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Thursday, December 31, 2009

Man Utd 5 - 0 Wigan

Manchester United moved back to within two points of league leaders Chelsea with a processional win over Wigan.

Wigan just could not cope with Wayne Rooney's movement and touch in attack

Wayne Rooney got the ball rolling with a clipped finish from Rafael da Silva's cross, before Michael Carrick swept in.

Rafael bagged a third before half-time with a left-footed shot and Dimitar Berbatov tapped in after the break.

Antonio Valencia rounded off a terrific display with a fine chipped fifth and, in truth, it could have been more as relegation candidates Wigan crumbled.

Defeat leaves the Latics only a point off the drop zone and their recent run of one win in nine matches has left Roberto Martinez's side nervously looking over their shoulder at the bottom three.

A woeful night out was made all the worse by an injury to keeper Chris Kirkland that meant he had to be withdrawn at half time.

United have won all 10 previous matches against Wigan, and the visitors' performance bore all the hallmarks of a side resigned to defeat before they had even kicked off.

It was barely a month ago that Wigan went down 9-1 at Tottenham - and if it were not for good fortune they might have suffered a similar fate at Old Trafford.

The Latics failed to put pressure on the ball, allowing the home midfield the freedom of the pitch, and with Rooney dropping deep to cause problems at every given opportunity United were able to create goalscoring opportunities at will.

But, as bad as the visitors were, the hosts were good.

Darren Fletcher patrolled the midfield with purpose, Carrick picked passes for fun, Valencia was a constant nuisance down the right-hand side, while Rooney's performance will cause the Wigan defence nightmares for months.

United could have been two or three to the good before Rooney broke the deadlock on 28 minutes.

Dimitar Berbatov had claims for a penalty turned down after going down under Titus Bramble's challenge, Rooney forced Chris Kirkland to tip round the post from 25 yards, Nemanja Vidic had an effort cleared off the line by Paul Sharner, and Rooney - again - curled onto the far post after dancing round Maynor Figueroa on the byline.

Rooney opened the scoring with the deftest of final touches, clipping in Rafael's cross from six yards out.

Carrick doubled that lead minutes later when he swept home Valencia's cut-back, and Rafael made it three before half-time when his left-foot shot from the edge of the squeezed home to give him his first goal at Old Trafford.

The second half was always going to be a case of damage limitation for Wigan - but they fell well short of that.

Berbatov ensured little momentum was lost when he poked home the fourth five minutes after the restart after more good work from Valencia, and the Bulgarian very nearly laid on a fifth soon after when his cross was headed against the bar by Rooney.

Despite being almost totally outplayed, Wigan did occasionally string a move together that ensured the United defence was not completely redundant, and Charles N'Zogbia missed a great chance to reduce the deficit when Won-Hee Cho's pass set him free in the box only for the winger to drift his shot wide, while Hugo Rodallega headed straight at Tomasz Kuszczak from six yards out.

However, they were only brief forays into the opposition half and former Latic Valencia soon added United's fifth of the night, running on to Rooney's slide-rule pass to chip over substitute keeper Mike Pollitt and into the far corner.

There was still time for Anderson to drill over and Pollitt to save well when Emmerson Boyce almost deflected a sixth into his own net, but United happily settled for a second 5-0 defeat of Wigan this season - a win that takes their goal difference to +27, two less than Chelsea.

From BBC

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Sir Alex Ferguson fires warning to title rivals

Sir Alex Ferguson has warned his side's title rivals that Manchester United will only improve in 2010 as they look to retain their Premier League trophy.

United end the year two points off league leaders Chelsea and two ahead of Arsenal, who have a game in hand, after Wednesday's 5-0 demolition of Wigan.

And the Scot warned: "The second half of the season is when experience counts and we have that and we have the squad.

"The key is getting the defence fit and then we'll be a much better team."

The return to fitness of Nemanja Vidic, in particular, has allowed Ferguson to select something like a settled back four in their last two matches and United have responded with comfortable wins over Hull and Wigan.

It has left them well placed to push on in the new year - though Chelsea remain top of the table, while Arsenal's recent form has underlined their title credentials as well.

But Ferguson insists the return to full fitness of a number of defenders such as Rio Ferdinand, Johnny Evans and John O'Shea will provide his side with the perfect fillip during the title run-in.

"There is no doubt that having a settled defence makes all the difference to us," he said.

"The stability given to us by our back four against Wigan and last time out against Hull has been fantastic. Tonight (Wednesday) we could have won by more because we were able to play with confidence and aggression from that base.

"We hit the woodwork a couple of times and had another cleared off the line, but we're happy enough with 5-0."

Wigan manager Roberto Martinez, though, was not so buoyant.

The defeat leaves his side just a point off the relegation zone at the turn of the year, and he admits he has work to do if Wigan are to pull away from the bottom three.

"That defeat can be summed up quite easily - we just did not give United a game at all," he said.

"It was extremely, extremely disappointing. We need to be solid, to earn the right to be on the ball and express ourselves, but tonight we did everything the other way round.

"We looked like individuals rather than a team and it is unacceptable. Credit to United, they were clinical, but everything they created was easy because we were not a team.

"We'll start again on Monday and in situations like this the players have to show how important they want to be for the football club. Simply put, we cannot continue like this."

From BBC

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Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Ferguson expects two-horse title race with Chelsea

Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson expects the title race to come down to a battle between his side and Chelsea, with other teams falling away.

Only 10 points cover the top six sides, while third-placed Arsenal can close to within one point of Chelsea if they win their two games in hand.

Ferguson said: "It is not looking like it at the moment, but history tells you that two teams break away at the end.

"Chelsea are the big danger because they too have great experience."

Going into their final game of 2009, against Wigan, United lie five points behind leaders Chelsea, just one point worse off than they were at the same time last year, and having scored more goals.

Ferguson said before the season began he had expected Chelsea to be their biggest rivals, and despite the best efforts of some other contenders, he still feels the same way.

"At the start of the season I saw Chelsea as our biggest danger and I have not changed my mind," said Ferguson.

"Nobody has had a consistent run really."

Considering the injury list they have had to put up with this season - now added to by goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar being given indefinite compassionate leave for family reasons - United's performance is all the more impressive.

And their goal-scoring record - 40 in 19 Premier League games - is particularly eye-catching bearing in mind the loss of Cristiano Ronaldo to Real Madrid in the summer.

"People looked at us losing Ronaldo and saw that as being crucial," said Ferguson.

"They felt we wouldn't be nearly as good without him. Cristiano was an unbelievable player. But we have adjusted to it. There is only one point difference."

From BBC

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Manchester United keeper Edwin Van der Sar given leave

Manchester United keeper Edwin van der Sar has been given indefinite compassionate leave to visit his ill wife in the Netherlands.

Annemarie van Kesteren, 36, suffered a brain haemorrhage on 23 December.

"Annemarie had a problem over in Holland a week ago and has been admitted to hospital," said United manager Sir Alex Ferguson.

"That is the best place for her to be. They have examined her twice and are trying to get to the root of it."

Van der Sar, 39, has not played since suffering a knee injury in United's 3-0 win over Everton on 21 November.

And the Dutchman has been told to take as long as he needs before returning to play for United.

"I have told Edwin to stay over there. There is no point in him being here," added Ferguson.

"The best thing is for him to be with his wife. Hopefully she will make a good recovery."

Van der Sar had been in his homeland to receive treatment from the Holland team doctor for his knee injury when his wife collapsed.

Tomasz Kuszczak has been Ferguson's choice in goal in recent weeks, with Ben Foster falling down the pecking order.

From BBC

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Monday, December 28, 2009

Man Utd vs. Wigan

Barclays Premier League
Venue: Old Trafford Date: Wednesday, 30 December 2009 Kick-off: 2000 GMT
Coverage: BBC Sport website, BBC Radio 5 Live & local radio

  • TEAM NEWS

Manchester United will check the condition of the players who returned from injury for Sunday's win at Hull.

Nemanja Vidic, Wes Brown and Ryan Giggs were among those to make their comebacks in that match.

Wigan manager Roberto Martinez has no fresh injury concerns, with Mohamed Diame the only player unavailable as he recovers from a knee ligament injury.

Paul Scharner must avoid a yellow card or else he will trigger an automatic one-match suspension.

  • MATCH PREVIEW

Sir Alex Ferguson might have mellowed with age, but it never fails to surprise when the Manchester United manager agrees with old foe Arsene Wenger.

Ferguson concurs with the Arsenal manager's assertion that a team could lose seven games this season and still win the title, a feat last achieved in 1995 by Blackburn.

Manchester United have lost five games, but trailed leaders Chelsea by just two points at the halfway stage of the season. Furthermore, United's case for a successful defence of the title was strengthened by the return of a recognised back four in Sunday's win at Hull.

Wigan manager Roberto Martinez can only hope his team are not as apologetic as he was in October, when he was forced to contact Ferguson to explain remarks attributed to him in a Spanish newspaper.

Martinez denied suggesting that the Football Association are afraid to punish Ferguson, and that the United manager "has a lot of control in this country." What cannot be refuted is that Ferguson has a hold over Wigan, having masterminded 10 wins in the 10 previous meetings between these clubs.

  • MATCH FACTS

Head-to-head

• Manchester United have won all 10 previous matches against Wigan, scoring 30 goals.

• The reverse fixture ended in a 5-0 away victory for United in August, when Wayne Rooney scored his 100th goal for the club and Michael Owen added his first.

Man Utd

• United are the only team not to have dropped any points from a winning position in the Premier League this season.

• They have the best record in the division against bottom-half opposition, winning nine games out of 10.

• If selected, Michael Owen will be making his 400th appearance for an English club.

• If Paul Scholes scores he will become the 18th player to score 100 goals in the Premier League.

Wigan

• Wigan are winless in four matches and have only managed one point from their last four away fixtures.

• They have conceded 39 goals in 18 league games - only Hull have fared worse.

• The Latics are unbeaten in the six league matches in which Hugo Rodallega has scored this season (W5, D1).

  • MOST RECENT MEETING

Wigan 0-5 Man Utd (22 August 2009)

Man Utd scorers: Rooney 56, 65, Berbatov 58, Owen 85, Nani 90.

From BBC

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Wayne Rooney relieved to avoid Ferguson's anger

Wayne Rooney was relieved to avoid the wrath of Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson after dropping a second-half clanger in the 3-1 win over Hull.

Rooney gave United the lead on the stroke of half-time, but a misjudged back-pass led to a Hull penalty from which Craig Fagan equalised.

"It's a relief," said the England striker. "Their equaliser was a mistake by myself and it's not a nice feeling."

"Thankfully we got the win, or the manager won't have been too pleased."

Rooney's error was the catalyst for a match-wining performance from the England international, who went on to force an Andy Dawson own goal before creating United's third for Dimitar Berbatov.

"I didn't want to let the lads down, and at the time it looked like that - but it happens, and we got the win in the end," added Rooney.

"I think it's a mad league, a lot of teams are dropping points and it's really close. Hopefully we can be more consistent in the second half of the season and retain our title."

United's hopes of realising that ambition rest at least partly in the hands of Rooney, whose first-half effort, prodded home from a Darren Fletcher cross, was his 13th Premier League goal of the season.

The victory moves United to within two points of league leaders Chelsea, and Ferguson readily acknowledged the significance of Rooney's pivotal contribution.

"He was a threat to them all day, his penetration behind their back line was very good," said Ferguson.

"He made a mistake in giving the ball away for the goal, that was his one bad moment in the game, but I thought he was exceptionally good today.

Rooney thankful for win at Hull

"He's a natural winner, he's always had that great attitude and determination to do well and he would be even more sick than anyone when he made a mistake.

"But he rectified it and everything's fine."

Ferguson did, however, stress that avoiding mistakes would play a key role in the eventual destination of the title.

"There are some unusual results going round and it's going to be a really tight league," he added.

"Experience will come into it, and I think the team that stays clear of injuries will also have an advantage.

"Other than that, if you make mistakes you're going to get punished. If you eradicate mistakes, whoever does that will have a great chance."

From BBC

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Hull 1 - 3 Man Utd

Manchester United edged an error-strewn encounter with Hull to close to within two points of leaders Chelsea in the race for the Premier League title.

Wayne Rooney pounced to give Manchester United the lead

Wayne Rooney drew first blood for United on the stroke of half-time, but later made a calamitous back-pass which paved the way for a Hull penalty.

Craig Fagan levelled from the spot, but Rooney made amends when his low cross led to an Andy Dawson own goal.

Dimitar Berbatov then sealed the win after a pin-point pass from Rooney.

At a stage of the season when champions United traditionally begin to hit their stride, the victory closed the gap on Chelsea after they were held to a goalless draw at Birmingham on Saturday.

Rooney thankful for win at Hull

But for all Rooney's influence, Sir Alex Ferguson's men - who arrived on Humberside in wounded-animal mode after suffering two defeats in their previous three Premier League outings - were rarely at their best.

In fairness that had much to do with Hull, whose industry and commitment proved formidable obstacles despite some hairy moments for goalkeeper Boaz Myhill, most notably when he miscued a first-half clearance.

Having seen his team charged by the Football Association after last weekend's mass confrontation at Arsenal, Phil Brown had looked to foster a siege mentality among his players in the build-up.

And his players clearly bought into the billing of unfairly-punished underdogs as they absorbed United's strong start and were unlucky to be denied an early penalty.

Fagan found Richard Garcia with a precise through-ball, but as the Australia international raced into the area he was upended by a sliding tackle from Nemanja Vidic that prompted furious protests from Hull.

It was Alan Wiley, the referee whose fitness was questioned by Ferguson after United's 2-2 draw against Sunderland earlier this season, who came to the visitors' rescue.

Wiley saw nothing wrong with the challenge, but no sooner had he waved away the complaints than Hull were at United again, Seyi Olofinjana forcing a fine reflex save from Tomasz Kuszczak.

We had Man Utd rocking - Brown

Another opportunity to open the scoring went begging when Olofinjana put Stephen Hunt through only for the Republic of Ireland midfielder to shoot wide.

As the misses mounted for Hull, the feeling grew that there would be a price to pay against a United side desperate to bounce back following last weekend's 3-0 defeat at Fulham.

The return of a trio of defenders in Rafael da Silva, Vidic and Wes Brown provided a platform for United to go forward with greater confidence, and although their attacking fluency was never at its best, they nonetheless offered plenty of threat.

Giggs twice went close early on, volleying on to the roof of the net before rippling the side-netting with a free-kick, while Rooney and Rafael both forced acrobatic saves from Myhill.

The danger was clear and, sure enough, with the interval beckoning Darren Fletcher swung in a near-post cross from the right flank, Giggs deflected it to Rooney, and the lurking England man prodded home from close-range.

With the hour mark approaching, however, Rooney gifted Hull a reprieve, directing a woeful back-pass to Kuszczak which was intercepted by Fagan.

We're well positioned for title bid - Phelan

Da Silva bundled over Jozy Altidore from the resulting cross, and Fagan shot unerringly past Kuszczak to ensure that there would be no repeat of Geovanni's missed spot kick against Arsenal last week.

Sensing the possibility of a win that would lift them clear of the relegation zone, Hull poured forward in search of a winner, but their enterprise was to prove their undoing.

With 17 minutes remaining, Giggs led a United counter-attack, slotting the ball through for Rooney to direct a low cross towards substitute Ji-Sung Park which the sliding Dawson could only direct into his own net.

And Rooney was once again at the heart of the action as United put the polish on their win with eight minutes remaining, directing a slide-rule pass through the legs of Anthony Gardner that enabled Berbatov to score with a tap-in.

From BBC

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Sunday, December 27, 2009

Rio Ferdinand's Manchester United return date unclear

Manchester United defender Rio Ferdinand has had an injection to ease a long-term back problem but there is still no date for his return to action.

Ferdinand, 31, has made only eight appearances for his club this season and missed the last 13 games.

"There is no light at the end of the tunnel," admitted United manager Sir Alex Ferguson.

"It is difficult to put a timescale on a back injury but I don't think he is too far away."

Ferdinand also missed last month's England's friendly against Brazil but the former West Ham and Leeds defender insisted last week that there was "no question" he will be fit for next summer's World Cup finals.

His more immediate aim is to regain full fitness and boost a United defence that has been weakened in recent weeks by injuries to Nemanja Vidic, Wes Brown, Gary Neville, John O'Shea, Jonny Evans, and Rafael and Fabio da Silva.

"We gave Rio an injection just over two weeks ago so we have to let that settle for a week, then he can go back into the gym work and do some more core work," said Ferguson.

"We are just hoping that pain goes away."

Ferguson added: "Rio is quite a composed and laid-back lad. He has never shown any effect of the injury from a mental standpoint but I have no doubt he will be feeling it because he is a footballer and footballers want to play.

"He will be thinking about all sorts, the run-in to the league and important games coming up and he is missing them. It is not easy for him."

From BBC

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