<p>Aston Villa manager Unai Emery tasted victory in his first game in charge as his side beat Manchester United 3-1 in the Premier League on Sunday, the visitors' first defeat in 10 matches in all competitions.</p>.<p>Former Arsenal boss Emery was given a warm welcome by home supporters ahead of the match, and he could not have wished for a better start to life back in the Premier League as Villa raced into a two-goal lead inside 11 minutes.</p>.<p>Leon Bailey arrowed a strike into the bottom corner to give Villa the lead, before Lucas Digne curled a sublime free kick past the despairing dive of United goalkeeper David de Gea, much to Emery's delight on the touchline.</p>.<p>United improved a great deal as the half wore on, creating several openings before Luke Shaw's strike took a huge deflection off Jacob Ramsey and found the net on the cusp of halftime to give the visitors hope.</p>.<p>Those hopes were quickly dashed, however, as Ramsey made amends, finding the top corner four minutes into the second half to restore Villa's two-goal advantage.</p>.<p>Tempers flared as the match reached its climax, but United could not muster a comeback, losing for the first time at Villa Park in the league since 1995 to stay fifth in the standings as a well-deserved victory lifted Villa to 14th.</p>.<p>"We were hopeful at halftime that we could come back, but we gave the game away early in the second half," United manager Erik ten Hag said.</p>.<p>"I am a long time in football. People are not robots. It is not acceptable, we have to be ready for every game and not give the game away. Collectively it was a bad performance."</p>.<p>It was a run of 23 games that United had gone unbeaten at Villa Park in the Premier League -- the longest undefeated away run a team has had against another in English league history -- but the writing was on the wall from the start on Sunday.</p>.<p><strong>Opening strike</strong></p>.<p>Ramsey set Jamaican winger Bailey through on goal and he rifled home the opener -- the first goal United have conceded from open play in over 12 hours of football in all competitions.</p>.<p>Things went from bad to worse for the visitors when Ramsey won a free kick, and full back Digne stroked an unstoppable shot into the net.</p>.<p>United finally found their feet just after the half-hour mark, with Emiliano Martinez in the Villa goal forced into two fine saves to deny youngster Alejandro Garnacho and captain for the day Cristiano Ronaldo</p>.<p>Shaw's strike did not look like it was heading for the net, but the huge deviation off Ramsey's back gave Martinez no chance.</p>.<p>That stroke of luck proved to be only a consolation for a below-par United, as Ramsey, who had ran United ragged all afternoon, fired home Ollie Watkins's pass to restore Villa's two-goal advantage.</p>.<p>Each of the previous nine managers to face United in their first Premier League match in charge of a team had all lost, with the Spaniard becoming only the fourth to get off to a winning start with a new side against the 20-times top-flight champions.</p>.<p>"We have the players with the good skills," Emery said. The way we played the 90 minutes we can be optimistic but only first step and we have to work a lot to keep improving."</p>
<p>Aston Villa manager Unai Emery tasted victory in his first game in charge as his side beat Manchester United 3-1 in the Premier League on Sunday, the visitors' first defeat in 10 matches in all competitions.</p>.<p>Former Arsenal boss Emery was given a warm welcome by home supporters ahead of the match, and he could not have wished for a better start to life back in the Premier League as Villa raced into a two-goal lead inside 11 minutes.</p>.<p>Leon Bailey arrowed a strike into the bottom corner to give Villa the lead, before Lucas Digne curled a sublime free kick past the despairing dive of United goalkeeper David de Gea, much to Emery's delight on the touchline.</p>.<p>United improved a great deal as the half wore on, creating several openings before Luke Shaw's strike took a huge deflection off Jacob Ramsey and found the net on the cusp of halftime to give the visitors hope.</p>.<p>Those hopes were quickly dashed, however, as Ramsey made amends, finding the top corner four minutes into the second half to restore Villa's two-goal advantage.</p>.<p>Tempers flared as the match reached its climax, but United could not muster a comeback, losing for the first time at Villa Park in the league since 1995 to stay fifth in the standings as a well-deserved victory lifted Villa to 14th.</p>.<p>"We were hopeful at halftime that we could come back, but we gave the game away early in the second half," United manager Erik ten Hag said.</p>.<p>"I am a long time in football. People are not robots. It is not acceptable, we have to be ready for every game and not give the game away. Collectively it was a bad performance."</p>.<p>It was a run of 23 games that United had gone unbeaten at Villa Park in the Premier League -- the longest undefeated away run a team has had against another in English league history -- but the writing was on the wall from the start on Sunday.</p>.<p><strong>Opening strike</strong></p>.<p>Ramsey set Jamaican winger Bailey through on goal and he rifled home the opener -- the first goal United have conceded from open play in over 12 hours of football in all competitions.</p>.<p>Things went from bad to worse for the visitors when Ramsey won a free kick, and full back Digne stroked an unstoppable shot into the net.</p>.<p>United finally found their feet just after the half-hour mark, with Emiliano Martinez in the Villa goal forced into two fine saves to deny youngster Alejandro Garnacho and captain for the day Cristiano Ronaldo</p>.<p>Shaw's strike did not look like it was heading for the net, but the huge deviation off Ramsey's back gave Martinez no chance.</p>.<p>That stroke of luck proved to be only a consolation for a below-par United, as Ramsey, who had ran United ragged all afternoon, fired home Ollie Watkins's pass to restore Villa's two-goal advantage.</p>.<p>Each of the previous nine managers to face United in their first Premier League match in charge of a team had all lost, with the Spaniard becoming only the fourth to get off to a winning start with a new side against the 20-times top-flight champions.</p>.<p>"We have the players with the good skills," Emery said. The way we played the 90 minutes we can be optimistic but only first step and we have to work a lot to keep improving."</p>