Tottenham win at Manchester United
Man Utd 1-2 Tottenham
These are the moments when
Manchester United must realise their grip on the Premier League title is slowly
being released, finger by finger. They subjected Tottenham to some intense
pressure in the final exchanges but the time has passed since Sir Alex Ferguson
used to boast that no other side in the world scored more late goals and
ultimately they were left to stew on their fourth league defeat at Old Trafford
this season. Three have come within the last four weeks and teams with genuine
title aspirations surely cannot be so careless.
The champions are now
seventh, 11 points off the lead, and David Moyes must feel as if he has been
offered the keys to a millionaire's pad, only to discover nobody had told him
it had rising damp. United at least showed great spirit in that dramatic final
push for an equaliser but they really had no choice but to throw everything
into attack after going 2-0 behind midway through the second half. They have
already lost on their own ground to Everton, Newcastle and West Brom and it is
clear that opposing teams no longer consider Old Trafford to be the formidable
place it once was.
Certainly it is starting to
feel like a trick of the imagination that Spurs went 23 years without winning
at this ground before André Villas-Boas's team managed it last season. Tim
Sherwood has now pulled it off in his fourth league game in charge, taking his
points tally to 10 out a possible 12 since taking the job. He has rejuvenated
the career of Emmanuel Adebayor, the first Spurs scorer, and could probably be
entitled to think his team should have spared themselves the late onslaught
once Christian Eriksen made it 2-0 midway through the second half. They played
with great togetherness to withstand plenty of early pressure and benefited
again from Sherwood's switch to an old-fashioned, yet hugely effective, 4-4-2
system.
Daniel Welbeck scored within
a minute of Eriksen and at one point Moyes was three yards on the pitch,
howling for a penalty after Hugo Lloris had charged from his goalline and lost
a chase of the ball to Ashley Young. United had a legitimate grievance and
maybe Young's reputation went against him. Welbeck had already been culpable of
what looked suspiciously like a dive and Adnan Januzaj, another repeat
offender, was involved in an incident of the same type later on, albeit
attracting a robust defence from his manager. United had a slightly dishevelled
look, however much Moyes tried to butter up their performance, and nobody
should think this was a smash-and-grab win for Spurs.
Aaron Lennon, who seems to
reserve his best performances for United, will reflect he should already have
scored when clean through on goal from Roberto Soldado's exquisite pass before
Adebayor opened the scoring on 34 minutes. Soldado had a wonderful chance to
make it 2-0 within five minutes and at one point late in the first half
Adebayor could be seen sprinting back to the left-back position tussling with
Wayne Rooney for the ball. When the resultant corner came over it was Adebayor
with the clearance and, again, when the ball was returned to the penalty area.
That little passage of play encapsulated their attitude. Adebayor was taken off
on a stretcher in the second half and Sherwood said he was not even sure where
the injury was. "He's got ice on everything down there," he said.
Adebayor's goal had its
origins in the kind of swift counterattacking football to which United have
been vulnerable too often this season. Januzaj's loose pass created the
problems for United from an encouraging attacking position of their own. Kyle
Walker turned defence into attack with a clever piece of skill and perfectly
measured ball to Eriksen and United, with Patrice Evra out of position, were in
trouble from that moment. Eriksen exchanged passes with Soldado, darted to the
right and the nearest defender, Chris Smalling, barely moved as Adebayor
expertly guided the Dane's cross just inside the post. From one end to the other
it was a goal of fine quality.
United had begun the game
brightly. Januzaj showed early flashes of his talent but their most penetrative
attacks in those moments mostly originated on the right. Antonio Valencia was a
difficult opponent for Danny Rose and Smalling's overlapping runs from
full-back added to the danger.
Yet there were only brief
passages when United produced the fluency for which they are known. Rooney's
desire to give everything to his team will always be a quality but a striker of
his ability should not be trying to run the game from every part of the field.
Valencia's early promise tailed off and he was switched to right-back when
Moyes tried to shake up his team, at 2-0, by taking off Smalling and Michael
Carrick and bringing on two more attack-minded players in Javier Hernández and
Shinji Kagawa.
It was a bold move from Moyes
but Valencia was at fault for Eriksen's goal, far too slow to react once Lennon
had sped to the outside of Nemanja Vidic and clipped the ball across the
penalty area. Eriksen showed far more commitment to getting there first,
darting in to send a stooping header past David de Gea.
Welbeck's goal was a lovely,
dinked finish over Lloris from Januzaj's pass but the Spurs goalkeeper was
superb thereafter. Moyes, reflecting on the Young incident as a
"scandalous" decision, made no attempt to conceal his frustration.
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