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  • Manchester United 1 Chelsea 2: match report

    By Duncan White at Old Trafford
    Published: 5:30PM BST 03 Apr 2010
    Clash of the Titans: Chelsea have leapfrogged United at the top of the table
    Photo: AP

    It is all very simple. Five games and five wins and Chelsea will be champions. With an impressive, aggressive performance in their rival’s own lair, they ripped the initiative from Manchester United and jumped to the top of the table. Now they just have to hold their nerve.

    Carlo Ancelotti has forged success out of failure. Chelsea were eliminated from the Champions League by Jose Mourinho’s Internazionale last month in a fitting defeat: the Portuguese’s achievements at Stamford Bridge have cast an imposing shadow over the work of his successors.

    It is ironic then that by beating his former club, Mourinho may well have helped them free themselves of his claustrophobic legacy. By removing the distraction of the Champions League, Mourinho has helped Chelsea close on their first title since his departure.

    The lack of midweek distraction was decisive. Thanks to his side no longer being involved in Europe, Ancelotti had a full week of training to prepare his team for this crucial game, a period of preparation that he felt gave his side the edge over United.

    “I think we have had a very good reaction after the game against Inter,” Ancelotti said. “We could train in the week and that was an advantage for us. We had the possibility to play with a high tempo.”

    That tempo was far too much for an ageing, jaded United XI, that had not got their midweek defeat in Munich out of their system. Not only was the defeat an emotional and physical drain, it cost them the fitness of Wayne Rooney.

    Inspired by the outstanding Florent Malouda, a fresh Chelsea dominated from the off, pressing high and hard. With 20 minutes gone the France winger held off the attempted tackle of Antonio Valencia and sprinted towards the box. Darren Fletcher tracked as Gary Neville was distracted by Yuri Zhirkov’s overlapping run but Malouda beat the Scot to the by-line to cross. Ingeniously, Cole flicked the ball through the legs of his marker, Patrice Evra, and into the net.

    You expected a response from United but they continued to struggle. The obvious problem was the absence of a 5”10 lump of squat Scouse gristle.
    Ferguson believes his squad can cope without Rooney but there was no question his side struggled without their 34-goal striker - that’s hardly a revelation. Yet the poverty of their play, in the first half in particular, could not be blamed just on the absence of Rooney.

    Their ability to recover from midweek European trials is hampered by the fact that so many of the players Ferguson is relying on are getting on: the average age of the United starting XI was over 31 and it showed. Chelsea were simply sharper and quicker to the ball and United’s veterans had to resort to increasingly desperate measures to stop them. Paul Scholes had already committed two rash fouls when his wild lunge at Malouda - which fortunately missed the Frenchman - was followed by a yellow card.

    Neville’s excessive foul on the same player just before the break met with the same punishment. Both players walked a fine line in the second half.
    Mike Dean, the referee, called those right but had a decidedly poor game otherwise, missing two clear penalties and failing to spot that Chelsea’s second goal was offside and that United’s goal was handball.

    Dean has a trigger finger with penalties, having given 16 in 24 games (more than any other Premier League referee) and he knew he would be under scrutiny.

    Zhirkov’s foul on Park after Alex had slipped was perhaps tricky from his angle of vision but how he could not punish Neville for ludicrously taking out Nicolas Anelka with a full-body charge was bizarre. One each, at least.
    Paulo Ferriera missed a great chance to put Chelsea 2-0 just two minutes into the second half, after Cole’s clever pass had sent him clear of Patrice Evra. The Portuguese full-back, perhaps panicked at being so far forward, neither crossed nor shot in the end.

    From that moment on, though, United began to come back into it. Evra ambitiously hit a Valencia cross on the full but could not get it on target while Park also sent the ball into the stand after latching on to Darren Fletcher’s cute pass.

    With United starting to build some useful pressure, Ancelotti played his trump card. He had decided not to start Drogba, wanting to use him as a late impact player. And some impact he did have. Put through by fellow substitute Salomon Kalou, he slammed the ball in at Edwin van der Sar’s near post to secure victory.

    He was a good yard offside, an oversight by assistant Simon Beck that met with Ferguson’s understandable fury.

    Still, the officials’ mistakes evened themselves out. With nine minutes left United’s own substitutes combined to pull one back.

    Nani beat Ferreira on the left and crossed the ball into the six-yard box. Petr Cech sprang out and pushed the ball into Macheda’s chest. The Italian striker, whose cameos had such a dramatic effect on the title run in last season, eased the ball over the line with his arm. A furious John Terry appealed in vain.

    Berbatov, who as deputy to Rooney was limited to a handful of headed half-chances, was given the opportunity to equalise in stoppage time but could not connect cleanly with Neville’s cross. With the final whistle, United ceded the initiative.

    United must now hope for a Chelsea slip. The fixture list could put them in a rather uncomfortable position indeed. On May 1, Chelsea travel to Anfield in what looks the trickiest obstacle left for them to overcome.
    United might have to become Liverpool fans for a day.
    "Only when you drink from the river of silence shall you indeed sing. And when you have reached the mountain top, then you shall begin to climb. And when the earth shall claim your limbs, then shall you truly dance." ~ Kahlil Gibran

  • #2
    So the ref got two goals wrong. The Drogba goal was offside by a mile and Macheda played the ManUre goal in with his hand.

    Where is Rockman when you need him? I noticed this writer is making reference to ManUre's aging squad too. I guess whenever a team loses, then this becomes an issue.

    Interesting report.
    "Only when you drink from the river of silence shall you indeed sing. And when you have reached the mountain top, then you shall begin to climb. And when the earth shall claim your limbs, then shall you truly dance." ~ Kahlil Gibran

    Comment


    • #3
      The hand ball goal

      See attached picture.

      "Two minutes later, Federico Macheda scrambles a goal for United. But the ball clearly struck Macheda's arm in the build up, making his goal every bit as controversial as Drogba's"
      Attached Files
      "Only when you drink from the river of silence shall you indeed sing. And when you have reached the mountain top, then you shall begin to climb. And when the earth shall claim your limbs, then shall you truly dance." ~ Kahlil Gibran

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by Tilla View Post
        By Duncan White at Old Trafford
        Published: 5:30PM BST 03 Apr 2010
        Clash of the Titans: Chelsea have leapfrogged United at the top of the table
        Photo: AP

        It is all very simple. Five games and five wins and Chelsea will be champions. With an impressive, aggressive performance in their rival’s own lair, they ripped the initiative from Manchester United and jumped to the top of the table. Now they just have to hold their nerve.

        Carlo Ancelotti has forged success out of failure. Chelsea were eliminated from the Champions League by Jose Mourinho’s Internazionale last month in a fitting defeat: the Portuguese’s achievements at Stamford Bridge have cast an imposing shadow over the work of his successors.

        It is ironic then that by beating his former club, Mourinho may well have helped them free themselves of his claustrophobic legacy. By removing the distraction of the Champions League, Mourinho has helped Chelsea close on their first title since his departure.

        The lack of midweek distraction was decisive. Thanks to his side no longer being involved in Europe, Ancelotti had a full week of training to prepare his team for this crucial game, a period of preparation that he felt gave his side the edge over United.

        “I think we have had a very good reaction after the game against Inter,” Ancelotti said. “We could train in the week and that was an advantage for us. We had the possibility to play with a high tempo.”

        That tempo was far too much for an ageing, jaded United XI, that had not got their midweek defeat in Munich out of their system. Not only was the defeat an emotional and physical drain, it cost them the fitness of Wayne Rooney.

        Inspired by the outstanding Florent Malouda, a fresh Chelsea dominated from the off, pressing high and hard. With 20 minutes gone the France winger held off the attempted tackle of Antonio Valencia and sprinted towards the box. Darren Fletcher tracked as Gary Neville was distracted by Yuri Zhirkov’s overlapping run but Malouda beat the Scot to the by-line to cross. Ingeniously, Cole flicked the ball through the legs of his marker, Patrice Evra, and into the net.

        You expected a response from United but they continued to struggle. The obvious problem was the absence of a 5”10 lump of squat Scouse gristle.
        Ferguson believes his squad can cope without Rooney but there was no question his side struggled without their 34-goal striker - that’s hardly a revelation. Yet the poverty of their play, in the first half in particular, could not be blamed just on the absence of Rooney.

        Their ability to recover from midweek European trials is hampered by the fact that so many of the players Ferguson is relying on are getting on: the average age of the United starting XI was over 31 and it showed. Chelsea were simply sharper and quicker to the ball and United’s veterans had to resort to increasingly desperate measures to stop them. Paul Scholes had already committed two rash fouls when his wild lunge at Malouda - which fortunately missed the Frenchman - was followed by a yellow card.

        Neville’s excessive foul on the same player just before the break met with the same punishment. Both players walked a fine line in the second half.
        Mike Dean, the referee, called those right but had a decidedly poor game otherwise, missing two clear penalties and failing to spot that Chelsea’s second goal was offside and that United’s goal was handball.

        Dean has a trigger finger with penalties, having given 16 in 24 games (more than any other Premier League referee) and he knew he would be under scrutiny.

        Zhirkov’s foul on Park after Alex had slipped was perhaps tricky from his angle of vision but how he could not punish Neville for ludicrously taking out Nicolas Anelka with a full-body charge was bizarre. One each, at least.
        Paulo Ferriera missed a great chance to put Chelsea 2-0 just two minutes into the second half, after Cole’s clever pass had sent him clear of Patrice Evra. The Portuguese full-back, perhaps panicked at being so far forward, neither crossed nor shot in the end.

        From that moment on, though, United began to come back into it. Evra ambitiously hit a Valencia cross on the full but could not get it on target while Park also sent the ball into the stand after latching on to Darren Fletcher’s cute pass.

        With United starting to build some useful pressure, Ancelotti played his trump card. He had decided not to start Drogba, wanting to use him as a late impact player. And some impact he did have. Put through by fellow substitute Salomon Kalou, he slammed the ball in at Edwin van der Sar’s near post to secure victory.

        He was a good yard offside, an oversight by assistant Simon Beck that met with Ferguson’s understandable fury.

        Still, the officials’ mistakes evened themselves out. With nine minutes left United’s own substitutes combined to pull one back.

        Nani beat Ferreira on the left and crossed the ball into the six-yard box. Petr Cech sprang out and pushed the ball into Macheda’s chest. The Italian striker, whose cameos had such a dramatic effect on the title run in last season, eased the ball over the line with his arm. A furious John Terry appealed in vain.

        Berbatov, who as deputy to Rooney was limited to a handful of headed half-chances, was given the opportunity to equalise in stoppage time but could not connect cleanly with Neville’s cross. With the final whistle, United ceded the initiative.

        United must now hope for a Chelsea slip. The fixture list could put them in a rather uncomfortable position indeed. On May 1, Chelsea travel to Anfield in what looks the trickiest obstacle left for them to overcome.
        United might have to become Liverpool fans for a day.
        Tilla, you forgot to highlight the most interesting piece in this article which I've done... the very last sentence... I can just picture Lazie at al in dem Liverpool jersey (an of course dem have one in the closet so to speak ..ha ha) shouting " Go Kop Go" .. LOL
        Peter R

        Comment


        • #5
          Whatever man, the off side trap was properly executed by our players(I can't fault our players then...).
          The game was played at a slow pace, Fergie's selection..for the game is suspect.
          Jah kno it bun mi sey the EPL champion probably was decided by a glaring "non call".


          Blessed

          Comment


          • #6
            May 1st,United might have to become Liverpool fans for a day...lol...this kills me
            THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

            "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


            "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

            Comment


            • #7
              Yes, boss?
              Yuh keep quiet fi a lang time...an mi nuh blame yuh wan bit fi come rub hit een now that you are in pole position!

              Tek heed avf di GUNNERS buck toe. Nuff time lef if Chelsea and BoyU crash an bun..an dem hit should be, GUNNERS TIME!
              "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Karl View Post
                Tek heed avf di GUNNERS buck toe. Nuff time lef if Chelsea and BoyU crash an bun..an dem hit should be, GUNNERS TIME!
                If wishes were horses. . .
                "Only when you drink from the river of silence shall you indeed sing. And when you have reached the mountain top, then you shall begin to climb. And when the earth shall claim your limbs, then shall you truly dance." ~ Kahlil Gibran

                Comment


                • #9
                  Jah kno it bun mi sey the EPL champion probably was decided by a glaring "non call".
                  It is not being decided by a glaring non call. There were two non-calls as ManUre's goal was a handled ball by Macheda before it went in. If you cancel the offside goal and the handball goal, then you still lose 1-0.
                  If the referee had called Anelka's penalty, you even more behind the eight ball.

                  It was the battle of the geriatrics and we were more rested than you, so advantage Chelsea. You getting beaten by Chelsea twice in the Prem this season, so I do not know what you are complaining about.
                  "Only when you drink from the river of silence shall you indeed sing. And when you have reached the mountain top, then you shall begin to climb. And when the earth shall claim your limbs, then shall you truly dance." ~ Kahlil Gibran

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Tilla View Post
                    It is not being decided by a glaring non call. There were two non-calls as ManUre's goal was a handled ball by Macheda before it went in. If you cancel the offside goal and the handball goal, then you still lose 1-0.
                    If the referee had called Anelka's penalty, you even more behind the eight ball.

                    It was the battle of the geriatrics and we were more rested than you, so advantage Chelsea. You getting beaten by Chelsea twice in the Prem this season, so I do not know what you are complaining about.
                    Stop mek up stuff Tilla. That was no penalty. How many times defenders use that tactic to stop wingers? Suh how come its a penalty now? Mi notice yuh side step the non call on Park.

                    This is the 2nd game this season ref incompetence gave yuh side 3 points. Yet the myth about MU getting calls from the refs continue to cloud the reality.
                    "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by X View Post
                      May 1st,United might have to become Liverpool fans for a day...lol...this kills me
                      Check the table. If yuh beat Chelsea no CL fi unuh.
                      "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Not bothered by that , one less C.L season would mean new investors and a real crack at the Prem.
                        Last edited by Sir X; April 4, 2010, 02:55 PM.
                        THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

                        "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


                        "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          You are the only one who thinks it was not a penalty. The man has the ball inside the 18 Yd box on direct path to goal. He was bundled off the ball by your defender from the side, but it is not a penalty. You would well want to give Park a penalty when the Chelsea player first played the ball before anything that could be considered a foul was committed.

                          Anyway, I know you are only able to see things one way, s let me leave you with this argument alone.
                          "Only when you drink from the river of silence shall you indeed sing. And when you have reached the mountain top, then you shall begin to climb. And when the earth shall claim your limbs, then shall you truly dance." ~ Kahlil Gibran

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            I think so too, he isn't the only one that thinks it was not a penalty.
                            One could argue another ref would have awarded the penalty to Park, in such cases it is all about the referee's discretion.Hence your penalty wasn't called as a "make up call".The same thing for hand ball appeals.
                            Entirely different regfarding off side, every ref is required to call it; defenders implement off side traps and it is "clear cut". I would understand if Drogba was near a defender(discretion..) but wasn't the case.





                            Blessed

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Unuhstill lose anyway you slice it...

                              ManU : one no (dubious) penalty called and one goal that was like Mike Jordan doing a dunk.

                              Chelsea : one no penalty called (which was glaring ...any Rugby player would be proud of that tackle) and an off side goal...

                              So if unuh want to count that to me cancels... which leaves Chelsea one goal ahead.

                              BTW You should review that Neville tackle on Anelka WITHOUT ManU coloured glasses on... I find it very instructive that both you and Lazie could think that that was NOT a penalty... yet you would award one to Mr "Paper doll" Park for that folding act...

                              You and Lazie get you Liverpool jersey yet...? LOL
                              Peter R

                              Comment

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