Jose Mourinho replaces Marouane Fellaini just seven minutes after bringing him off the bench in Spurs defeat

Spurs 2 Manchester United 0

Manchester United's Belgian midfielder Marouane Fellaini (L) goes by manager Jose Mourinho (R) as he leaves the pitch to be replaced by Spanish midfielder Ander Herrera (C) at Wembley Stadium in London, on January 31, 2018. / AFP PHOTO / Adrian DENNIS /

Tom Allnutt

Manchester United midfielder Marouane Fellaini had a short night's work against Spurs, with Jose Mourinho taking him off just seven minutes after introducing him as a substitute.

Christian Eriksen scored within 11 seconds as Tottenham brushed aside a below-par Manchester United to seal a crunch 2-0 victory in the race for the top four.

Eriksen's strike, coming after four Spurs passes, is the third fastest in Premier League history, slower only than Ledley King and Alan Shearer, who both took 10 seconds to hit the net in 2000 and 2003 respectively.

A Phil Jones own-goal then put Tottenham in charge before half-time at Wembley, with United fortunate not to suffer a more emphatic defeat.

Their chaotic display was summed up by Jose Mourinho substituting Fellaini in the second half, less than eight minutes after the Belgian had been brought on.

Fellaini entered the fray at Wembley after 63 minutes with Manchester United 2-0 down, but Mourinho quickly decided to replace his replacement.

It has yet to be confirmed whether or not Fellaini suffered an injury but the Belgian didn't receive treatment and shook hands with his manager as he walked off the pitch before promptly marching down the tunnel after taking off his jersey.

Mauricio Pochettino's men stay fifth but have reduced the gap behind Chelsea to three points and United to five.

A pulsating contest was played out in front of a crowd of 81,978, beating the previous Premier League record set when Spurs hosted Liverpool here earlier this season.

Alexis Sanchez was handed his league debut by Mourinho but by the end the Chilean's contribution was nothing more than a footnote. Tottenham's own new star signing Lucas Moura was paraded on the pitch at half-time.

Four Tottenham players had touched ball before Eriksen was celebrating. Mousa Dembele laid the kick-off back to Jan Vertonghen, who launched a pass forward to Harry Kane.

Kane headed into the path of Dele Alli and a feathered flick allowed Eriksen space to finish past David de Gea. Mourinho stood stone-faced on the touchline.

A frantic beginning continued with Jesse Lingard being denied by the foot of Hugo Lloris, but it was Tottenham who looked most likely to capitalise.

Son Heung-min almost skipped past the hapless Jones when left one against one and Spurs wanted a penalty when Kieran Trippier went down under a clumsy challenge from Ashley Young.

United were not without threat as Ben Davies made an excellent challenge inside the area to thwart Anthony Martial but every time Spurs attacked they looked like they could score.

One break left Alli with only Jones to beat but he neither rounded the defender nor made the pass to Son, who was free and screaming in the middle.

A second seemed inevitable, however, and it came when Trippier, left completely free out wide, fired a low cross into the near post. Jones opted against clearing with his left foot and instead with his right diverted into his own net.

United were lucky not to concede a penalty when Antonio Valencia clattered Alli in the box, saved only perhaps by the slightest of touches on the ball. Mourinho marched down the tunnel three minutes before half-time.

There was an optimistic penalty appeal when Sanchez headed against the arm of Son but otherwise the second half followed a similar pattern to the first.

Eriksen brilliantly let the ball run for Kane but the striker's effort was straight at De Gea and then Kane was left fuming when Son chose to shoot instead of squaring to him in the middle.