Posts Tagged manchester united

Scholes Means Goals!

Paul Scholes heads the winner at City

I wouldn’t say relief was etched on my face, but I may need my wife’s iron to straighten it out!! Sky Sports begins their match report:

A Paul Scholes header in the third minute of stoppage time handed Manchester United a precious 1-0 victory over fierce rivals Manchester City at Eastlands.  The veteran midfielder marked the signing of his one-year contract extension with the 149th goal of his glittering United career to keep the title race well and truly alive.  The win reduces the gap at the top to just a single point, although Chelsea could increase that back to four with victory over Tottenham later on Saturday.

In a game starved of clear-cut chances which United had the better of, Scholes arrived on cue with the last play of the game to meet Patrice Evra’s cross and nestle a firm header into the bottom corner. City had chances themselves to snatch the spoils in the second half with both Craig Bellamy and Wayne Bridge coming close in the latter stages.

http://www.skysports.com/football/match_report/0,19764,11065_3151692,00.html

This could argueably be the most important goal he ever scored, of his 149 goals for United, this keeps us in with a slight chance, I give it no more than that. We still have some major contests ahead and Chelski have the easier run in. Still, we should not complain, 3 points against this shower is well received.

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Red Knight’s Gaining in Popularity

Beckham Shows His SupportThe Red Knights have enjoyed their best day yet as the tussle over the future ownership of Manchester United enters a crucial phase. First, the world wakes up to pictures of Old Trafford legend David Beckham draped in a green and gold scarf, a publicity boost described to me as “priceless” by a senior Red Knight I spoke to. Then came confirmation that the group of investors seeking to buy the club from the Glazer family had recruited Nomura to help. The support of the biggest investment bank in Japan will only enhance the potential for more significant investment from the Far East, where the club’s popularity is considerable.

The same Red Knight told me he was delighted by the appointment and what he believes is real momentum behind their campaign. Guy Dawson, who will lead Nomura’s team, advised United’s board when the club was sold to the Glazers in 2005. Now he will speak to the 70 wealthy individuals who have expressed an interest in investing in the takeover bid, explore the possibility of a sale with the Glazers, whom he knows well, and try to come up with a timetable that could lead to a bid. “This is a significant next step for us,” a spokesman for the Red Knights told me. “This is the start of the process, but it’s good to have Nomura on board to help us structure a deal.” Until now, the Red Knights have been a fledgling campaign, with expressions of interest but no money changing hands. This statement of intent proves they are serious about making an offer to the Glazers and persuading them to walk away from the club. Interestingly, I am told that the Red Knights have now turned away two mystery ‘super-investors’, worth hundreds of millions of pounds, that had offered their support to the cause.

The intention is to only accept financial help from genuine Manchester United supporters and members of the Manchester United Supporters’ Trust (MUST), which now number 130,000. This makes Dawson’s task a complex and unprecedented one, but he believes the project is credible. The Red Knights believe they will need to raise between £800m and £1bn, but they appreciate Dawson may need months before he is in a position to make a formal offer to the Glazers. Despite Nomura’s involvement, a Glazer’s spokesman told me: “The club is not for sale and we are in it for the long run.” Dawson was a key player five years ago when United was sold to the Glazers. Now his challenge is to help buy the club back from them.

BBC Sports News

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AC Who?

Wayne scores first goalAC Milan came to Old Trafford on the back of a 3-2 home defeat by Manchester United in the first leg and threatened to make amends, for about 1 minute. After a period of United attack, Wayne Rooney, with his head, again, scored the opener in the 13th minute and then added a second before half time to put the match that bridge too far for an attackless AC Milan. Ronaldinho was made to look quite ordinary and had the ball taken off him time and time again. J S Park added goal number 3 and then, 3 minutes before the end, Fletcher steered in a fine header, over the keeper, to stitch it all up at 4-0, 7-2 in aggregate. United again proved to be far superior to Italian sides. AC Milan were tactical babies to United tonight.

Fletcher header

Ferguson made a stroke of genius when he decided to play Gary Neville in place of Rafael da Silva, to look after Ronaldinho and he did such a good job that Neville was more often up in attack and supplying crosses instead o f defending as he knew full well that a lazy Ronaldinho does not track back, does not defend. Seedorf came on relatively early for Milan but he could make no impression on the hounding harrassing football of United.

Beckham came on in the second half and, to be fair, made a difference, giving Milan more scope in attack, cracking a massive volley at United goals causing Van der Sar to fist it out and over for a corner which Beckham also took. Beckham’s final act was to don a green and gold scarf before he walked off, much to the delight of the sell out crowd!! One of the all time great nights of european football.

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First Silver of Season – United

Owen Scores For United

This report from Sky Sports

Wayne Rooney came off the bench to head the winner as Manchester United retained the Carling Cup by coming from behind to beat Aston Villa 2-1 at Wembley. Replaced by Michael Owen in the starting line-up, Rooney came on for his injured team-mate before half-time and then guided home the winning goal 16 minutes from time. Villa had enjoyed a dream start when taking the lead on five minutes after James Milner coolly sent Tomasz Kuszczak the wrong way from the penalty spot after Nemanja Vidic was fortunate not to be sent off for bringing down Gabriel Agbonlahor.

United were level less than 10 minutes later, though, when Dimitar Berbatov robbed Richard Dunne of possession and, while the Villa defender recovered to tackle the Bulgarian, the loose ball was swept home from just inside the box by Owen. But Owen failed to last the half as his injury jinx struck again and he was replaced by Rooney before United almost went into the break in front when Park Ji-sung’s shot thudded off the post and bounced clear off Carlos Cuellar.

Brad Friedel produced an excellent save from Michael Carrick early in the second period, but was beaten on 74 minutes when Antonio Valencia, after a slick one-two with Berbatov, stood a cross up for Rooney to guide a header beyond the Villa keeper’s reach. Rooney headed another Valencia cross against the base of the upright moments later and, though Emile Heskey’s header deflected on to the top of the crossbar, Villa were unable to prevent United from winning back-to-back cup competitions for the first time in the club’s history.

Villa’s flying start meant there was no chance of either side being allowed to turn this into the sterile affair many had predicted. At the time, Martin O’Neill questioned how Vidic avoided a card of any kind for his foul on Agbonlahor. As the contest wore on, and an increasing number of his own players ended up in Phil Dowd’s notebook, the criticism grew. If Agbonlahor had gone down when Vidic first grabbed his shirt, the card should have been red. Instead, the Villa striker admirably attempted to stay on his feet after outpacing the Serbian to reach Ashley Young’s lofted pass beyond the United defence.

In the end, it was too much. Vidic stuck out a leg and hauled Agbonlahor down. Milner kept his nerve, sending Kuszczak the wrong way to provide the contest with the start it craved. As tends to be the case when they fall behind, United’s response was an all-out attacking assault, which in turn provided Villa with space to counter. The mixture produced a thrilling spectacle, made all the more absorbing because Sir Alex Ferguson’s team levelled so quickly. So solid all season, it was just Dunne’s luck his blunder should come in Villa’s biggest game of the year.

The Irishman was robbed by Berbatov inside his own half, and though he made up the ground, in making his despairing tackle, Dunne only succeeded in rolling the ball into Owen’s path, offering the kind of instinctive first-time finish he has made a career out of. That Owen’s contribution – and Rooney’s exile – came to an end three minutes before the break was cause for regret, although the watching Fabio Capello has long since deduced those dodgy hamstrings cannot be trusted through another World Cup campaign.

Capello was probably also reaching the conclusion Stephen Warnock should be handed his problematic left-back berth against Egypt on Wednesday. But when Warnock slipped just before half-time, man-of-the-match Valencia galloped past him down the by-line, his cross eventually arriving at the feet of Park, who slammed it onto the inside of a post, where it rocketed across goal for Cuellar to hack clear. Friedel palmed away a magnificently constructed effort from Carrick after half-time, although Villa were United’s equals and could easily have levelled when Young sent a volley bouncing into the ground.

The decisive moment arrived on 74 minutes when Berbatov nonchalantly flicked Valencia’s pass back into the Ecuadorian’s path and he lifted up a cross for Rooney to loop a header into the net. Rooney almost made the game safe four minutes later, with Valencia again the provider as the England ace’s header came back off the post with Friedel beaten. Villa responded in kind, Vidic deflecting Heskey’s header onto his own bar and then Dunne nodded wide after steaming in to meet Stewart Downing’s cross at the far post.

But Villa were unable to force Kuszczak into another save and Valencia had a chance to kill off his team’s opponents when lashing wide in stoppage-time.

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Come on You Knights!!!

A group of City investors known as the Red Knights are plotting to take over at Manchester United – but who are they?

Skysports.com brings you the lowdown of the key players who could potentially take charge at Britain’s biggest club.

WHO ARE THE RED KNIGHTS PLOTTING TO TAKE OVER MANCHESTER UNITED?
A mixture of City bankers, lawyers and lifelong United fans, including Goldman Sachs chief economist Jim O’Neill, Paul Marshall, a partner at the hedge fund Marshall Wace, Richard Hytner of advertising agency Saatchi and Saatchi and Mark Rawlinson, a partner in Freshfields’ corporate practice who advised United on their takeover by Malcolm Glazer and his family in 2005.

WHAT IS THEIR PLAN?
Simple. To raise £1billion to buy out the Glazers, who have plunged the club into debt to the tune of £716.5million.

HOW WOULD THEY RAISE THE CASH?
One idea involves finding 40 individuals to put up £20m each, with the Red Knights borrowing around £200m to top up the offer, but the plan would be to keep debt to a minimum.

HOW WOULD THEY RUN THE CLUB?
For the fans and not as a commercial venture is the plan. United would stay in private ownership and not be returned to the public markets where it was traded until the Glazers’ buyout.

WHO IS THEIR LEADER?
Seymour Pierce stockbroker Keith Harris is the man brokering the potential takeover. He is a former HSBC investment bank chief executive and well known in football circles due to his involvement in takeovers of West Ham, Manchester City and Aston Villa. He is also the financier who warned last year that football’s gravy train was set for a crash.

DO THEY HAVE SUPPORT?
The Red Knights have spoken with the Manchester United Supporters’ Trust (MUST), who have indicated they will back any bid. Not surprising considering the blaze of green and gold inside Old Trafford as fans protest against the Glazers in the colours of Newton Heath, the club which predated United.

WHAT CHANCE HAS THE PLOT OF SUCCEEDING?
Not good. Exploratory discussions are thought to have begun at the offices of law firm Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer on Monday to study the viability, rather than details, of any bid. The problem is that the Glazers maintain they have no intention of selling and the Red Knights have no way of ousting them other than to make a bid they cannot refuse.

DO THE GLAZERS HAVE ANY SUPPORT?
Not among fans but their decision to alleviate high interest repayments on the £716.5million debt with a £500million bond issue last month was successful. The issue was twice oversubscribed.

IS HARRIS CONFIDENT?
Cautiously optimistic at best. He said: “There is a serious intent on the part of those people (Red Knights) who have not just support in their hearts but the ability to muster support from their pockets to get after this and the time feels right.”

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Standard of British Referees

Ferguson at an Earlier Altercation with DeanThe scene: Manchester City v Manchester United in the Carling Cup Semi Final first of two legs. The away team, United were winning 1-0 and looking comfortable. The referee decided that a blatant dive by David Bellamy (City) was worthy of a penalty award and, in spite of the fact that all the world could see nothing happened, gave it, converted by Tevez. Score 1-1 and a prime example of a games result being decided, yet again, by a blind official. He then rubbed salt into United’s wounds by giving a corner when the ball had obviously gone out for a United goal kick. This was converted by Tevez. 2-1 to Manchester City was the final score and the referee, Mike Dean, should be struck off the lists for such an abysmal sequence of events which, effectively, decided a football match. The players, clubs or managers did not decide this, but an individual referee who could not see the wood for the trees. I would also point out that another blatant dive, this time by City defender Richards went unpunished by the referee. If the referee decided that it was indeed a dive, why did he not yellow, or red, card, Richards?

Officials decides results, not players, not managers, not clubs and certainly not tactics. No manager in the world can prepare a team for the decisions of such an imbecile as Mike Dean.

I would also like to ask what will be done about the missle thrown that hit Patrice Evra, the United defender?

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Tactics & United

Sir Alex Ferguson

Sir Alex Ferguson

The Question: How did a nutmeg change football tactics in the noughties? For the first time in over 30 years, an English side became a world leader in tactical innovation this decade – thanks to Henning Berg being nutmegged. Little over a hundred days into the new millennium Manchester United suffered a defeat so striking that it defined the tactical direction of English football for the decade to come.  It is rare that you can pinpoint the precise moment at which the world changed, but for Sir Alex Ferguson it did on 19 April 2000 with a 3-2 defeat at home to Real Madrid in the Champions League quarter-final.

This was his equivalent of Liverpool’s defeat to Red Star Belgrade in 1973, the game that persuaded him to tear up the old blueprints and start again. Then Bill Shankly, despite having won the Uefa Cup the season before, decided that if Liverpool were to dominate Europe, they had to alter their approach. “We realised it was no use winning the ball if you finished up on your backside,” said Bob Paisley. “The top Europeans showed us how to break out of defence effectively. The pace of their movement was dictated by their first pass. We had to learn how to be patient like that and think about the next two or three moves when we had the ball.” And so Liverpool changed and, under Paisley, came to dominate Europe in a way no other English side has managed, winning four European Cups between 1977 and 1984.

For Ferguson, too, the decision to change was a tremendous risk. That season his side won the second of three successive Premier League titles, finishing a record 18 points clear of Arsenal in second, while scoring 97 goals in 38 games. The year before they had won the Champions League. There would be many in the difficult seasons of transition who would tell him he should never have changed his approach. His willingness to do so, though, his ruthlessness and clear-sightedness (at least in seeing what was wrong, if not necessarily what the solution was), is precisely what makes him a genius. It is one thing to build a great side; quite another to be brave enough to dismantle it and start again, shaping football’s evolution even as you adapt to its changing shape.

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Pompey Penalties – Phew!

Wayne Rooney

Wayne Rooney

Wayne Rooney’s hat-trick helped guide Manchester United to victory over bottom-of-the table Portsmouth. Rooney put the visitors ahead from the spot after he was brought down by Michael Brown only for Kevin-Prince Boateng’s penalty to haul Pompey level.  Ryan Giggs crossed for Rooney to slot in and the Welsh winger was then fouled to allow the England striker to grab his third with a second penalty.  Giggs added a late free-kick as United kept the pressure on leaders Chelsea.

The win moved United to within two points of Premier League table-toppers Chelsea, who play Arsenal on Sunday.  It was Giggs’ 100th Premier League goal and capped a performance of vision and verve which has been the trademark of an illustrious career – and this a day ahead of the his 36th birthday.

United boss Sir Alex Ferguson had to watch from the stands as he began the first of a two-game touchline ban and, in an even first half, it was far from comfortable viewing for the Scot before his team eased away to victory.

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