Manchester United winger Ashley Young is fit for Sunday's Premier League match at home to Everton after recovering from a knee injury, manager Alex Ferguson said.
Midfielder Michael Carrick is also available while defender Phil Jones should have shaken off a bout of shingles that also bothered Ferguson who was annoyed that news of the illness had been made public by England under-21 coach Stuart Pearce.
"We thought it was a doctor's confidence so we are disappointed in that, it's not anything serious for the boy. It's a mild condition, he should be OK," Ferguson said.
They then host Reading in an FA Cup fifth round match on February 18.
Before those two dates there is Everton who are flying high in fifth and whose fightback in a thrilling 4-4 draw in this fixture last season proved costly for United who lost out on the title on goal difference to ManchesterCity.
"(We were) 4-2 up with seven or eight minutes to go, it was unexpected and you've got to anticipate the unexpected in the run-in but that was a bad blow for us," Ferguson said.
"That definitely cost us the league, there is no question of that. That will never happen again."
United have a nine-point lead over Manchester City with 62 points from 25 games although by the time they host David Moyes's side on Sunday the gap could have been narrowed as the champions play at Southampton the day before.
Everton are 20 points behind Ferguson's side and involved in the tussle for a top-four finish and the lucrative business of Champions League football, despite a much smaller budget than many teams around them.
Ferguson was full of praise for the job fellow Scot Moyes had done in more than a decade at Everton.
"David Moyes has got a very strong unit at Everton, very experienced ... they've only lost three games this season," he said.
Inspired by the goals of Marouane Fellaini, who headed the winner in the 1-0 victory over United at GoodisonPark on the opening weekend of the season and has netted 10 times in the league this term, Everton pose a stiff test for United.
"They are a difficult opponent," Ferguson said. "They have got a genuine chance of finishing in the top four.
"I think the race for the title is between ourselves and City but after that you've got Chelsea, Tottenham, Arsenal, Everton and even Liverpool."
Fellaini, who has become increasingly influential for Everton since he joined the club in 2008, has been nursing a hip injury and did not play in Belgium's midweek 2-1 friendly win over Slovakia.
Moyes, however, expects him to be fit for Sunday's encounter.
"He has got really bad bruising but I think he will be okay," the Everton manager said.
Photograph: Clive Brunskill/Getty Images
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