Manchester United vs Swansea City Report
Manchester United 2-0 Swansea City: Scholes & Young goals take title race to final day with champions needing a miracle
Sir Alex Ferguson's side made short work of the out-of-sorts
visitors running out comfortable and deserved winners at home as the
title race goes into the final game of the season
Manchester United ensured they took the Premier League title race into the final day of the season with a routine victory over Swansea at Old Trafford, with Paul Scholes and Ashley Young getting the goals.
After a nervy opening twenty minute period
from the hosts, they were put ahead after Scholes managed to turn in
Michael Carrick's scuffed shot from inside the box past the despairing
Michel Vorm.
Ashley Young added a second just minutes before the
break, clinically dispatching a loose ball into the far-right corner
after some kamikaze defending from Swansea.
The second half
followed a very similar pattern to the first, with United well on top
for long spells, and failing to put the game to bed despite creating a
host of chances, with Javier Hernandez the main culprit in a wasteful
display.
Sir Alex Ferguson made three changes to the side that
lost the crucial derby match against Manchester City and added a more
attacking dimension to their starting eleven with the aim of bridging
the goal difference gap.
Javier Hernandez, Ashley Young and
Antonio Valencia all returned to the side in place of Ryan Giggs, Park
Ji-Sung and Nani, while Jonny Evans and Danny Welbeck missed out
altogether through injury.
Brendan Rodgers made just two changes
to the side that were held to a thrilling 4-4 draw against Wolves, with
Mark Gower replacing the injured Leon Britton and Angel Rangel preferred
to Andrea Orlandi in defence.
The game began at a frantic pace,
but only a blocked Wayne Rooney shot and a speculative effort from
Nathan Dyer were worthy of note in the opening quarter of an hour.
Vorm
was forced into a smart double save in the 21st minute, though, first
to deny Patrice Evra's angled volley and then Wayne Rooney's follow-up.
A
decent move from Swansea saw Danny Graham get off a snapshot while
under pressure from Rio Ferdinand moments before the hosts took the lead
in the 27th minute through Scholes.
The veteran
playmaker began the move in the middle of the park, spraying the ball
out wide to Antonio Valencia, with the winger leaving Swansea left-back
Neil Taylor for dead before cutting back a superb ball from the byline.
The
Ecuadorian's pass found Carrick unmarked 12 yards out, but as the
midfielder scuffed his effort into the ground, a deft flick from Scholes
just in front of Vorm turned it goalwards and handed Ferguson's side
the lead.
In the very next move, they should have gone two goals
up after some excellent work down the right by Valencia again found
Carrick bursting into the box, and his low arrowed centre across goal
was missed by the onrushing Hernandez with the goal gaping.
Young
soon had a strong penalty appeal turned down after Angel Rangel
appeared to catch him in the area. From the resulting corner, Hernandez
nodded well over from inside the six yard box.
Phil Jones,
starting at right back, then burst in off the flank after playing a
lovely give-and-go with Valencia, before firing straight at Vorm from
wide on the edge of the area with the angle slightly against him.
United extended their lead even further in the 40th minute through Young.
The visitors were guilty of trying to over-complicate things by playing
the ball out from the back and Joe Allen suicidally passed the ball to
Valencia, who played it inside to Rooney, who saw his shot well blocked
by Ashley Williams.
However, the ball fell to Young's feet
inside the box, who looked up and curled a low effort past the
outstretched fingertips of Vorm and into the bottom right-hand corner to
double the hosts' lead.
Early in the second half, David De Gea
had to be alert to turn behind a stinging Gylfi Sigurdsson strike from
the edge of the area after Allen had released Dyer away down the right
with a superb ball over the top.
From the resulting corner,
though, United broke away at pace and only a marvellous bit of covering
from Dyer prevented Young from turning in at the far post after some
tidy work from both Valencia and Rooney.
Hernandez continued his
prolifigacy in front of goal as he headed narrowly over unmarked inside
the six yard box from a Jones cross as United chased further reward for
their dominance.
But Swansea still posed a threat on the break
and they should have reduced the deficit in the 63rd minute when Dyer
blazed over high, wide and not so handsome after collecting Sigurdsson's
cute diagonal pass into the area.
With the game petering out
into little more than a training exercise, Sigurdsson forced De Gea into
a decent stop at his near post in the 70th minute in a rare scare for
the home side's relatively untroubled defence.
United were still
real threatening every time they poured forward, though, but they only
succeeded in providing further evidence of why they find themselves
eight goals behind City on goal difference in the race for the title.
Rooney
spurned a great chance after collecting Carrick's sublime first-time
pass from 25 yards before angling his finish wide of the far left-hand
post in the 73rd minute with Vorm well beaten.
Berbatov came off
the bench in the 78th minute to replace Rooney up front in what could
well be his final appearance at Old Trafford, but was largely
ineffective.
United comfortably closed out three points which
keep their slim title hopes alive, but they remain eight goals further
back on rivals City on a day when they were more than capable of filling
their boots.
Source : Goal.com