<p>Liverpool let a 2-0 lead slip as League One Shrewsbury earned a FA Cup fourth round replay at Anfield thanks to a 2-2 draw, whilst Manchester United and Manchester City cruised into the fifth round on Sunday.</p>.<p>Jurgen Klopp showed Liverpool's focus is very much on a first Premier League title for 30 years as he made 11 changes to the side that won at Wolves on Thursday.</p>.<p>However, unlike against Everton in the third round, the German's gamble did not pay off despite a calm finish from 18-year-old Curtis Jones to open the scoring on 15 minutes.</p>.<p>Shrewsbury missed a host of chances to level before the break and seemed set to pay a heavy price when a freak own goal from Donald Love doubled the visitors' lead a minute into the second half.</p>.<p>The Shrews, though, did not give up on their shot at shocking the European champions and were given a lifeline when Yasser Larouci brought down Josh Laurent and substitute Jason Cummings scored from the spot.</p>.<p>Cummings then sent New Meadow into raptures by slotting low under Adrian 15 minutes from time.</p>.<p>A visibly furious Klopp threw on Mohamed Salah and Roberto Firmino from the bench in an attempt to avoid adding a replay to their congested schedule.</p>.<p>But it was to no avail as a draw will see his side's two-week winter break from Premier League action at the start of February shortened by a few days.</p>.<p>United boss Ole Gunnar Solskjaer was badly in need of a convincing performance after 2-0 defeats to Liverpool and Burnley over the past seven days and got a response with a 6-0 thrashing of third-tier Tranmere.</p>.<p>Many tipped the Red Devils to get bogged down on a sandy surface at Prenton Park, but a flying start thanks to a host of unlikely goalscorers ensured there was no chance of an upset.</p>.<p>"This game was one where everyone apart from Man United fans wanted us to lose," said Solskjaer.</p>.<p>"It's been a bit of pressure on them but they've enjoyed it.</p>.<p>"It was a difficult pitch but we went about it the right way; just worked hard, played simple but effective and played the right way."</p>.<p>Captain Harry Maguire led by example by striding forward to smash home his first goal for the club since an £80 million ($105 million) move from Leicester.</p>.<p>Diogo Dalot then also grabbed his first United goal before Jesse Lingard curled home for just a second time in a year for club and country inside 16 minutes.</p>.<p>Phil Jones nodded home his first United effort since 2014 and Anthony Martial's deflected strike made it five before the break.</p>.<p>Solskjaer could then afford the luxury of resting Martial, Maguire and Nemanja Matic for most of the second half ahead of Wednesday's attempt to overturn a 3-1 first leg deficit against City in the League Cup semi-finals.</p>.<p>Tahith Chong was one of those introduced and he was brought down by Tranmere goalkeeper Scott Davies, allowing Mason Greenwood to score United's sixth from the penalty spot.</p>.<p>City manager Pep Guardiola hopes more fans show up at the Etihad Stadium for the derby in midweek after questioning why there were 15,000 empty seats for his side's 4-0 stroll past Fulham.</p>.<p>Nearly 40,000 were in attendance to see Tim Ream's sixth-minute red card give the Championship side a mountain to climb after he hauled down Gabriel Jesus inside the box.</p>.<p>Ilkay Gundogan converted the resulting penalty before Bernardo Silva's smart turn and shot quickly doubled City's advantage.</p>.<p>The visitors then held out for nearly an hour but two headers in three minutes from Jesus gave the scoreline a more accurate reflection of the English champions' dominance.</p>.<p>"Hopefully more people can come than today, hopefully (they) can support us more," said Guardiola.</p>.<p>"I don't know the reason why, but it was not full."</p>
<p>Liverpool let a 2-0 lead slip as League One Shrewsbury earned a FA Cup fourth round replay at Anfield thanks to a 2-2 draw, whilst Manchester United and Manchester City cruised into the fifth round on Sunday.</p>.<p>Jurgen Klopp showed Liverpool's focus is very much on a first Premier League title for 30 years as he made 11 changes to the side that won at Wolves on Thursday.</p>.<p>However, unlike against Everton in the third round, the German's gamble did not pay off despite a calm finish from 18-year-old Curtis Jones to open the scoring on 15 minutes.</p>.<p>Shrewsbury missed a host of chances to level before the break and seemed set to pay a heavy price when a freak own goal from Donald Love doubled the visitors' lead a minute into the second half.</p>.<p>The Shrews, though, did not give up on their shot at shocking the European champions and were given a lifeline when Yasser Larouci brought down Josh Laurent and substitute Jason Cummings scored from the spot.</p>.<p>Cummings then sent New Meadow into raptures by slotting low under Adrian 15 minutes from time.</p>.<p>A visibly furious Klopp threw on Mohamed Salah and Roberto Firmino from the bench in an attempt to avoid adding a replay to their congested schedule.</p>.<p>But it was to no avail as a draw will see his side's two-week winter break from Premier League action at the start of February shortened by a few days.</p>.<p>United boss Ole Gunnar Solskjaer was badly in need of a convincing performance after 2-0 defeats to Liverpool and Burnley over the past seven days and got a response with a 6-0 thrashing of third-tier Tranmere.</p>.<p>Many tipped the Red Devils to get bogged down on a sandy surface at Prenton Park, but a flying start thanks to a host of unlikely goalscorers ensured there was no chance of an upset.</p>.<p>"This game was one where everyone apart from Man United fans wanted us to lose," said Solskjaer.</p>.<p>"It's been a bit of pressure on them but they've enjoyed it.</p>.<p>"It was a difficult pitch but we went about it the right way; just worked hard, played simple but effective and played the right way."</p>.<p>Captain Harry Maguire led by example by striding forward to smash home his first goal for the club since an £80 million ($105 million) move from Leicester.</p>.<p>Diogo Dalot then also grabbed his first United goal before Jesse Lingard curled home for just a second time in a year for club and country inside 16 minutes.</p>.<p>Phil Jones nodded home his first United effort since 2014 and Anthony Martial's deflected strike made it five before the break.</p>.<p>Solskjaer could then afford the luxury of resting Martial, Maguire and Nemanja Matic for most of the second half ahead of Wednesday's attempt to overturn a 3-1 first leg deficit against City in the League Cup semi-finals.</p>.<p>Tahith Chong was one of those introduced and he was brought down by Tranmere goalkeeper Scott Davies, allowing Mason Greenwood to score United's sixth from the penalty spot.</p>.<p>City manager Pep Guardiola hopes more fans show up at the Etihad Stadium for the derby in midweek after questioning why there were 15,000 empty seats for his side's 4-0 stroll past Fulham.</p>.<p>Nearly 40,000 were in attendance to see Tim Ream's sixth-minute red card give the Championship side a mountain to climb after he hauled down Gabriel Jesus inside the box.</p>.<p>Ilkay Gundogan converted the resulting penalty before Bernardo Silva's smart turn and shot quickly doubled City's advantage.</p>.<p>The visitors then held out for nearly an hour but two headers in three minutes from Jesus gave the scoreline a more accurate reflection of the English champions' dominance.</p>.<p>"Hopefully more people can come than today, hopefully (they) can support us more," said Guardiola.</p>.<p>"I don't know the reason why, but it was not full."</p>