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Showing posts with label Emirates Stadium. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Emirates Stadium. Show all posts

Wednesday, 6 May 2009

Arsenal 1 United 3

Bring on Barca or the Blues. United will be in Rome on 27 May to defend the Champions League trophy.

The Champions League holders turned in a flawless away performance to completely dismantle Arsene Wenger's Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium, killing the tie through early goals from Ji-sung Park and Cristiano Ronaldo, before the Portuguese added gloss to the scoreline with a breakaway third.

The only sour note for United came through the late dismissal of Darren Fletcher. The Scot will miss the final after being incorrectly punished for bringing down Cesc Fabregas inside the United area, allowing Robin van Persie to hammer home a late penalty.

That made for a cruel end to the evening for Fletcher who, like each and every one of his colleagues, had been magnificent in overcoming the Gunners. It was in stark contrast to the manner in which the evening began, as United put the tie to bed inside 11 minutes.

Arsenal supporters had been encouraged to whip up a frenzied atmosphere to try and help their side overcome a single goal deficit brought about by John O'Shea's first leg strike at Old Trafford, but the Emirates' noise levels dipped irretrievably after seven minutes.

United's mantra had been obvious from the first whistle: counter attack. On the Reds' second such foray, Anderson slipped in Ronaldo, who had been detailed with the lone striker's role by virtue of his searing pace, and the Portuguese fizzed a low ball across the area. Teenage full-back Kieran Gibbs slipped at the crucial moment, allowing Park to pinch the ball and slip a shot over Manuel Almunia and into the goal.

The pocket of some 3,500 United fans behind the opposite goal burst into a frenzied celebration, one which was still ongoing when Ronaldo put the tie out of sight just four minutes later. Having won a free-kick 40 yards from goal, he sent a trademark rocket towards Almunia's left-hand corner, and the Spaniard was unable to read the ball's flight. Game over, tie over, start packing the bags for Rome.

Arsenal, understandably, were rocked. The half-hour mark had arrived before the hosts even tested Edwin van der Sar, and it was a tame header from Fabregas which called the Dutchman into action. Either side of the Spaniard's effort, Wayne Rooney and Ronaldo drew impressive saves from Almunia.

With the Reds' backline in imperious, unbreachable mood, it was left to the forwards to surge forward and exploit the inevitable gaps in Arsenal's foraging formation. Ronaldo had already seen one breakaway end with an Almunia save before he struck a superb third goal.

Nemanja Vidic headed an Arsenal corner as far as the Portuguese, who impishly backheeled a pass to Park before high-tailing it towards the Gunners' area. He reached his destination at the same time as Rooney's perfectly-weighted pass, and drilled a fine shot high into Almunia's goal. Cue delirium among the United supporters, and a mass exodus by their Arsenal counterparts.

With Patrice Evra and Rooney at risk of missing the final with another booking, they were quickly hooked for Rafael and Dimitar Berbatov, while Ryan Giggs replaced Anderson after another impressive outing from the young Brazilian.

There was more of a hint of irony, then, when Fletcher raced back to superbly touch the ball away from Fabregas deep inside the United area, only for referee Roberto Rosetti to award a penalty and brandish the red card at the heartbroken Scot. Van Persie drilled home the resultant kick as Fletcher trudged down the tunnel, joining Roy Keane and Paul Scholes on the list of United players unfortunate enough to have been ruled out of European football's greatest showpiece by suspension.

While dismay was ultimately the order of the day for Fletch, the overall mood among the United camp must be one of elation after one of the most emphatic European away displays in memory. The Reds are off to Rome, where Barcelona or Chelsea - both vanquished last season - will await. Forza United!

Monday, 4 May 2009

Rio trains in semi-final squad

Two senior defenders missed United's training session on Monday morning - but Rio Ferdinand wasn't one of the absentees.

The central defender now seems set to fulfil Sir Alex Ferguson's hope that he'll be "alright for Tuesday." Rio had been visited by the club doctor as he recovered from the lung bruising he suffered in the Champions League semi-final first leg clash against Arsenal.

Wes Brown and Patrice Evra were the pair who missed training. Brown had been touted for a comeback on the bench at Middlesbrough on Saturday but as it turned out, he wasn't named among the seven substitutes. Evra did play at the Riverside Stadium and was on the receiving end of some robust challenges; however Sir Alex Ferguson told MUTV in his post-match interview: "Patrice got a knock but I don’t think it’s anything serious."

Sir Alex Ferguson opted to hold United's pre-match training session at Carrington rather than the Emirates Stadium on the eve of Tuesday's second-leg clash.

The Reds travel down to London early on Monday afternoon, and more team news will follow when Sir Alex conducts his press conference in the capital at 17:00 BST.

The players training at Carrington were as follows: Van der Sar, Foster, Kuszczak; Neville, Rafael, Eckersley, O'Shea, Ferdinand, Vidic, Evans; Ronaldo, Anderson, Giggs, Park, Carrick, Nani, Scholes, Fletcher, Gibson; Berbatov, Rooney, Tevez, Welbeck, Macheda.

Outstanding Ando ready for Arsenal

Midfield will be at the centre of Sir Alex Ferguson's thinking as he prepares his tactics for Tuesday's decisive second leg in the Champions League semi-final.

The United boss was full of praise for Anderson, Michael Carrick and Darren Fletcher after their graft and craft in the middle of the park helped the Reds to initially dominate and ultimately beat Arsenal at Old Trafford.

All three were rewarded with a rest when the champions travelled to Middlesbrough on Saturday; they'll now be ready to return on Tuesday, possibly in place of Ryan Giggs and Paul Scholes who started in central midfield at the Riverside.

"The midfield worked so hard against Arsenal in the first leg, we decided to rest the three of them," said Sir Alex after Saturday's match.

"We put Anderson on the bench because he’s not had as much football as Michael and Darren. But they’ve had a rest and they’ll be fresh for Tuesday if I decide to play them all."

Anderson is also being tipped to succeed Scholes in the long term. His impressed United manager said at Friday's press conference: "I think he is going to replace Paul Scholes, that’s my opinion. I think he’s an outstanding talent, he's got fantastic speed and strength."

The boss believes the Brazilian can get even better as he gets more big games under his belt - "He’s still only 21. In the second half (against Arsenal), he was starting to be too positive, so we brought Giggs into midfield to give us more experience."

Sir Alex also awaits Anderson's first United goal after 72 games but his press conference quip of “We’re all lighting candles for that!" suggests that's not a serious concern!