Blues Battle To United WIn (Sky Sports)
Manchester United 1 Chelsea 2
Chelsea
moved to the top of the table with an impressive 2-1 win over rivals
Manchester United in their title showdown at Old Trafford.
Joe Cole gave Chelsea the lead on 20 minutes with a clever back-heeled finish
from Florent Malouda's cross in a first half dominated by the visitors.
Didier Drogba came off the bench to net a second 11 minutes from time even
though it appeared the striker was offside as he latched onto Salomon Kalou's
pass.
Manchester United substitute Federico Macheda pulled a goal back two minutes
later when Cech could only parry Nani's cross into the path of the Italian who
bundled the ball into the net.
United threw everything at Chelsea in the closing stages, but Carlo Ancelotti's
men held on to move two points clear at the top of the table.
Without Wayne Rooney, there was no real bite in United's attack. And although
the 34-goal striker is only out for a fortnight, by the time he returns his
side's dreams of glory might be over, considering Chelsea now have a two-point
advantage and a superior goal difference.
Since his recovery from a long-term knee injury, Cole has struggled to get back
into the swing of things.
Fabio Capello claimed he was not the same player when he left the midfielder out
of his England squad to face Egypt last month, raising extreme doubt over Cole's
chances of making the World Cup.
Cole's admission that contract talks had broken down was a statement in itself,
given it is hard to imagine Carlo Ancelotti allowing a pivotal player to find
himself in such a position so close to him being allowed to leave on a free
transfer.
Old Trafford has been mentioned as a potential destination should Cole leave
Stamford Bridge this summer, so it was an opportunity to impress Sir Alex
Ferguson, not that the United chief would have found the 18th-minute opener even
vaguely admirable.
Having put his side's obvious failings in possession down to a one-off in Munich
last week, Ferguson must have been worried to see the same fault reappearing
quite so often, quite so soon.
There is no doubt the ankle injury Rooney suffered in Germany had a negative
effect on United.
But the fault lay much deeper, their play too ponderous to have any impact.
All across the midfield, United were wasteful in possession. And with Florent
Malouda giving Gary Neville a right old runaround, Chelsea took complete
command.
The disappointment for Ancelotti must have been that his team did not make the
most of their possession.
Edwin van der Sar denied Cole on one occasion and Nicolas Anelka had a couple of
shots blocked but clear-cut chances were rare.
Opener
Even Chelsea's opening goal
was not a golden opportunity in that sense. Malouda was invited to run into the
home box and although Darren Fletcher eventually reacted, the Chelsea midfielder
had the strength to hold him off and cut the ball back to the near post, where
Cole got in front of Patrice Evra and found the net with a neat back flick.
It took United a long time to respond. And when the rally eventually came, it
took the form of a couple of debatable penalty appeals and referee Mike Dean was
not impressed either when Yury Zhirkov chopped down Park Ji-sung and Dimitar
Berbatov fell under Frank Lampard's challenge.
Had Paulo Ferreira shown more conviction when he raced to meet Cole's excellent
through-ball at the start of the second half, the contest would have been over.
Instead, the full-back failed to find either the far corner, or Anelka, and
United, who at least speeded up a little bit, remained alive.
The escape certainly seemed to galvanise the hosts, who for the first time made
Chelsea's defence creak.
Berbatov, the man of whom so much was expected in Rooney's absence, was just off
target with a couple of headers and, off balance, Park was unable to keep his
shot on target after a forceful Fletcher run had carved Chelsea open.
The introduction of Drogba midway through the second half emphasised the Blues'
strength in depth compared to their hosts, who were forced to rely on the
talents of teenager Macheda when Ferguson needed to reinvigorate his side.
Impact
Predictably, Drogba had an
immediate impact, even if he was offside as he collected Kalou's pass before
drilling his shot past Van der Sar.
Down, and almost out, United responded instantly as Cech pushed Nani's cross
onto the on-rushing Macheda.
The ball bounced slowly into the Chelsea goal to set up a dramatic ending. But
the Blues were worthy winners at the end. Behind glass, in the executive box
where he watched from, Rooney could only wonder what might have been.
Manchester United |
Team Statistics |
Chelsea |
1 |
Goals |
2 |
0 |
1st Half Goals |
1 |
3 |
Shots on Target |
3 |
7 |
Shots off Target |
5 |
1 |
Blocked Shots |
2 |
3 |
Corners |
3 |
13 |
Fouls |
12 |
2 |
Offsides |
1 |
3 |
Yellow Cards |
2 |
0 |
Red Cards |
0 |
80.5 |
Passing Success |
78.3 |
20 |
Tackles |
25 |
65 |
Tackles Success |
80 |
52 |
Possession |
48 |
54.7 |
Territorial Advantage |
45.3 |
Manchester United
Van der Sar, Neville, Ferdinand, Vidic, Evra, Fletcher (Gibson 86), Scholes
(Nani 72), Park Macheda 72), Giggs, Valencia, Berbatov
Subs Not Used Kuszczak, Carrick,
Rafael, De Laet
Booked
Scholes, Neville, Fletcher
Goals Macheda 81
Chelsea
Cech, Zhirkov, Alex, Terry, Ferreira, Lampard, Deco (Ballack 82), Mikel, J. Cole
(Kalou 74), Malouda, Anelka (Drogba 70)
Subs Not Used
Turnbull, Bruma, Belletti, Sturridge
Booked
Deco, J. Cole
Goals
J. Cole 20, Drogba 79
Attendance 75,217
Referee M. Dean