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Clip Wigan Athletic 0-4 Manchester United - Barclays Premier League - 26,02,2011

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Wigan Athletic 0-4 Manchester United - Barclays Premier League - 26,02,2011

17' [0-1] J. Hernandez
74' [0-2] J. Hernandez
84' [0-3] W. Rooney
87' [0-4] F.d. Silva

วันจันทร์ที่ 27 มิถุนายน พ.ศ. 2554

Chicharito lifts Gold Cup



Javier Hernandez's fairytale season ended on a soaring high, as the United striker and his Mexico team-mates came from behind to beat host nation United States in the Gold Cup final.

Chicharito secured the golden boot and player of the tournament awards for his outstanding exertions in taking El Tri to the final, but he had to settle for the role of provider as his side roared back from two goals down to post a stunning 4-2 victory.

After the United striker had poked against the post in the second minute, the US stormed ahead as Michael Bradley and Landon Donovan struck inside the first 25 minutes. Crucially, Mexico soon hit back when Chicharito fed West Ham winger Pablo Barrera to halve the arrears, and Andres Guardado popped up to level matters before the interval.

El Tri were ahead soon after the break as Barrera struck again, before Giovani dos Santos completed the comeback with a superbly composed finish. Chicharito was unable to nab his customary goal - though he was incorrectly flagged offside as he bore down on goal late on - but the United striker cared not a jot.

His work had already been done in hauling Mexico to the final with his seven-goal haul, and the 23-year-old was quick to hail his side's collective resolve after the final whistle. "Things were difficult but the coach told us to fight every single play," he said. "Our attitude is in our hands."

วันอาทิตย์ที่ 27 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2554

Wigan Athletic 0-4 Manchester United - Barclays Premier League



Javier Hernandez made it a lucky 13 goals for the season as Manchester United charged four points clear of Arsenal with a clinical victory at Wigan Athletic.

Sir Alex Ferguson declared the Barclays Premier League title battle was now a straight fight between his own side and the Gunners, and with trips to Chelsea and Liverpool looming, United could not have made a better start to their week on the road.

Preferred to Dimitar Berbatov, Hernandez justified the faith of his manager, turning home Nani's first-half cross before finishing Wayne Rooney's brilliant second-half through ball.

Rooney and Fabio then scored in the final minutes to leave relegation-threatened Wigan thoroughly deflated at a result that did not reflect their performance.

Three times Edwin van der Sar needed to make outstanding saves, whilst skipper Nemanja Vidic was a towering presence in the United defence.

Ferguson often speaks of his regret at failing to land Van der Sar in 1999 when he was searching for Peter Schmeichel's replacement.

At the time, the giant Dutchman was at Ajax and about to leave for Juventus. Instead, Ferguson tried a number of alternatives. Some were better than others and titles kept being won.

But was not until Van der Sar arrived from Fulham in 2005 that concern about the goalkeeping position ended.

This summer, Ferguson must hope for more success as Van der Sar heads off into retirement, having hit the 40-mark but still capable of producing the brilliance that has categorised his career.

Two first-half saves were responsible for United having a half-time lead at the DW Stadium when they could easily have been behind.

A poor back-pass from Paul Scholes presented Victor Moses with the first opportunity.

Moses strode into the United box with only Van der Sar to beat. He failed, blasting his shot against his imposing opponent's chest.

That was when the contest was still goalless. Within seconds of United's opener, Wigan were in again.

This time Moses was the provider, drilling a low cross to the far post where the combative James McCarthy was on his own six yards out.

Again, only Van der Sar stood between Wigan and the net. Once more he came out on top.

That Hernandez had scored in between only added to the Latics' frustrations.

The Mexican, preferred to Dimitar Berbatov, tends not to look as dangerous when starting matches.

He clearly knows how to find space, though. And, having once been denied by Ali Al Habsi after streaking clean through, the Mexican wriggled into enough space to steer home Nani's 17th-minute cross.

It was tough luck on Wigan, who were the better side, frustrating Scholes and Rooney in particular.

They were forced to survive another near thing for Wigan before they took command, though.

This time, Van der Sar needed agility rather than reactions to deny Maynor Figueroa.

Nani came close to doubling the visitors' lead when he thrashed a fierce shot into the side-netting, not long after he had been repelled by Ali Al Habsi's firm one-handed save.

Ferguson made comparisons between Nani and Cristiano Ronaldo earlier this week.

United's current Portugal winger is certainly a major attacking threat and Al Habsi repelled him with the first part of a double save, when he also denied Darren Fletcher, who had been set up by Rooney.

The England man may still be struggling for goals himself but he remains an excellent source of them.

After failing to convert a close range header, Rooney collected Hernandez's knock-down, then fed the Mexican with a delicately weighted pass.

Clean though, the Mexican found the bottom corner with ease.

Victory assured, a Rooney tap-in from Berbatov's square ball, followed by Fabio's close-range finish, his first United goal, merely rubbed Wigan's noses in it at the start of an eight-day period when, one senses, the strength of their title credentials will be discovered once and for all.

วันเสาร์ที่ 5 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2554

Wolverhampton Wanderers 2-1 Manchester United - Barclays Premier League



The 41st goal of a record day for scoring in the Barclays Premier League ended Manchester United's long unbeaten run as Wolverhampton Wanderers claimed another notable scalp at Molineux.

United's name can now go alongside Manchester City and Chelsea as title contenders who have lost at the Black Country venue after Wolves bounced back from an early goal, then repelled a fierce second-half pummelling.

By the final whistle, the Red Devils had lost their cool, reduced to the desperation of Paul Scholes trying to push the ball into the net to salvage a point.

It did not work and Wolves were able to celebrate thanks to a George Elokobi header which levelled Nani's third-minute opener and a winner whose scorer was disputed - Elokobi and Kevin Doyle both claimed to get the final tough to Nenad Milijas' 40th-minute free-kick - but whose value was unquestioned.

Indeed, as the frenzied roar greeted the final whistle, it seemed somehow in keeping with an extraordinary day, that the top club should lose to the bottom, their lead at the top trimmed to four points over a team that themselves tossed away a four-goal lead.

Judging by the way they began, it seemed as though both Wolves and United had spent the afternoon watching the drama unfold elsewhere and wanted a piece of the action themselves.

Certainly there was precious little attention paid to the defensive side of the match as large holes appeared in midfield and both outfits flew forward at every opportunity.

Milijas had already narrowly failed with one effort before United went in front.

There appeared little danger when Nani collected possession on the right flank. But Elokobi relaxed for a moment, the Portugal winger stepped inside and then beat Wayne Hennessey at his near post with a shot the Wolves goalkeeper should have kept out.

Had Rooney not continued the improvement in goalscoring in evidence in midweek, the visitors might not have been caught.

Instead, he failed to get enough power behind his shot after Dimitar Berbatov had threaded through an excellent pass, allowing Hennessey to make the save.

Wolves made the most of their reprieve too. Having lost Rio Ferdinand to an injury sustained in the warm-up, United's defence was a touch short of the cohesion required.

And when the loose ball from a corner was shovelled back out to Matt Jarvis, Elokobi beat Nemanja Vidic to the cross and headed into the bottom corner.

What followed had the fans of both teams on their feet and the managers tearing their hair out.

Clear chances came and went at both ends with unstoppable regularity.

For Nani, Ryan Giggs and Berbatov at one end, read Kevin Doyle, Milijas and O'Hara at the other. O'Hara was denied by a superb feet-first save from Edwin van der Sar after he had tried his luck from an acute angle.

Wolves did not give up. And with United's defence looking vulnerable, it was no surprise the hosts got their noses in front before the interval.

Milijas was the provider, floating an excellent free-kick deep into the United area. There was some confusion among the players over the identity of the scorer, although it went down as Elokobi's goal.

As the debate between Elokobi and Doyle raged after both claimed it, the unavoidable truth was that with the ball once again nestling in the bottom left-hand corner of Van der Sar's goal, Wolves were ahead.

Ferguson made one change at half-time and two more midway through the second period after Scholes' arrival had failed to trigger a comeback.

The exit of Berbatov was slightly surprising on two counts - first his goals, but also because Rooney was showing signs of frustration.

Christophe Berra threw himself in front of a Rooney blockbuster, emphasising the hosts' fighting spirit.

United were increasingly desperate. Scholes' act the ultimate admission of defeat.

วันอังคารที่ 25 มกราคม พ.ศ. 2554

Blackpool 2-3Manchester United - Barclays Premier Leagu



United moved five points clear of the chasing pack in the Barclays Premier League title race, but this was a far from straightforward three points as the Reds had to come back from a two-goal deficit and a below-par performance for almost 70 minutes of this clash at Bloomfield Road.

Ian Holloway’s side were 2-0 up and the better side at half-time after headed goals from poorly defended corners from Craig Cathcart and DJ Campbell. But with the home side’s tempo and energy expended, and with substitutes Ryan Giggs and Javier Hernandez providing pace and penetration, the final 20 minutes was all one-way traffic. Dimitar Berbatov got the first of two goals after 72 minutes, then Hernandez equalised before his Bulgarian strike-partner completed the dramatic turnaround with two minutes of normal time remaining – although there were ten minutes of added time to survive due to a serious head injury suffered by Rafael.

Sir Alex Ferguson described Blackpool as a “revelation” in the Premier League this season; that didn’t stop him selecting an attacking trident of Nani, Dimitar Berbatov and Wayne Rooney, suggesting a need to be positive from the off. With Paul Scholes recalled for his first game since the Champions League victory over Rangers in November and his penchant for a deep-lying, quarter-back role, there was licence for the front five to press forward. That meant Darron Gibson, in for Ryan Giggs, and Darren Fletcher, replacing Anderson, getting forward where possible. Rafael returned from a one-game ban for a red card at Tottenham Hotspur in place of John O’Shea.Such has been Blackpool’s success, particularly that of their captain Charlie Adam, that they have had to fend off three bids from three different clubs, including Liverpool, for their talisman. But such distractions would be swatted away for the visit of United and 1,500 Reds travelling to Bloomfield Road, a tight ground with the kind of close atmosphere that intimidates some teams.

The pre-match excitement was palpable; for locals this fixture, without wishing to patronise, embodies their return to the top-flight while, for United, it was one of the most eagerly-anticipated away trips of the season. The Reds began with large swathes of possession and Scholes pulling the strings in the opening ten minutes; a neat early exchange down the left between Gibson, Evra and Rooney ended with a cleverly-disguised Rooney pass and a blocked Evra cross. But it didn’t last.

The Reds’ rhythm was disrupted when Adam clattered into Patrice Evra, leaving the left-back dazed and bloodied. The Frenchman had barely returned to the field and certainly wasn't in position for a Blackpool corner that Adam swung across on 16 minutes. It was met with a thumping header from Craig Cathcart, which flew past Edwin van der Sar. It hurt more as Cathcart is an Academy graduate and former Young Player of the Year at Old Trafford, who joined the Tangerines only after a persuasive telephone call from Ian Holloway to Sir Alex.

Despite the shot in the arm for the home team, United still found space – whether created by passing and movement, or offered by an openBlackpool side – and momentarily at least upped the tempo. But there were still scares at the back, not least as Nemanja Vidic’s attempted headed clearance from Adam’s cross forced van der Sar into a reactionary save.

Sir Alex switched from a 4-3-3 formation to 4-4-2, but United’s openings were still mere half-chances. A Rafael header five minutes before the break was easily held by Richard Kingson in Blackpool's goal, while a brilliant piece of control from Berbatov was not be matched with an equally sublime finish. Blackpool looked fearless and went straight up the other end and grabbed a second. Van der Sar saved well from David Vaughan’s shot, but from the resulting corner United were caught out again as DJ Campbell headed home at the far post to leave Sir Alex’s men with a mountain to climb and an unbeaten record looking alarmingly exposed.

Ryan Giggs was called from the bench at the break, but almost immediately United could have conceded a third were it not for Rafael’s excellent positioning for Gary Taylor-Fletcher’s cross. Giggs did make a difference, though, especially as Blackpool ran out of steam. Another veteran, Scholes, got United’s first real attempt of the half just after the hour when Kingson struggled to hold his fizzing shot. A second change followed soon after that as Javier Hernandez replaced Rooney. The Mexican broke the offside trap almost straight away to race onto Scholes’ long pass and, aiming to put the ball between Kingson’s legs, the Ghanaian keeper got the slightest of touches that prevented it reaching the goal.Blackpool looked dead on their feet, while United’s tails were up. And on 73 minutes the Reds' probing paid off when Nani’s clever pass played in Fletcher and the Scot squared for Berbatov to tap home from close range. Within two minutes the Reds were level as Hernandez once again beat the offside flag to meet Giggs’ precision through-ball with a perfect finish to make it 2-2 in a remarkable turnaround.

Sadly Rafael was stretchered off, his head in a neckbrace, with just over ten minutes left - although later reports suggest he is suffering only from concussion - leading to a lengthy delay. Fletcher dropped in at right-back, while Anderson came on in midfield.

United pressed on and the incredible comeback was sealed with two minutes of normal time left when a breakaway attack allowed Berbatov to evade an increasingly jaded Blackpool back four to run through and steer a left-footed shot past Kingson. The additional ten minutes of added time, mainly to cover the extended stoppage for Rafael’s injury, did little for already battered nerves. But United's work was done.

Sir Alex’s men were far from at their best in Blackpool – certainly not reaching the heights of the win over Birmingham - but the last 20 minutes at least is the other side to United; a resilient, relentless United that just will not give up.

วันอาทิตย์ที่ 9 มกราคม พ.ศ. 2554

Manchester United 1 Liverpool 0 - The FA Cup



United are through to the FA Cup fourth round as a Ryan Giggs penalty after just two minutes ensured victory in an action-packed, end-to-end encounter with ten-man Liverpool.

Giggs’ spot-kick quelled Liverpool’s early optimism, while their own captain Steven Gerrard all but extinguished it with a reckless two-footed challenge on Michael Carrick that rightly earned him a red card after 32 minutes.

Liverpool – remarkably given their form and the turmoil on and off the pitch that has engulfed their season – arrived at Old Trafford on a wave of optimism. Roy Hodgson’s sacking and Kenny Dalglish's subsequent return to the club the day previously, ensured the 9,000 visiting fans had plenty to sing about before the match. But they would soon be silenced.

United, on the other hand, have started 2011 on a high, top of the league and hopeful of what the year might bring – not least the prospect of a 19th league title. But while Sir Alex Ferguson was keen to avoid the shock of last season’s FA Cup third round exit at the hands of local rivals Leeds, he had to contend with a cluster of first-choice absentees. Edwin van der Sar was still missing after suffering with a virus, while Wayne Rooney’s ankle problem meant he was not risked either. Worse still, Nemanja Vidic was a late drop-out – United’s influential skipper replaced by Jonny Evans, who would stand up to the demands of this fixture admirably.Dalglish entered the arena like an excited child expectant of what the next 90 minutes might hold, but Liverpool’s giddy optimism dissipated after barely 90 seconds when United went ahead from the spot. Darren Fletcher’s lofted pass picked out Dimitar Berbatov’s run into the right channel. The Bulgarian plucked the ball expertly out of the air and turned past Daniel Agger, who stuck his leg out. Although there the contact may have been slight, Howard Webb deemed it enough to point to the penalty spot. Giggs stepped up and, displaying the composure of a man who has played in this fixture 41 times, fired the ball confidently past Jose Reina. Old Trafford shook in the delirious celebrations that followed.

Liverpool came back into the contest with a spell of pressure midway through the half; Maxi Rodriguez stung Tomasz Kuszczak’s palms with a fierce drive, while Rio Ferdinand was well-positioned to stop Martin Kelly’s cross reaching Fernando Torres at the far post.

Despite the lead and a fair share of the pressure United had created little in front of goal by the time the next twist in the tale arrived. This meeting so often contains red cards due to its emotive nature. However, while some tackles can be explained by commitment in the heat of battle, there's no excusing the two-footed lunge from Gerrard on Carrick. He was rightly given his marching orders by Webb, again after careful consideration. Some observers might point to an earlier challenge from Rafael, but although both his feet left the ground momentarily, the Brazilian full-back was never out of control and, crucially, won theball.

United fans gleefully pointed at a dumbstruck Dalglish in the away dug-out and wittily sang, ‘You’re getting sacked in the morning’.

Nani had a half-chance to score United’s second before the break, making a run into the Liverpool area and a toe-poking shot that Reina saved comfortably. But it was Jonny Evans – still without a goal in his Reds career – who went closest to doubling the lead when his towering header from a corner slammed against the post.

United’s numerical advantage hadn’t fully shown towards the end of the first half, but it began to after the break as United pressed forward. The irrepressible Berbatov continued to cause havoc in Liverpool’s defence. His class shone through as he kick-started the Reds’ first real chance of the half three minutes in, beautifully controlling the ball and slipping a pass out to Fletcher on the right, and the Scotsman’s inviting cross was headed inches wide by Berbatov’s enthusiastic partner Chicharito.

Moments later Patrice Evra had a legitimate shout for a penalty turned down, and while this pointed to United’s dominance in the tie, the fragility of a 1-0 scoreline in a cup tie – even with the opposition a man down - was palpable. The away support sensed it, and with substitutes Ryan Babel and Jonjo Shelvey providing fresh legs, United still had work to do.As a counter move, Sir Alex replaced Fletcher with Anderson, but the Brazilian instantly earned a yellow card for a foul on Torres on the edge of the area, and Fabio Aurelio forced Kuszczak into an outstanding save from the resulting free-kick. United needed to respond, and did so with a flurry of corners and goal-mouth action. Berbatov saw a close range effort turned wide by Reina, while Rafael and two shots blocked as the game took on a genuine cup tie feel. Although United were protecting a lead, the fans were swept along with the excitement, calling for United to ‘attack, attack, attack’. This was no time for conservatism.

It was time, however, for the introduction of Michael Owen and the reactions of both sets of supporters showed in an instant the divide between the two clubs. Greater still is the gulf in value between victory and defeat – and when the final whistle blew, it was United celebrating the win, marching on in search of success in 2011. Liverpool, on the other hand, are staring at another fallow year.

United: Kuszczak; Rafael, Ferdinand, Evans (Smalling 84), Evra; Nani, Fletcher (Anderson 63), Carrick, Giggs; Berbatov, Hernandez (Owen 75). Subs not used: Lindegaard, Fabio, Gibson, Obertan.

Liverpool: Reina; Kelly, Skrtel, Agger, Aurelio; Meireles (Shelvey 61), Lucas; Kuyt, Gerrard, Maxi (Babel 61); Torres (Ngog 77). Subs not used: Gulasci, Kyrgiakos, Wilson, Ngog, Poulsen.