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Manchester United vs Chelsea report : Robin van Persie's late goal rescues a point for United
Manchester United vs Chelsea report : Robin van Persie's late goal rescues a point for United
er a mound of United team-mates after
his 94th-minute goal, and still had the elation coursing through him
when he emerged to tear his shirt off and throw it in the air. The Old
Trafford crowd were sent home with that familiar tingle of joy at a
game-changing last few minutes. But this was a draw, not a victory, and
the gap to Chelsea remains a formidable 10 points.
On
the touchline as Old Trafford erupted in delight at the equaliser, Jose
Mourinho responded with a dismissive wrinkle of the nose and a shake of
the head. His team had come close to a big win, and he was furious at
the decision of referee Phil Dowd to send off Branislav Ivanovic in the
moments before United scored. But soon he had composed himself because,
for now, a point seemed like it was enough for him.
His team had stepped it up a level in the second half, scored through the 36-year-old Didier Drogba and then held United at arm’s length for much of the rest of the game. United got out of jail. They had the better of a hectic first half but Chelsea had taken control after the break and to watch them today was to see a team ready to win a title.
For Van Gaal, United remain frustratingly short of being the sum of their parts and the Dutch coach’s jolly attitude afterwards, ticking Van Persie off for the goal celebration that got him booked, suggested that he was relieved with a point. His team had thrown everything at Chelsea in the closing stages and, man-for-man, they match up well. The simple truth is that Chelsea are a much better functioning, slicker ensemble.
Eight minutes after half-time, Drogba drifted to the near post pursued by the diminutive Rafael Da Silva who was wholly inadequate when it came to challenging one of the greatest headers of the ball the game has known. Those are the kind of details that are tripping up United at present, the sort of glitches that Mourinho has had longer to address in his own Chelsea team.
Chelsea also had the most consistently dangerous player on the pitch in Eden Hazard, whose incision through the United defence won the corner for the goal. They played without their first and second choice strikers, Diego Costa and Loïc Rémy, and in the calmer post-match atmosphere, Mourinho seemed to have assessed the result as acceptable. His unwillingness to be explicit about what he regarded as Dowd’s mistakes in the game told you that much.
As for United, they were without the injured Radamel Falcao and their best attacker was the teenager Adnan Januzaj, who came in and out of the game but delivered quality every time. As for Angel Di Maria, when he reaches full fitness, he will be extraordinary – but this could not have been him at his best. Phil Jones is injured again, and missed the game with a case of shin splints that Van Gaal said had prevented him training.
Didier Drogba heads in to break the deadlock It was a wonderful first half, full of the exceptional high-quality football one would expect of these two sides, but also with the promise of a mistake that might unlock the match. Marcos Rojo gave the ball away to Willian on 34 minutes and was lucky that Chris Smalling was there to cover. Rafael got himself booked on 12 minutes, falling for one of Hazard’s oldest tricks.
There were some fine moments from United for whom Marouane Fellaini did a good job minding Cesc Fabregas in midfield. The best chance for United in the first half was Januzaj’s ball into the inside left channel to Van Persie when Thibaut Courtois was off his line so quickly he was almost at the striker’s toes when he blocked.
Drogba missed Chelsea’s best first-half chance, a shot that David De Gea stopped with his feet. Chelsea found themselves stretched in midfield, demonstrated by the booking for Nemanja Matic for his second cynical block of the half. At a Chelsea corner, the away team could have complained about the grappling of United defenders.
In the second half, Dowd’s decision to book Ivanovic on 65 minutes enraged Mourinho, and with some justification. Di Maria had tried to push the full-back away and found himself out-muscled. When the free-kick was given United’s way it appeared to be Ivanovic’s complaint that earned him a yellow card for dissent. It was to cost him later.
Thibaut Courtois saves an effort from Robin van Persie
By then, Chelsea were in the lead. On 50 minutes Hazard was through the United defence in a heartbeat, exchanging passes with Drogba and in on goal. De Gea did well to save that time but from the subsequent corner United were undone.
The home side got their marking patterns all wrong, and so it was Rafael who chased Drogba to the near post in vain, making no impact on the striker’s glancing header back into goal. Van Persie managed a touch but it was not enough to stop the ball going in. In 20 games against United it was just Drogba’s fourth goal but what a goal, and what a player – even after all these years.
Later Van Gaal explained the mis-match of Rafael marking Drogba as a necessity; he said he simply did not have enough tall players in his side. The suspicion was that one reason for Fellaini’s inclusion was to address that problem, but he could not cover all the giants in Chelsea’s team.
The big tactical switches followed the goal. Van Gaal brought off Mata for the striker James Wilson and changed to a 4-4-2. Mourinho introduced John Obi Mikel to play alongside Matic. Oscar came off and Fabregas moved into the orthodox No 10 position. The big moment came after Ivanovic’s red card, which felt like it would be the decisive moment of the game.
For Ivanovic’s second yellow card, he had caught the heels of Di Maria, who swung in the free-kick and Fellaini attacked it well. From Courtois’ fine save it spilled to Van Persie who thumped it home. This was enough for now for United, but very soon they will need more from these kind of games.
Manchester United (4-1-4-1): De Gea; Rafael, Smalling, Rojo, Shaw; Blind; Di Maria, Fellaini, Mata (Wilson, 67), Januzaj; Van Persie.
Substitutes not used: Lindegaard (gk), Carrick, Herrera, Fletcher, Blackett, Pereira.
Chelsea (4-2-3-1): Courtois; Ivanovic, Cahill, Terry, Filipe Luis; Fabregas, Matic; Willian (Zouma, 90), Oscar (Mikel, 67), Hazard (Schurrle, 89); Drogba.
Substitutes not used: Cech (gk), Ake, Salah, Baker.
Booked: Manchester United Rafael, Fellaini Chelsea Drogba, Matic, Fabregas ,Oscar, Ivanovic
Sent off: Ivanovic
Referee: P Dowd (Staffordshire)
Man of the match: Hazard
Rating: 8
Attendance: 75,327
His team had stepped it up a level in the second half, scored through the 36-year-old Didier Drogba and then held United at arm’s length for much of the rest of the game. United got out of jail. They had the better of a hectic first half but Chelsea had taken control after the break and to watch them today was to see a team ready to win a title.
For Van Gaal, United remain frustratingly short of being the sum of their parts and the Dutch coach’s jolly attitude afterwards, ticking Van Persie off for the goal celebration that got him booked, suggested that he was relieved with a point. His team had thrown everything at Chelsea in the closing stages and, man-for-man, they match up well. The simple truth is that Chelsea are a much better functioning, slicker ensemble.
Eight minutes after half-time, Drogba drifted to the near post pursued by the diminutive Rafael Da Silva who was wholly inadequate when it came to challenging one of the greatest headers of the ball the game has known. Those are the kind of details that are tripping up United at present, the sort of glitches that Mourinho has had longer to address in his own Chelsea team.
Chelsea also had the most consistently dangerous player on the pitch in Eden Hazard, whose incision through the United defence won the corner for the goal. They played without their first and second choice strikers, Diego Costa and Loïc Rémy, and in the calmer post-match atmosphere, Mourinho seemed to have assessed the result as acceptable. His unwillingness to be explicit about what he regarded as Dowd’s mistakes in the game told you that much.
As for United, they were without the injured Radamel Falcao and their best attacker was the teenager Adnan Januzaj, who came in and out of the game but delivered quality every time. As for Angel Di Maria, when he reaches full fitness, he will be extraordinary – but this could not have been him at his best. Phil Jones is injured again, and missed the game with a case of shin splints that Van Gaal said had prevented him training.
Didier Drogba heads in to break the deadlock It was a wonderful first half, full of the exceptional high-quality football one would expect of these two sides, but also with the promise of a mistake that might unlock the match. Marcos Rojo gave the ball away to Willian on 34 minutes and was lucky that Chris Smalling was there to cover. Rafael got himself booked on 12 minutes, falling for one of Hazard’s oldest tricks.
There were some fine moments from United for whom Marouane Fellaini did a good job minding Cesc Fabregas in midfield. The best chance for United in the first half was Januzaj’s ball into the inside left channel to Van Persie when Thibaut Courtois was off his line so quickly he was almost at the striker’s toes when he blocked.
Drogba missed Chelsea’s best first-half chance, a shot that David De Gea stopped with his feet. Chelsea found themselves stretched in midfield, demonstrated by the booking for Nemanja Matic for his second cynical block of the half. At a Chelsea corner, the away team could have complained about the grappling of United defenders.
In the second half, Dowd’s decision to book Ivanovic on 65 minutes enraged Mourinho, and with some justification. Di Maria had tried to push the full-back away and found himself out-muscled. When the free-kick was given United’s way it appeared to be Ivanovic’s complaint that earned him a yellow card for dissent. It was to cost him later.
Thibaut Courtois saves an effort from Robin van Persie
By then, Chelsea were in the lead. On 50 minutes Hazard was through the United defence in a heartbeat, exchanging passes with Drogba and in on goal. De Gea did well to save that time but from the subsequent corner United were undone.
The home side got their marking patterns all wrong, and so it was Rafael who chased Drogba to the near post in vain, making no impact on the striker’s glancing header back into goal. Van Persie managed a touch but it was not enough to stop the ball going in. In 20 games against United it was just Drogba’s fourth goal but what a goal, and what a player – even after all these years.
Later Van Gaal explained the mis-match of Rafael marking Drogba as a necessity; he said he simply did not have enough tall players in his side. The suspicion was that one reason for Fellaini’s inclusion was to address that problem, but he could not cover all the giants in Chelsea’s team.
The big tactical switches followed the goal. Van Gaal brought off Mata for the striker James Wilson and changed to a 4-4-2. Mourinho introduced John Obi Mikel to play alongside Matic. Oscar came off and Fabregas moved into the orthodox No 10 position. The big moment came after Ivanovic’s red card, which felt like it would be the decisive moment of the game.
For Ivanovic’s second yellow card, he had caught the heels of Di Maria, who swung in the free-kick and Fellaini attacked it well. From Courtois’ fine save it spilled to Van Persie who thumped it home. This was enough for now for United, but very soon they will need more from these kind of games.
Manchester United (4-1-4-1): De Gea; Rafael, Smalling, Rojo, Shaw; Blind; Di Maria, Fellaini, Mata (Wilson, 67), Januzaj; Van Persie.
Substitutes not used: Lindegaard (gk), Carrick, Herrera, Fletcher, Blackett, Pereira.
Chelsea (4-2-3-1): Courtois; Ivanovic, Cahill, Terry, Filipe Luis; Fabregas, Matic; Willian (Zouma, 90), Oscar (Mikel, 67), Hazard (Schurrle, 89); Drogba.
Substitutes not used: Cech (gk), Ake, Salah, Baker.
Booked: Manchester United Rafael, Fellaini Chelsea Drogba, Matic, Fabregas ,Oscar, Ivanovic
Sent off: Ivanovic
Referee: P Dowd (Staffordshire)
Man of the match: Hazard
Rating: 8
Attendance: 75,327
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