Ostenstad after just a minute's play.

                      Howells had reason to rue that bad miss when United - men in black, this
                      time - took the lead 10 minutes later. It was not a pretty goal, the ball
                      trickling slowly over the line after Yorke had stuck out a hopeful leg and
                      diverted Cole's low, curving centre from the left wide of the stranded
                      Southampton goalkeeper, Paul Jones.

                      It was also a landmark for United in that, remarkably, it was the first they
                      had scored on their travels this season. As for Yorke himself, he could take
                      great satisfaction from the fact that it took his total to five goals in the couple
                      of months since United paid Aston Villa £12.6 million for his services.

                      Southampton responded vigorously enough, Raimond van der Gouw tipping
                      a long-range shot from Howells over the bar after Jaap Stam had hacked a
                      Matthew Le Tissier shot out beyond the penalty area. Jesper Blomqvist was
                      becoming a real danger to the Saints on the left, however, and the home side
                      were relieved to see Yorke's diving header go wide when the Swedish
                      winger picked him out with a centre.

                      There was a real bite to some of the tackling, as Carlton Palmer showed by
                      catching Denis Irwin painfully and late after 38 minutes for the second time in
                      the first half. To his credit, Irwin, who had needed treatment after the first
                      tackle, did not make a fuss. Nevertheless, the referee, David Elleray, rightly
                      showed Palmer the yellow card.

                      United began the second half with a sense of purpose. Only five minutes
                      after the restart, Nicky Butt slipped a lovely through pass into the path of
                      Roy Keane and the home fans held their breath as the Irishman's rasping
                      shot flew across the face of goal and wide of the far post.

                      It was fully deserved when United increased their lead on the hour. David
                      Beckham found Blomqvist with a pass the Swede turned into a storming run
                      past two opponents. Finally, he laid the ball off to Cole, who calmly curled a
                      shot round Jones and into the net.

                      By then, Palmer was playing in central defence because Claus Lundekvam
                      had been helped off the field with a leg injury. The former England
                      international was replaced by Kevin Gibbens in midfield, and the changes
                      can hardly be said to have improved Southampton's prospects.

                      Southampton's worst fears were confirmed after 74 minutes, when United
                      virtually assured themselves of victory with another delightful goal. The move
                      was started and finished by Cruyff, who had come on for Blomqvist.

                      Having carried the ball 30 or 40 yards on a run deep into the Southampton
                      half, Cruyff set up Cole for a shot that Jones beat out to the edge of the
                      penalty area. Unfortunately for the goalkeeper, the ball went straight back to
                      Cruyff, who met it with an accurate, first-time volley.