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Hellas Verona’s Orestes Romulo (left) and Inter Milan’s Ivan Perisic vie for the ball during their Serie A match at Bentegodi stadium in Verona. Inter Milan won 2-1. Image Credit: AP

Rome: Inter Milan kept in touch with leaders Napoli, thanks to a 2-1 win at struggling Verona on Monday as they reclaimed second place in Serie A.

Luciano Spalletti’s unbeaten side have 29 points from 11 games — a new club record — and are two points adrift of Napoli.

Champions Juventus and Lazio are joint third on 28 points with Roma sitting four points further back in fifth with a game in hand. “There’s a new line in the history of the club, then we move on,” said Spalletti of the points record.

“We have to keep going through this tunnel until June before we see the light. “If we hadn’t won this match, and Roma had played their [postponed] match against Sampdoria and won, we’d be out of the Champions League places.

“All teams are in there fighting, I’m thinking of teams like Milan who will come back and Lazio who have the quality to stay up there. Everything can change in one moment.”

Spanish midfielder Borja Valero opened his account for Inter after 36 minutes as he turned in an Antonio Candreva cross with Ivan Perisic scoring the second from the edge of the area midway through the second half.

Substitute Giampaolo Pazzini had pulled Verona level on 59 minutes with a penalty after the intervention of the video assistant referee.

Spalletti praised inspirational captain Mauro Icardi despite his failure to find the net. “People consider his games based on goals but when he dropped deep and played with the whole team he offered a big advantage for us,” said the coach.

“He’s crucial even in scrappy games.”

A seventh defeat of the season leaves Verona second from bottom with just six points to show from 11 games.

In Premier League, Irish international Jeff Hendrick’s second-half goal gave Burnley only their second home win of the season, edging Newcastle United 1-0.

The 25-year-old’s goal lifted Burnley up to the heady heights of seventh, but may have heightened Everton’s interest in their manager Sean Dyche to fill the vacancy left by Ronald Koeman’s sacking. Rafael Benitez’s Newcastle stay in ninth place.

The hosts had the better of the opening 10 minutes, putting the Newcastle defence under pressure and Hendrick should have done better than scuff his shot from close range in the third minute.

It was visiting midfielder Jonjo Shelvey who had the first genuine shot on target as his long-range effort was caught by Burnley ‘keeper Nick Pope.

Ashley Barnes, standing in for the injured Chris Wood up front, should have done better when he was picked out by Robbie Brady’s superb cross on the half-hour mark, but his header went well wide.

Newcastle went even closer to opening the scoring early in the second half but Pope, who has proved a great replacement since coming in for the injured Tom Heaton, produced a superb save to deny Ayoze Perez.