United can be champions
Quality, consistency and luck are all important if you want to win the league. But on Saturday at Old Trafford, United displayed two more title-winning attributes: bravery and know-how.
Patrice Evra showed bravery. It was clear he wasn’t feeling the best and it can’t be too pleasant emptying the contents of your stomach in front of 75,000 people. Lesser mortals would have gone off straight away. But the Frenchman found the determination to soldier on and set up United’s opening goal after he was fouled in the area by the hapless Benoit Assou-Ekotto.
There was bravery from Nani, too. If you're sent through on goal with nine minutes to play in a game where the stakes are so high, you've got to have some bottle to attempt a delicate dink of a finish. Just imagine what the reaction would have been had he made a mess of it. Now and then Nani drives us all mad but he's got that X factor and can produce the extraordinary as we saw against Bayern Munich.
On Saturday he also won the match-clinching penalty with a driving run into the box. To complete an eventful afternoon, the Portuguese winger "did an Evra" and threw up on the hallowed Old Trafford turf. I wonder what United groundsman Tony Sinclair makes of it all? I’m pretty sure stomach contents aren't the ideal fertiliser for his magnificently manicured surface.
So that’s bravery dealt with. United also exude know-how. Quite simply, they know how to win. When Ledley King headed home a Spurs equaliser, United didn't panic. In fact, the Reds remained remarkably calm. There was no lumping the ball forward in desperation, there was no headless-chicken-style football. United just continued to play, buoyed by the confidence that comes with winning countless games in the dying stages.
Ryan Giggs has done everything in football. But until Saturday, he’d never scored a league penalty. And yet you’d never have known that when the great man stepped up in front of the Stretford End. Did you think for a moment he was going to miss?
And so, against the odds, a fourth consecutive title is still very much a possibility. And what a delicious prospect: Liverpool could help us win a record breaking 19th title by beating Chelsea. That would surely be too good to be true!
Watch Denis Irwin’s verdict on the Spurs game when he joins Stewart for The Big Match on MUTV on Monday (17:30 BST).
The views expressed in this article are personal to the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Manchester United FC.
United 3 Spurs 1
Ryan Giggs put United in front from the spot in the second half, but Tottenham equalised through Ledley King and arguably looked like being the team to win it. However, the victory was secured by some brilliance from Nani. The Portuguese winger scored with an audacious chipped finish with nine minutes left, before earning a second penalty for Giggs to convert to ensure a 3-1 win.
That there would be drama and frayed nerves should not have come as a surprise in a topsy-turvy season which took arguably its wildest twist last weekend.
United were seconds away from being out of the title race altogether at Eastlands when the derby was headed for a draw. In the third minute of injury time a Paul Scholes-of-old late dart into the box and header into the bottom corner clinched three points. That dramatic win was capped by Tottenham’s defeat of Chelsea later that day. Game on in the title race.
Tottenham posed a serious risk after their wins over the Blues and Arsenal. As difficult as this fixture already was, it was made more difficult when Wayne Rooney was ruled out with a groin problem. Sir Alex intimated on Friday that he had “one or two doubts”, but Rooney’s availability was only publicly brought to light when he was pictured watching the Under-18s at Carrington on Saturday morning.
His absence was confirmed when the teams were announced, so too was news that Rio Ferdinand was missing again. But Owen Hargreaves’ return on the bench, and the prospect of his first action in 19 months, came as a very welcome boost. The Reds lined up with Paul Scholes and Darren Fletcher in central midfield, Antonio Valencia and Nani on the flanks and Ryan Giggs operating just behind Dimitar Berbatov up front.
However, it was an uncharacteristically quiet start, Tottenham making much of the early running and controlling play. That was perhaps down to Spurs’ confidence, maybe the importance of getting a result weighed on the United players’ minds, or perhaps it was because of Rooney’s absence – noticeable in the stands as much as on the pitch – but something was needed to bring United out of their shell. The truth of it was that, by the midway point in the first half, neither side had had a shot on target.
United's best opening came after 29 minutes. Nani slipped a pass to Evra who crossed for Giggs, but the ball never reached the Welshman. Berbatov was quickest to react, but his goal-bound strike was blocked by King. Seconds later, Valencia raced clear on goal, shrugged off the attentions of Gareth Bale and forced an excellent low save from Heurelho Gomes, although Berbatov was screaming for a squared pass. Two minutes later Evra volleyed over from 12 yards; United’s tails were up – the men in red just needed to make it count.
Spurs, despite their early possession, were far from potent in the final third. Their best chance of the first half was a Bale free-kick, after Nani’s foul on David Bentley earned him a booking, but it didn’t trouble Edwin van der Sar. It was United who threatened to score more than the Lilywhites. Berbatov saw a volley five minutes before half time rise over the bar. The half which had started so timidly from the home side, ended far more positively – albeit without the goal United craved to settle everyone’s nerves.
The Reds were first out after the break and urged on by the Stretford End. From a short corner seven minutes in, Berbatov headed agonisingly wide – with Fletcher narrowly missing out on turning the ball over the line. Then Nani hit the side-netting after a neat turn and shot inside the area. United were in the ascendancy and the breakthrough finally came after 58 minutes. Berbatov did well to escape the attentions of Benoit Assou-Ekotto. He brilliantly backheeled the ball to Evra but the Spurs defender fouled the Frenchman and a penalty was correctly awarded. Without Rooney, Giggs took spot-kick duties and coolly slotted the ball past Gomes. It wasn’t without cost – Berbatov injured his groin in the build-up, Evra had already been sick on the pitch, and Valencia was forced off - replaced by Michael Carrick – after clashing with King. Most importantly, United were in front.
The Reds were hardly settling on the lead, but Tottenham hadn’t given up hope either. And their attitude was rewared on 70 minutes. From Bale’s corner, King rose above Carrick and headed into the far corner beyond Rafael on the post. With 20 minutes remaining, the question now was: what did United have left in the locker?
Sir Alex brought on Federico Macheda with ten minutes to go, hoping the Italian teenager could reprise his heroics of last season against Aston Villa. And while he didn’t provide the finish, Macheda’s neat ball set up Nani for the crucial second goal. It was Nani's finish that really caught the eye. His dinked finish over Gomes was sublime and worthy of winning any football match. It was similar to that of Lionel Messi against Arsenal in the Champions League, but arguably a more high-pressure situation with nine minutes left and United's season on the line.
United, and Nani, were not finished there. The Portuguese picked up the ball on the halfway line and charged at the Tottenham defence. After twisting Michael Dawson’s inside-out, he drew a foul from Wilson Palacios to earn a second penalty of the game. Giggs went to Gomes’ left this time, but his spot-kick was equally as unstoppable. The Stretford End bounced, singing ‘we shall not be moved’. United are back on top of the league. Chelsea - who take on Stoke on Sunday - the ball is in your court...
City 0 United 1
After a tense, tight derby encounter, the midfielder popped up in the final minute of added time to nod home Patrice Evra's superb cross and move the Reds to within a point of Chelsea, ahead of the league leaders' late-afternoon trip to Tottenham.
Amid the Reds' ongoing chase for a fourth straight title, the subplot of City's challenge for local and, ultimately, national supremacy had seemed set to hog the headlines. But Scholes had other ideas and just a day after penning a one-year contract extension, the 35-year-old illustrated his enduring value not only with his winner, but by dictating play in a masterful midfield performance.
Of United's three pre-match injury doubts, two recovered sufficiently to join the starting XI. Wayne Rooney and Ryan Giggs were both available, but Rio Ferdinand's groin injury prompted a return for Jonny Evans alongside Nemanja Vidic in the centre of defence.
Both sides started the game with evident intent to attack. Darren Fletcher fired a 25-yard effort inches wide of Shay Given's post, with the Irishman well beaten, before Carlos Tevez's top corner free-kick drew a fine full-length catch from Edwin van der Sar.
Despite coming out of their corners swinging, both sides quickly displayed an awareness of the potential cost of failure. United bossed possession by virtue of an extra man in midfield, but refused to overcommit in support of Rooney, while City sat deep, costing themselves the chance to offer quick, accurate service to Tevez and Emmanuel Adebayor.
Scholes scuffed a shot wide from 25 yards, before a slip from Vincent Kompany allowed Rooney to race into the Blues' area. The Belgian's blushes were spared, however, when Kolo Toure blocked two attempted pull-backs from the striker. That characterised a first half largely comprised of chances snuffed out in their infancy. Giggs' in-swinging free-kick and Craig Bellamy's low ball across the six yard box both begged for conversion, but were instead left unfulfilled.
United spurned the two clearest openings of the half in its final five minutes. Both chances were created by the industry of Antonio Valencia, who held off Wayne Bridge to head across for Rooney, only for the striker to fire uncharacteristically off-target, before the Ecuadorian's low cross was stabbed straight at Given by Giggs.
Level, but having been comfortably outplayed, City began the second half with greater purpose. Kompany and Adam Johnson both picked up yellow cards in quick succession, before a counter-attack from the home side was wasted by Bellamy, who blazed wide instead of squaring for Tevez.
Despite that scare United were still bossing matters, and the Reds' need for victory was layed bare when Nani replaced Gibson. Roberto Mancini responded conversely, sending on midfielder Patrick Vieira for winger Johnson. The two substitutes were soon involved. A patient United move culminated in Giggs sliding an enticing ball into the area, which Nani slid wide under heavy pressure from Vieira. As the game entered its final 20 minutes, both teams began to open up.
Gareth Barry, largely anonymous in the midfield battle, had a glorious chance after latching onto Adebayor's neat through-ball, but the England midfielder opted to cut inside and tumble under Neville's attentions rather than pull the trigger. No penalty met his half-hearted appeal, and as play continued he was indebted to Given's
close-range save from an attempted lob by Giggs.
Dimitar Berbatov replaced Rooney, who looked short of full fitness, while Valencia made way for Gabriel Obertan as United continued to press. The Bulgarian's first contribution was almost a telling one, as his glancing header from a Nani cross sneaked just past Given's post.
At the other end, Vidic produced two brilliant interceptions in quick succession to keep City at bay, first flicking a cross away from the lurking Nedum Onuoha, then toe-poking away the danger in an almighty goalmouth scramble.
United's menace continued to linger, though. Agony was etched across Giggs' face when he just failed to reach Nani's cross in the final minute of normal time, but those emotions flipped entirely just as time seemed to be up.
Evra led one final foray down the left flank, exchanged passes with Obertan and floated a superb cross into the centre of the City area. There, onrushing in trademark fashion, was Scholes to execute a perfect header which nestled just inside Given's post.
The goal prompted near-feral scenes of delight among players, staff and supporters of a Red persuasion. The saying goes that lightning never strikes twice. How about thrice? Just as the Blues had seemed set to curtail the Reds' hunt for history, United struck a winner in injury-time for the third of four meetings this season. For now at least, Manchester resounds to status quo, rather than new order.
The bigger picture for United is one of silverware. There must be favours from other clubs in order for history to be re-written, but if the champions are to be dethroned, it won't be without a fight.
United 3 Bayern Munich 2
Darron Gibson's early strike and a brace from Nani put United 3-0 up on the night after 41 minutes, only for Ivica Olic to quickly reduce the arrears before Arjen Robben hit a superb – and pivotal – second away goal for the Germans 16 minutes from time.
United, who had Rafael sent off for two bookings five minutes into the second half, were seemingly home and hosed after a breakneck start to the evening, but Bayern's 2-1 first leg victory in the Allianz Arena laid the foundations for an unlikely turnaround.
The harsh denouement to the evening was a far cry from the rousing manner with which United had started the game. For all the pre-match tub-thumping about raising the Old Trafford roof and providing a soundtrack to inspire Sir Alex Ferguson’s side, far more inspirational was the shock inclusion of Wayne Rooney.
Eight days of hysterical speculation could finally die down, as the team sheets confirmed pre-match whispers that United’s talisman would play a part after his battle with ankle ligament damage. Alongside him, Rafael and Darron Gibson replaced Gary Neville and Paul Scholes, while John O’Shea made a welcome return to the bench after his long battle with a complicated leg injury.
Bayern could also count on reinforcements, as Robben won his own high-profile race against time and Bastian Schweinsteiger returned from suspension. To accommodate them, Hamit Altintop and Danijel Pranjic dropped to the bench.
Predictably, given the late personnel boon, Old Trafford was abuzz prior to the first whistle. Less than three minutes in, the Theatre of Dreams was a citadel of sound. Rafael superbly rolled off the attentions of Frank Ribery and curled a pass infield to Rooney. He instantly laid off to Gibson and sped towards goal, expecting a return pass. Instead, the young midfielder advanced and powered a low 25-yard shot inside Hans-Jorg Butt’s near post.
The home support erupted, and wild scenes of celebration were replicated in evermore feral fashion just four minutes later as the Reds’ lead was doubled. Again Rooney was involved, spreading a glorious pass wide to Valencia, and the Ecuadorian teased Bayern right-back Holger Badstuber, twice shimmying to cross before firing in a flat delivery which Nani impishly backheeled just inside Butt’s right-hand post.
Eight days earlier, Bayern had recovered from an early concession to overcome United in the Allianz Arena. Two down inside seven minutes and completely under the cosh, the odds were stacked against Louis van Gaal’s side. Not that they were helping themselves. Butt was extremely fortunate that his shanked clearance was not punished by Michael Carrick, who had to fashion space before shooting just off target with his left foot.
United’s dominance was near absolute. The sterling work of Patrice Evra and Rafael – who was booked for an
altercation with Mark van Bommel – was negating the attempts of Franck Ribery and Robben to influence proceedings.
The foundations for Bayern’s first-leg victory had been laid in winning the central midfield battle, but Carrick, Gibson and the omnipresent Darren Fletcher ensured there would be no repeat in the opening stages of the second leg. Gibson drilled a 30-yard rasper just over the bar before feeding Rafael, who could only fire past the far post after running virtually half the field in possession of the ball.
With six minutes of the half remaining, both sides exchanged a flurry of blows. Edwin van der Sar made a superb sprawling save from Olic, and two minutes later Nani grabbed his second goal of the evening to seemingly put United out of sight. Rafael’s quick throw released Valencia, who bypassed Martin Demichelis before pulling the ball back across the area. The ball was out of Rooney’s reach, but arrived perfectly for Nani to steer an unerring finish which brushed the crossbar en route into the roof of the net.
With only four minutes until the interval, United appeared to have put the tie out of Bayern’s reach. Not so. Almost immediately, Thomas Muller headed on for Olic, who held off the attentions of Carrick before firing inside van der Sar’s far post.
In first-half stoppage time, the Dutchman had to make a stunning one-handed stop to keep out compatriot Robben’s curling effort as Bayern finished in the ascendancy, before referee Nicola Rizzoli brought a breathtaking first period to a close.
United’s dominance had been almost total, but given Bayern's first-leg lead, one defensive mix-up had suddenly placed the tie back astride a knife edge.
To further complicate matters, United were reduced to 10 men within five minutes of the second half commencing as Rafael received a second caution for tugging Ribery’s shirt as the Frenchman threatened to break. United had overcome adversity once in overturning Bayern’s lead. Now, a man down and just a goal away from exiting the competition, it would have to happen again.
The early omens were good. Darren Fletcher’s free kick prompted confusion in the Bayern box, and Butt had to flick Nani’s superbly-measured volley over the crossbar as a result. From the resulting corner, Fletcher curled a yard wide of the far post. Between those two chances, John O’Shea replaced Rooney, who had been visibly struggling since taking two heavy hits on his right ankle midway through the first half.
Inevitably, Bayern's pressure grew. Van der Sar needed to be alert to punch away a volley from Ribery, and the Bundesliga leaders had United encamped in front of the Scoreboard End. Just after the hour, however, Evra's fine run and pass released Nani, deployed as the new lone striker who was only denied a hat-trick by the reflexes of Butt. Carrick fired over from a clever corner by the Portuguese as the Reds continued to search for an unlikely killer goal, but defending in numbers was the new gameplan.
Substitute Mario Gomez glanced Philipp Lahm's cross onto the top of the crossbar and Schweinsteiger's low drive tested van der Sar's handling, before Robben struck a hammer blow on 73 minutes, superbly volleying Ribery's corner through a crowd of players and inside van der Sar's far post.
Although Dimitar Berbatov and Ryan Giggs were thrown into the fray, Bayern gradually constricted the life out of United with a masterclass in keep-ball. Ribery almost fired in an equaliser late on, but second-leg victory – however hollow – was the least United deserved for an heroic, sweat-soaked show of defiance.
Bayern Munich 2 United 1
The Reds looked all set to come home with a decent score draw but that all changed when, two minutes into injury time, Bayern striker Ivica Olic swept past a couple of defenders and finally beat the man who'd been a big obstacle all night, Edwin van der Sar.
United had led for the majority of the match, from Wayne Rooney's lightning strike in the second minute until Franck Ribery's free-kick equaliser in the 77th. But the home side were the better side on the night and will come to Old Trafford full of confidence.
The Reds' first attack produced the coveted away goal. Only fifteen seconds in, Nani was brought down by the masked Martin Demichelis close to the corner flag. The Argentine assailant was then found wanting as the winger’s free-kick, via a large deflection off Markus van Bommel, dropped into the six-yard box where Rooney volleyed triumphantly into the roof of the net.
It was a dream start for the Reds and it threatened to get even better as Sir Alex’s superior midfield unit sliced through the Bayern rearguard and presented Nani with an opportunity of his own. Unfortunately, he scuffed wide of the near post but the opening was encouraging, as was his right-wing cross that skimmed off the bar.
With the injured Arjen Robben forced to watch from the stands, Bayern were pinning their hopes on Franck Ribery. There were several flashes of danger fromthe French international inside the first half-hour - a low drive well held by van der Sar, a majestic ball through the heart of United’s defence that Hamit Altintop couldn’t kill, and a searing run down the left flank past Gary Neville. On the last attack, Ribery’s cross was punched only half-clear by van der Sar and when Altintop bounced the ball back into the middle, Olic should have done better than divert it wide.
Bayern stayed on the boil to force another van der Sar save through Danijel Pranjic’s long-range effort. But the closest this absorbing first half came to producing a second goal was when Fletcher floated a superb cross in from the left to Rooney, who pulled the ball down but fired too close to Butt, enabling the keeper to block his shot. It was a big chance – the sort you can rue if the opposition comes back to bite you.
Ribery and Bayern came flying out of the traps and won two corners within two minutes of the restart, when van der Sar thwarted Olic’s effort from a tight angle and Daniel Van Buyten’s shot was diverted wide. The United keeper had to make three further saves before the hour mark, to keep out two shots from Thomas Muller – one wickedly deflected off Vidic’s inside leg – and a stringing strike from Altintop after he wriggled past a couple of defenders.
Silenced early on by Rooney’s lightning strike, the Bayern supporters were beginning to find their voices with the game, if not the score, in the grip of their improving team. But for all their possession, the best they could throw at United was long-range shots – like the Pranjic effort which the slidingScholes diverted onto the roof of the net.
Sir Alex shuffled his attacking pack for the last 20 minutes, sending on Dimitar Berbatov and Antonio Valencia for Ji-sung Park and Michael Carrick. But the next opportunity again fell to Bayern as Muller backheeled inside the box to Olic and van der Sar tipped the Croatian’s shot around the post. The Dutchman was also called into action at the corner, pushing it away to give United some respite.
Louis Van Gaal’s first change was well received by the home crowd, Germany striker Mario Gomez making his return from injury as a substitute for Muller. But a greater roar would follow moments later when Bayern’s pressure finally paid off.
Neville’s handling of the ball just outside the box received double punishment - a yellow card and then the equaliser as Ribery’s free-kick clipped off the defensive wall to leave van der sar stranded. So unlucky for United, 13 minutes from time.
Sir Alex responded by sending on Ryan Giggs and there was almost an instant dividend as Nemanja Vidic powered a header against the crossbar from the Welshman’s first corner. At the other end, van der Sar made his best save in injury time, tipping away a Gomes shot. But Bayern were not finished and when Olic broke into the box, he fired home clinically. A horrible end for the Reds was compounded by Rooney limping off with an injury - here's to a quick recovery as United bid to turn this difficult tie around.
United had led for the majority of the match, from Wayne Rooney's lightning strike in the second minute until Franck Ribery's free-kick equaliser in the 77th. But the home side were the better side on the night and will come to Old Trafford full of confidence.
The Reds' first attack produced the coveted away goal. Only fifteen seconds in, Nani was brought down by the masked Martin Demichelis close to the corner flag. The Argentine assailant was then found wanting as the winger’s free-kick, via a large deflection off Markus van Bommel, dropped into the six-yard box where Rooney volleyed triumphantly into the roof of the net.
It was a dream start for the Reds and it threatened to get even better as Sir Alex’s superior midfield unit sliced through the Bayern rearguard and presented Nani with an opportunity of his own. Unfortunately, he scuffed wide of the near post but the opening was encouraging, as was his right-wing cross that skimmed off the bar.
With the injured Arjen Robben forced to watch from the stands, Bayern were pinning their hopes on Franck Ribery. There were several flashes of danger fromthe French international inside the first half-hour - a low drive well held by van der Sar, a majestic ball through the heart of United’s defence that Hamit Altintop couldn’t kill, and a searing run down the left flank past Gary Neville. On the last attack, Ribery’s cross was punched only half-clear by van der Sar and when Altintop bounced the ball back into the middle, Olic should have done better than divert it wide.
Bayern stayed on the boil to force another van der Sar save through Danijel Pranjic’s long-range effort. But the closest this absorbing first half came to producing a second goal was when Fletcher floated a superb cross in from the left to Rooney, who pulled the ball down but fired too close to Butt, enabling the keeper to block his shot. It was a big chance – the sort you can rue if the opposition comes back to bite you.
Ribery and Bayern came flying out of the traps and won two corners within two minutes of the restart, when van der Sar thwarted Olic’s effort from a tight angle and Daniel Van Buyten’s shot was diverted wide. The United keeper had to make three further saves before the hour mark, to keep out two shots from Thomas Muller – one wickedly deflected off Vidic’s inside leg – and a stringing strike from Altintop after he wriggled past a couple of defenders.
Silenced early on by Rooney’s lightning strike, the Bayern supporters were beginning to find their voices with the game, if not the score, in the grip of their improving team. But for all their possession, the best they could throw at United was long-range shots – like the Pranjic effort which the slidingScholes diverted onto the roof of the net.
Sir Alex shuffled his attacking pack for the last 20 minutes, sending on Dimitar Berbatov and Antonio Valencia for Ji-sung Park and Michael Carrick. But the next opportunity again fell to Bayern as Muller backheeled inside the box to Olic and van der Sar tipped the Croatian’s shot around the post. The Dutchman was also called into action at the corner, pushing it away to give United some respite.
Louis Van Gaal’s first change was well received by the home crowd, Germany striker Mario Gomez making his return from injury as a substitute for Muller. But a greater roar would follow moments later when Bayern’s pressure finally paid off.
Neville’s handling of the ball just outside the box received double punishment - a yellow card and then the equaliser as Ribery’s free-kick clipped off the defensive wall to leave van der sar stranded. So unlucky for United, 13 minutes from time.
Sir Alex responded by sending on Ryan Giggs and there was almost an instant dividend as Nemanja Vidic powered a header against the crossbar from the Welshman’s first corner. At the other end, van der Sar made his best save in injury time, tipping away a Gomes shot. But Bayern were not finished and when Olic broke into the box, he fired home clinically. A horrible end for the Reds was compounded by Rooney limping off with an injury - here's to a quick recovery as United bid to turn this difficult tie around.
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