Manchester United manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer endured a sour ending to his 100th Premier League game in charge after slack defending again cost his team home points in a 3-3 draw with Everton on Saturday. United's away league form has been outstanding this season but simple errors unbecoming of title contenders have led to four defeats at Old Trafford, most recently a 2-1 reverse to bottom team Sheffield United. Manchester United took a 2-0 lead against the Toffees but amateurish defending allowed the visitors to wipe out the deficit and then snatch a draw with the last kick of the game from Dominic Calvert-Lewin after they had fallen behind again. The result dented second-placed United's hopes of winning their first league title since 2013 as it left them two points behind leaders Manchester City who have two games in hand. Solskjaer reacted with a touch of defiance as he praised his team's prolific scoring but could not ignore the disappointment of having to settle for a draw which tasted like defeat. "We deserved to win the game but that is football for you, you have to take your chances and cannot concede with every shot," he told the BBC. "First half I did not feel we played particularly well but scored two fantastic goals. You go in at the break 2-0 up feeling we have not hit where we could do. "After 2-2 we played really well then the last kick of the ball kicks us in the teeth and we go home disappointed."