Showing posts with label Manchester City. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Manchester City. Show all posts

Manchester United dismisses Manchester City 4 – 3

Tuesday, September 22, 2009 ·

Michael Owen's dramatic strike in the sixth minute of added time to win a sensational derby catapulted the former Liverpool man into Old Trafford legend.

Now England boss Fabio Capello might have to reconsider Owen's claims for a World Cup ticket next summer. This was no ordinary goal; this was a clinical finish in a high-octane match - the type Owen used to specialize in before injuries wrecked his career. Many thought Owen was finished as an international and a top-level player.

When United boss Alex Ferguson let Carlos Tevez drift away to City and took Owen on a free, questions were raised in the summer about the old man's judgment. This was the answer and, for extra satisfaction, Tevez was there to witness it - after City seemed to have grabbed a point when Rio Ferdinand gave the ball away and Craig Bellamy scored with 90 minutes up on the clock.

Fergie was seriously wound up by that poster of Tevez on a billboard in his new City strip above the words "Welcome to Manchester". So how about United retaliating with a picture of Owen and his arms outstretched over the same message? That would kill two birds with one stone, not only annoying City but Owen's former club and rivals from Anfield as well.

Fergie reckoned United could have won this by six or seven but United's mistakes made it "the greatest derby of all time". It was true that United were remarkably accident-prone although, at the same time, City's finishing was outstanding. This was a rollicking Manchester derby with real edge and a passion which has been somewhat artificial in recent years.

Fergie claimed City had become too cocky and would not be the dominant team in his lifetime. So he was delighted when his players backed up his boast inside the first two minutes. With Shaun Wright-Phillips caught napping at a quick throw-in, Patrice Evra cut the ball back for Wayne Rooney who skipped between Nigel De Jong and Kolo Toure before shooting home.

The joy was short-lived, however, as nervy Ben Foster gifted City their 16th-minute equaliser. Foster had already hesitated once and seen his clearance charged down by Tevez so this time he foolishly tried to take the ball round the Argy - with fatal consequences. Tevez won the ball and laid it back for Gareth Barry and he finished with precision. In the stands sat Capello's assistant Franco Baldini, who cannot have been impressed by Foster's claims for the England goalkeeping spot, though he will have admired Barry's accuracy.

One-time United hero Mark Hughes, the City boss, was off the bench punching the air while the fans who used to adore him responded with gestures of a different type. The tempo was set - fast and furious with tackles flying in from all angles but somehow the lid stayed on.

Just before half-time, the moment Tevez had waited for came his way as Toure and Stephen Ireland set him up - only for his right-foot shot to rattle the outside of the post. Fergie gave his men a boot up the backside at half-time and they came out with far more purpose after the break. Within four minutes the evergreen Giggs, who bossed the second half, looped a cross towards the far post and the vastly improved Darren Fletcher climbed above Barry to head home. But City equalised through a cracking effort from Bellamy, who deceived Park Ji Sung to create space, then unleashed a right-foot pearler from 20 yards which flew in the top right-hand corner.

It took the brilliance of goalkeeper Shay Given to keep City level as he frustrated the life out of Dimitar Berbatov - twice beating away headers from the Bulgarian. When Giggs had a go with a volley, Given was there again to push it over the top as he fell backwards. But the Irishman could not stop Fletcher heading United's third from Giggs' free-kick on 80 minutes.

Just when United looked like closing it out, Ferdinand was punished for being casual. He tried to loft the ball to John O'Shea only for Martin Petrov to chest down and send Bellamy away. The Welshman appeared to have run out of room yet found a gap between Foster and post to slide in a stoppage-time leveller.

The irony was that the party which took place in front of the visiting fans was to be City's undoing. Referee Martin Atkinson added on time for City's exuberance, there were another 30 seconds when Michael Carrick came on for Anderson - and United made the most of it. Rooney's free-kick was charged down but, when he hooked it back into the area, the ball was cleared only as far as Giggs. The pass which followed was out of this world, splitting the defence in two. Owen controlled it with the outside of his right foot before prodding the winner home.














City fire title warning

Monday, September 14, 2009 ·

Manchester City fired out a stunning signal of their Premier League title intent with a thrilling 4-2 victory over Arsenal at the City of Manchester Stadium.

After three successive wins in the Premier League, the visit of Arsenal provided Mark Hughes' side with their first serious test of the campaign and it was one they passed with flying colours.

Though Arsenal started brightly, City took the lead on 20 minutes in fortunate circumstances when Micah Richards' header was turned onto the post by Manuel Almunia before bouncing off the visitors' keeper and into the net.

William Gallas, who missed a great chance before City scored, was then denied by Shay Given, who also thwarted Thomas Vermaelen from distance.

Arsenal drew level on 62 minutes through Robin van Persie only for Craig Bellamy to restore City's lead in the 74th minute.

Emmanuel Adebayor maintained his record of scoring in every game since leaving Arsenal for City by heading home on 80 minutes and he was booked after running the length of the pitch in celebration.

Shaun Wright-Phillips grabbed City's fourth goal on 84 minutes before Tomas Rosicky marked his first Arsenal appearance since January 2008 with a late consolation.

Premiere League Preview

Friday, August 28, 2009 ·

All eyes will be on Old Trafford this weekend for the first clash between big four of the 2009/10 campaign.

It may still be early days in the new season but the importance of getting one over on your rivals should not be underestimated, at either end of the table.

Manchester United,Your browser may not support display of this image. Chelsea and much-touted Manchester CityYour browser may not support display of this image. all well-placed on the upper rungs of the Premier League ladder. Liverpool have stumbled to a disappointing start, and know they have ground to make up already, while the likes of Birmingham and Burnley have displayed enough promise to suggest that they could be dark horses as the top-flight marathon begins in earnest.

The latest round of fixtures will, however, be overshadowed by what promises to be a titanic tussle between Manchester United and Arsenal on Saturday evening - a game which can be seen live on Sky Sports 1 in UK and ESPNSTAR in South East Asia.

Reigning champions United appear to have shaken off the surprise of suffering a shock loss at Turf Moor, and put five past Wigan last time out, and Sir Alex Ferguson will have his troops primed for battle. Arsenal, though, have been mightily impressive so far this term, scoring 10 goals in their two fixtures so far, and they will head to Old Trafford confident they can put down a significant marker in the title race.

While the Gunners and Red Devils will have aspirations of crossing the finish line first come next May, Carlo Ancelotti's Chelsea are also expected to have a major say in the destination of the crown. The Blues have made a perfect start to the season, taking nine points from three games, but they will not have things all their own way at Stamford Bridge this weekend when they play host to a Burnley side who have adapted to life among England's elite with consummate ease.

At present, though, it is Tottenham who are looking down on the rest of the table from their lofty perch at the summit and Harry Redknapp'sYour browser may not support display of this image. men will fancy their chances of racking up a fourth consecutive success this week. Spurs welcome Birmingham to North London on Saturday looking to preserve White Hart Lane'sYour browser may not support display of this image. burgeoning status as a fortress few away sides are able to breach.

Liverpool's troubles so far have already been alluded to and Rafa Benitez will not be relishing a tricky trip to Bolton. The Reds appeared bereft of ideas in their hugely disappointing 3-1 defeat to Aston VillaYour browser may not support display of this image. on Monday and Gary Megson will have his Trotters team sensing blood.

Anyone looking for a surprise package to emerge from the midst of the 2009/10 campaign could do worse than cast an eye over ever-improving Sunderland. Steve BruceYour browser may not support display of this image. has got the Black Cats purring and a trip to fortress Britannia Stadium to take on Stoke will hold no fear for the wily former Birmingham and Wigan boss.

West Ham, or rather their supporters, have dominated the headlines for all the wrong reasons this week and they will welcome the opportunity to turn attentions back to their performances on the field. A 3-1 victory over Millwall in the Carling Cup in midweek, a good result which has been somewhat overshadowed, should stand them in good stead ahead of a trip to Blackburn to take on a Rovers side yet to get off the mark.

Molineux promises to be bathed in gold this weekend as hosts Wolves take on Hull City. Mick McCarthy's side have made a solid yet unspectacular start to life back in the big time, while the Tigers will feel that they have yet to reap the rewards their industry this term has deserved.

Portsmouth kick-off Sunday's action with a lunchtime contest with Manchester City.With Sulaiman Al-Fahim now overseeing events at Fratton Park,Your browser may not support display of this image. having previously helped to manufacture the Abu Dhabi United Group's takeover at City, it will be intriguing to see which of the two sides now benefitting from Middle Eastern investment come out on top. The smart money would appear to be on the visitors, as they have taken maximum points from their two outings so far and are yet to concede, while Pompey have slipped to three consecutive defeats and look drained by the distracting takeover saga.

The South Coast outfit do not prop up the table at present, though, with that unfortunate honour going to Everton. The Toffees were expected to be among the frontrunners again this season, after taking positive strides in recent years, but a dismal start has seen them slip off the pace. A home date with inconsistent Wigan could help them to get back on track, but the Merseysiders will be forced to make do without Joleon LescottYour browser may not support display of this image. from now on after offloading the England international to Manchester City.

A busy weekend, which sees all 20 Premier League sides in action, comes to a close at Villa ParkYour browser may not support display of this image. on Sunday afternoon as Aston Villa take on Fulham. Martin O'Neill's men will have been buoyed by their heroics at Anfield last time out, while the Cottagers are looking to bounce back from a derby day setback at Chelsea last weekend.

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