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Archive for Febbraio 27th, 2011

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Ten-man Tangerines punished

Wolves lifted themselves out of the bottom three of the Barclays Premier League for only the second time in five months following a comprehensive defeat of 10-man Blackpool.

Matt Jarvis gave boss Mick McCarthy’s men the perfect start with a second-minute opener before a moment of madness from Blackpool leading scorer DJ Campbell saw him sent off in the 43rd minute.

Wolves then made their numerical advantage count after the break as Jamie O’Hara and then substitute Sylvan Ebanks-Blake with a brace eased their club off the foot of the table into 17th.

The first half was one that started and ended in nightmare fashion for Blackpool boss Ian Holloway as his side proved you are only as good as your last game.

That had been a sensational 3-1 victory over Spurs in midweek, one that had eased the Seasiders clear of the relegation zone, sending belief soaring they can survive in the top flight this season.

But after just 116 seconds Blackpool were swiftly brought crashing back down to earth as a four-man move culminated in Jarvis scoring his fourth goal of the season.

From deep inside Wolves territory, Ronald Zubar played a ball down the right wing into David Edwards, fit again after missing the 1-1 draw at West Brom last Sunday with a groin injury.

Edwards’ short run was incisive as he cut inside his marker prior to feeding Adam Hammill, also restored to the starting line-up, just inside the Blackpool area.

Although Hammill’s pass to his left was scuffed, it had enough pace on it to find Jarvis who brilliantly curled beyond Richard Kingson a 12-yard right-effort that had the majority of the crowd on their feet.

Then just over two minutes from the interval, with Blackpool having failed to seriously test goalkeeper Wayne Hennessey, any hope of a comeback suffered a crucial setback.

Directly in front of Holloway, on the edge of his technical area, Campbell stupidly over-reacted to a slight shove in his back from Richard Stearman as the duo faced onto a long ball downfield.

The red mist descended as the much-shorter Campbell then turned on Stearman, and with both hands, shoved the centre-back in the face.

Making arguably his easiest decision all afternoon, referee Neil Swarbrick swiftly brandished the red card.

Turning on his heels, Campbell made the short walk to the dressing room, with not so much as an apologetic acknowledgement towards Holloway just yards from him.

The act of rage, from a player who had previously only been booked just once all season, will now see him miss the next three matches.

In between those two horror moments for Holloway, it was Wolves who had the better of the half, with Kingson pulling off one stunning save to deny Edwards from a 12-yard, left-foot half volley.

The home side did have the ball in the back of the net on a second occasion, only for Swarbrick to adjudge George Elokobi had fouled Kingson as he nodded the ball home.

As for a typically workmanlike Blackpool, their best opportunity was inadvertently set up by a stunning sliding challenge from Wolves captain Karl Henry on Keith Southern deep in his own half.

But it was a tackle made facing his own goal as the ball flew into the path of Luke Varney, who had minutes earlier replaced Sergei Kornilenko, only for the striker to slice his shot wide.

That was as good as it got for Blackpool for within 10 minutes of the restart the 10 men caved in, and with it went the last remaining hope of salvaging a point.

After Kingson had denied substitute Kevin Foley and O’Hara in the two minutes immediately prior to Wolves doubling their advantage, the latter was not to be denied.

Thanks primarily to a defence that stood off him, O’Hara rifled in a 22-yard, left-foot shot that bounced over the outstretched left hand of Kingson into the corner of his net for his second goal in a week.

With the spirit and stuffing knocked out of Blackpool, and as one-way traffic developed, they duly conceded a third 12 minutes from time.

Ebanks-Blake, who had replaced Zubar just after O’Hara’s strike, tapped home from a yard courtesy of a precision cross from Kevin Foley.

In front of a record crowd for the new Molineux of 29,086, Ebanks-Blake then took his tally to six for the season with an angled left-foot drive beyond Kingson on the stroke of full time.

# Holloway fumes at Campbell

Blackpool boss Ian Holloway described DJ Campbell’s moment of madness as “unacceptable” after “a stinking day in the office.”

Assessing Campbell’s red mist, Holloway said: “It probably seemed pretty innocent, but he has scrapes down the back of his Achilles, and it was Stearman who kicked him however many times before that. But it’s still unacceptable. That’s part and parcel of your job, but it’s just out of character, so something was not quite right with him today, and it really cost us.

“You’ve got to pick yourself up, dust yourself down and get on with it. But goals are vital. Luke Varney missed our only chance, and if he had scored then who knows what would have happened? Maybe DJ would not have been frustrated.”

Asked if he was shattered by the defeat, Holloway added: “Not really. I don’t get shattered – I’m made not made of glass or crystal. I’m bruised, it hurts, but I’m not shattered. I’m a football manager and unfortunately we were beaten by the better team.

“You need things to go for you, and we had spoken about doing things right and doing them better, but we were one down inside two minutes. That changed the whole complexion of the crowd and their players, of our crowd and our players. Such is life.

“But that was a stinking day in the office for me, although I’m pleased for Mick, who has carried himself with dignity all the time I’ve known him. My lot will have to come up with something a bit better than that to try to get a result against Chelsea.

“But this is no disgraceful result because Manchester United and Chelsea have already been beaten here. It’s a tough place to come.”

Wolves boss Mick McCarthy believes his side’s luck might finally be beginning to turn as he feels they’ve not had an ounce of good fortune this season.

“I’ve not come away from a game this season and thought we were lucky or were jammy. I’ve not said that once this season,” said McCarthy. “But after (Blackpool captain) Charlie Adam was booked on Tuesday night (his 10th of the season leading to a two-game ban which began today), I thought then that maybe our luck was changing.

“We then scored a fabulous first goal here, then DJ Campbell gets himself sent off, and that caused them all sorts of problems. I said last week before we drew at West Brom that I wanted four points from the two games. We should have had all six, but I think four from the two is a good haul.”

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Young at the double

Aston Villa’s impressive revival continued as inspired performances from two-goal Ashley Young and Stewart Downing enabled them to comfortably dispose of Blackburn at Villa Park.

Young’s penalty broke the deadlock early in the second half and, after an own goal from Rovers defender Grant Hanley, Downing also got on the score-sheet before Nikola Kalinic’s consolation.

Young’s stunning strike completed the scoring eight minutes from time and Blackburn skipper Ryan Nelsen was sent off in injury time for a second bookable offence.

Villa have now taken 12 points from their last seven Premier League matches to climb into mid-table.

Watching England head coach Fabio Capello must have been impressed by Young who is relishing playing in the central role behind Darren Bent.

Downing and on-loan Tottenham right-back Kyle Walker also caught the eye down the flanks.

Veteran midfielder Robert Pires also had his most influential game for Villa.

Rovers had little to offer as an attacking force and finished well beaten.

Rovers keeper Paul Robinson was called into action for the first time in saving a low drive from Bent at the second attempt after good play by Young.

Rovers defender Martin Olsson ventured forward but dragged his shot well wide.

Jermaine Jones became the first player to be yellow carded after 23 minutes for bringing down Pires from behind.

Nelsen should have done better when he got on the end of a deep Morten Gamst Pedersen corner but he could not keep his header down.

Villa had strong appeals for a penalty rejected when Pires’ fine pass found Bent who went down after a challenge from Grant Hanley but referee Martin Atkinson waved play on.

Nathan Baker needed lengthy touchline treatment after being caught by Robinson when punching clear a Downing cross.

The teenager appeared to be suffering from concussion and had to be replaced after 36 minutes by Fabian Delph.

Villa built up some momentum and Robinson beat out a powerful effort from Pires after Young had teed him up with a first time pass.

Then the former England keeper parried away a drive from Walker and the rebound was put over the top by Young.

The home side were building up some momentum and Robinson pushed another Pires attempt to one side.

Bent almost took advantage of a defensive mix-up but tried to cut back inside and the chance went begging.

Vince Grella was booked in first half injury time for chopping down Pires.

A mistake by Richard Dunne almost proved costly for Villa in the first minute of the second half.

Roque Santa Cruz played in Jones and his low shot was beaten away by former Blackburn keeper Brad Friedel.

Villa were quickly back on the offensive and a fine ball from Pires played in Downing whose shot was deflected wide.

The home side’s dominance was finally rewarded after 49 minutes with Young putting Villa ahead from the penalty spot.

Keith Andrews lost possession to Young and the Rovers defender brought down the England player.

Up stepped Young to send Robinson the wrong way with the spot-kick for his seventh goal of the campaign.

Villa took control of the match by netting twice more in the space of 60 seconds.

After 62 minutes Hanley could only deflect a low centre from Marc Albrighton past his own keeper.

Rovers manager Steve Kean then brought on Jason Roberts and Nikola Kalinic in place of Vince Grella and Santa Cruz.

But immediately Villa made it 3-0 through Downing.

Downing cut in from the left after seizing onto Albrighton’s pass and coolly beat Robinson with a shot into the far corner of the net.

Pires left the field to warm applause with 15 minutes remaining and was replaced by skipper Stiliyan Petrov.

Acting captain Young offered Petrov the armband but he declined to take it.

Kalinic gave Rovers a glimmer of hope after 81 minutes when his shot took a deflection of Dunne and flew past Friedel into the net.

But Villa were soon back on the offensive and Young made it 4-1 in superb fashion.

Downing was the creator with his cross from the right and Young’s powerful first time shot flew past Robinson.

Blackburn’s misery was completed with Nelsen’s dismissal when he was shown a second yellow card.

  • Houllier hails YoungAston Villa manager Gerard Houllier hailed an inspired performance from stand-in skipper Ashley Young during the 4-1 demolition of Blackburn at Villa Park.Houllier said: “Ashley is an inspiring leader when he is on the pitch. I know the captain is Stiliyan when he plays but, when he is not playing, Ashley is a leader because of the efforts he puts in. As the game goes on, his efficiency and work-rates goes on as well and does not diminish.”I like him to play in that position to be fair. He can be a real specialist. He can be a striker and he can also be a link between the midfield and the attack.”Veteran midfielder Robert Pires also impressed Houllier in having his best game for Villa. Houllier said: “The game Robert played against Blackburn in the FA Cup gave him match fitness and confidence. In training he has been good, nearly scoring and making goals, so I thought he would bring something.”It was his best game for Villa. He was more confident at taking the ball.”Houllier was pleased with his side’s overall performance despite not breaking the deadlock until the second half.He said: “I think some people may have been disappointed with the first half. I was not and I told the players to keep their heads up, keep believing in what we were doing. We had to put more tempo, which we did in the second half.”I said keep passing and moving once we get in the final third and eventually we would find a solution and that paid off. More than the result, was the quality of the play. We made some mistakes but I want the team to play that way with confidence and to me, it has got to be entertaining.”Rovers manager Steve Kean admitted his side were always facing an uphill battle once Young’s penalty had broken the deadlock.He said: “We set up to try and nullify Villa through the middle of the pitch by playing three in there. We were excellent in the early part and trying to get a clean sheet as a platform. Villa started to get on top just before half-time and I felt we were getting a little bit deep.”We said it was important to keep it tight for the first 15 minutes of the second half and then hopefully the crowd would get restless. Before the penalty we had a great chance ourselves and Brad Friedel made a good save and a minute later we are a goal down.”It is a bad day after that. We found ourselves chasing the game and being a little bit open.”
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    Taylor off but Magpies hold firm

    Daniel Sturridge’s fourth goal in as many games was only enough to claim a point for Bolton as 10-man Newcastle held out for a draw.

    The striker, on loan from Chelsea, struck seven minutes before the break to cancel out the lead former Wanderers midfielder Kevin Nolan had given the Magpies with his 11th of the season with 13 minutes gone.

    But an open game shifted firmly Bolton’s way with Ryan Taylor’s 54th-minute dismissal for a two-footed challenge on Johan Elmander.

    Taylor was making just his fifth appearance of the season on his return from an ankle ligament injury, but his rush of blood left Newcastle hanging on for a dear life.

    The draw ended Bolton’s run of six successive Premier League away defeats and extended the Magpies’ run to one loss in nine.

    In Sturridge, Bolton had a deserving candidate for man of the match as he caused problems for the off.

    Fabricio Coloccini repeatedly needed the help of full-back Jose Enrique to keep the striker at bay, although the Spaniard had his own hands full with Elmander, who caused such problems during the Magpies 5-1 defeat at the Reebok Stadium in November, playing in a wide midfield role.

    But Newcastle gave as good as they got in a thrilling first half, during which play switched rapidly from end to end. The home side took the lead with 13 minutes gone, and yet again, it was Nolan who did the trick.

    Not for the first time, he demonstrated his knack of finding space inside a crowded penalty area to meet Cheick Tiote’s driven cross, and his deft header was too good for Jussi Jaaskelainen.

    The Finn had kept out Peter Lovenkrands’ near-post flick seconds earlier, and later needed David Wheater’s help to prevent Leon Best’s shot ending up in the back of the net.

    Best headed a Taylor free-kick just over the bar with 28 minutes gone. The former Wigan man was a late replacement for Joey Barton, who suffered an injury during the warm-up.

    Only a last-ditch tackle by full-back Marcos Alonso denied Taylor seconds later – but Sturridge continued to look the man most likely to drag Bolton back into the game, and he did just that seven minutes before the break.

    A rare mistake from Tiote allowed Elmander to find the striker, and he shifted the ball on to his left foot before shooting unerringly into the bottom corner.

    Lovenkrands helped a Tiote effort just over the bar and Nolan bravely blocked an Elmander drive as the half drew to a close.

    Jaaskelainen was back in action within three minutes of the restart after Enrique spun away from Elmander with ease before surging into the penalty area and unleashing a powerful shot.

    However, Alonso fired over from 20 yards and Steve Harper had to get down well to claim Gary Cahill’s deflected drive as Bolton responded.

    But the momentum shifted significantly with 54 minutes gone when Taylor launched himself at Elmander and was dismissed by referee Chris Foy, who had little choice but to produce the red card.

    Bolton instantly sensed an opportunity and committed more men to the search for a winner, and Coloccini and Mike Williamson found themselves firmly in the firing line as they were forced to deal with a series of dangerous crosses.

    Lovenkrands dropped into the wide midfield berth vacated by Taylor to leave Best alone up front, and there was little the former Coventry man could do to help stem the tide.

    Magpies boss Alan Pardew made his move with 23 minutes remaining when he sent on central defender Steven Taylor for Jonas Gutierrez and striker Nile Ranger for Lovenkrands, and went to a back three.

    Ranger headed over from Taylor’s 70th-minute cross, but it took a priceless goal-line clearance from Nolan to keep out Martin Petrov’s effort five minutes later.

    There was late drama when Jaaskelainen had to scuttle across his line to collect the ball after Paul Robinson had chested Best’s cross a little too firmly towards goal.

  • Coyle praises SturridgeBolton boss Owen Coyle tipped striker Daniel Sturridge to follow in Jack Wilshere’s footsteps after seeing him secure a point at Newcastle with his fourth goal in as many games.Coyle has been delighted with Sturridge’s contribution since his arrival last month, and is hopeful of reaping the same kind of benefits he received from Arsenal midfielder Wilshere last season.He said: “There’s no doubt he is a natural goalscorer, but he is more than that, he is a natural footballer. He can finish left-foot, right-foot, he can score headed goals as well, but he has got pace to burn, he is a clever football and the great thing I love about him is he is exciting.”I love football, I want to come and be entertained and when he gets the ball, everybody in the stadium thinks something exciting might happen. That’s the type of player we want in the Barclays Premier League. I have seen him for a number of years and I did everything in my power to bring him to the football club, knowing the impact he could have.”Daniel is going to continue to get better. Hopefully, we can help, we can hopefully impart some knowledge, experience, whatever you want to call it. But the biggest player in all this will be Daniel, because he is the one who has to go and deliver on it when he crosses the white line, and he has certainly started in the right fashion.”Jack Wilshere has taken his game to another level now, and I have got no doubts Daniel can – that’s why I brought him to the football club, because I believed he was that special. I have said to him in there, ‘Don’t be happy just to score one a game, get your goal and then go and be hungry to get the second one’, which he is because he is such a natural goalscorer and a finisher.”Coyle said of the draw: “If you had offered a point before the game, I think we would have seen that as a very good point, and I don’t see why at the end of the game, that changes, excepting that we could have won the game.”Opposite number Alan Pardew was also happy enough with a point which eased the Magpies closer to Premier League safety, and defended Taylor over his rash tackle.He said: “I have seen it again and he went in a little bit over-zealously. I didn’t think it was high, if I am honest, but he was late. With that type of take-off, you are going to be sent off in today’s age. Go back 10 years and the boy ain’t getting sent off – he might not even get a booking.”
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    Beckford brace fires Toffees

    Jermaine Beckford struck twice as Sunderland suffered yet more misery at Everton.

    The former Leeds striker found the net twice in the first half to lift Everton further away from Premier League relegation danger and send Sunderland home from Goodison Park empty-handed again.

    The Black Cats, without a league win at the ground since 1996, went close when Tim Howard saved well from Stephane Sessegnon but Beckford’s second just before the interval blunted their threat.

    Steve Bruce’s side created little after the break and surrendered to a fourth successive loss that could have been more emphatic.

    It was another dent in their push for Europe but Everton, winning for only the second time in six league games, could still make a late charge.

    Beckford’s double took his tally after slow start to his Everton career to eight and emphasised that the Merseysiders still have much to play for after their stunning FA Cup win at Chelsea last week.

    Beckford stole the limelight from strike partner Louis Saha, who scored four goals against Blackpool three weeks ago but had been out since with a hamstring injury.

    Saha took the place of Tim Cahill, who started on the bench after being a slight injury doubt, in the only change to the side which won memorably at Stamford Bridge.

    Sunderland goalkeeper Craig Gordon, recently troubled by a knee injury, also had to make do with a place on the bench as Simon Mignolet took his place.

    The visitors almost claimed an early lead but Kieran Richardson, playing in an advanced role, spurned a glorious chance after just three minutes.

    The former Manchester United midfielder raced onto a fine ball from Sessegnon and was allowed a clear run at goal as Everton mistakenly stopped in anticipation of an offside flag.

    Howard managed to force him wide but Richardson should still have done better than to drag a shot across the face of goal. Sunderland paid for that miss as Everton claimed the lead four minutes later.

    Leon Osman found space on the edge of the box and looked to have slipped Saha in but the Frenchman allowed Beckford to sneak through and fire in a shot which Titus Bramble diverted in.

    Sunderland were denied an equaliser as Howard produced a brilliant fingertip save to turn a fierce Sessegnon drive from the edge of the box onto the bar.

    Everton continued to drive forward themselves with Saha skipping around a challenge from Anton Ferdinand in the area only to be denied by a fine Sulley Muntari tackle.

    Saha had another promising opportunity after being fed by Mikel Arteta but slipped as he shaped to shoot.

    Everton doubled their advantage six minutes before the break after Arteta beat Ferdinand and John Mensah to pull back for Beckford in front of goal.

    The former Leeds striker scuffed his left-foot shot but the ball still had enough power to creep into the bottom corner. The only downside for Everton was the loss of Marouane Fellaini just before the interval with an ankle injury suffered in a challenge with Sessegnon. Jack Rodwell took his place.

    Everton could have had a third soon after the restart when Saha flicked a Phil Neville throw into the danger area but Osman shot wide on the half-volley.

    The Toffees thought they had earned their first penalty in 29 league games when Beckford went down under a Mensah challenge after a powerful run from Seamus Coleman but the flag was raised.

    Mignolet then came to Sunderland’s rescue by saving with his feet in quick succession from Saha and Coleman after the defence had failed to clear.

    Osman tried his luck again from the edge of the box after a Bramble header fell into his path but, despite having time to take aim, the otherwise excellent midfielder again put it wide.

    Coleman brought another good save out of Mignolet with a well-struck first-time shot from the right which looked to be creeping inside the near post.

    Substitute Diniyar Bilyaletdinov skewed another attempt over the bar as Everton pressed until the end. Osman should have added a third in injury time when he took the ball round Mignolet but Ahmed Elmohamady headed off the line.

  • Moyes expects Beckford to go on a runEverton boss David Moyes expects Jermaine Beckford to continue improving after his double strike against Sunderland.Moyes said: “When we brought him to the club the idea was we brought him on slowly and we had to put him in a bit too early. But I always thought if he got his chance and played some games he would get goals and he is proving that.”If you move up the divisions you have to try to compete with better players. The defenders are better, they are stronger, faster and have better concentration. You have to move up and learn that. It has been a big step up for him – it is for any player to jump up two divisions – and it was going to take time.”He has got to improve on other aspects of his game but I think his movement in the box is as good as I have seen from a lot of the best. He can lose defenders and go one way and then the other. He is fantastic at that.”I thought we did a good job today, we were in control for most periods. I’m maybe a little disappointed we didn’t add to our tally. I thought we might have scored more goals but overall we won 2-0 and I’ve not been able to say that too often in the Premier League this season. Thankfully we got those important points.”The result knocked Sunderland down to eighth and was another blow to their hopes of pushing for a place in Europe.”We seem to save our worst for Everton for some reason,” said manager Steve Bruce, whose side have not won at Goodison Park since 1996. “Throughout the season you have disappointing games and disappointing moments and there is no doubt this was one of them.”We were second best all afternoon. Defensively we were very poor and if you don’t do the basics you are going to come unstuck. I didn’t see them do much but if you get 2-0 up it’s game over, usually, in the Premier League. We have to get that resilience and determination that we had three or four weeks ago, to keep a clean sheet, back.”That is why we are in the position we are – because defensively we didn’t give much away. We were difficult to beat but that is the opposite of what we have seen today. We have given away poor goals and you can count on one hand how many people really played well.”When you come away to somewhere like Everton you have to produce a better performance and have more resilience about you than we did today.”
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    Latics sink in second half

    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.

    Sir Alex Ferguson declared yesterday the 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 games. 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. That Scholes avoided a booking for clattering into the back of McCarthy was a mystery to everyone but referee Mark Clattenburg.

    Rooney had earlier caught the midfielder on the back of the head with his elbow.

    The Wigan fans were incensed. Rooney pleaded his innocence. TV replays were inconclusive.

    Before the half had ended, Rooney had needlessly got himself involved in a shoving match with Antolin Alcaraz and still looked ill at ease in the second period even though United played with far more poise.

    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.

  • Martinez: Rooney should have seen redWigan manager Roberto Martinez has claimed Wayne Rooney should have been sent off. Rooney caught James McCarthy in the face with his elbow during the opening minutes of Manchester United’s 4-0 win at the DW Stadium.”I saw the incident clearly and the referee did as well because he gave the free-kick,” said Martinez. “Once you give a free-kick it is quite clear that it is a red card. When you look at the replay, it is quite clear he catches James McCarthy in the face with his elbow.”If one of my players had done that, I would think he was very lucky to stay on the pitch. It is a big call in the game. It is unfortunate because the referee saw it but he didn’t feel it was a red card. It was not because he was Wayne Rooney. It was an incident in the game. That is it.”Predictably, United boss Sir Alex Ferguson took an alternate view, feeling Clattenburg made the correct call.”I have had a chance to see it,” said the Scot. “There is nothing in it. But, what will happen, the question has been asked and because it is Wayne Rooney the press will raise a campaign to get him hung by Tuesday or electrocuted or something like that.”It is unbelievable. Watch the press. It will be interesting to see it.”The chances of Rooney being punished – a red card would have meant him missing Tuesday’s trip to Chelsea, the Liverpool encounter at Anfield next Sunday and an FA Cup sixth-round tie against Arsenal or Leyton Orient – appear non-existent as Clattenburg would have to tell the FA he did not see what happened. And, as he sought him out at half-time, Martinez knows Clattenburg did.”I saw the referee at half-time,” said the Wigan chief. “He said he felt it was not a red card and that Rooney had just clipped McCarthy.”Clattenburg has a chequered past with Ferguson, who was fined after an angry exchange with the north-east official at Bolton following a clash between Patrice Evra and Kevin Davies. This time, though, it was Martinez who felt harshly dealt with considering Paul Scholes also escaped unpunished when he clattered through the back of McCarthy, whom the Wigan boss felt United had targeted.”You could see what Manchester United wanted to do,” he said. They wanted to impose themselves on James McCarthy. Unfortunately, they got away with it. There was also a very bad challenge from Paul Scholes on McCarthy. Again it was another free-kick that was not punished with a yellow card.”If we are going to get a result against Manchester United, you need the big calls to go your way. That did not happen.”Sir Alex said of the game: “It is a good result because this is a difficult place to come. For the first 20 minutes, Wigan were terrific. Van der Sar made three great saves and another fantastic one in the second-half.”Ferguson was hoping to have Ryan Giggs back from a hamstring injury and Michael Owen available following a groin strain. In the end neither made it, and Giggs only has an outside chance of being involved at Stamford Bridge.”Hopefully Ryan will train tomorrow,” said Ferguson. “He is coming on.”
  • Credit: http://soccernet.espn.go.com

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