Showing posts with label team manager. Show all posts
Showing posts with label team manager. Show all posts

Saturday, April 28, 2007

Report: United 3 Milan 2


Report: United 3 Milan 2
24/04/2007 16:43, Report by Steve Bartram

Wayne Rooney struck an injury time winner as United came from behind to win a pulsating Champions League semi-final, first leg at Old Trafford.

The England striker struck in the first minute of added time, having earlier pulled United level after a fine Kaka double had negated Cristiano Ronaldo's early opener.

Sir Alex Ferguson's side now take a 3-2 advantage into next Wednesday's second leg at the San Siro, albeit minus the suspended Patrice Evra.

Old Trafford can have known few occasions like this as a thrilling display of football from both sides was soundtracked by a raucous atmosphere.

The noise started well before kick off as news of Sir Alex Ferguson's team news began to filter through to the growing crowd.

Despite his superb recent form, particularly in the demolition of Roma, Alan Smith dropped to the bench as Sir Alex opted for a 4-3-3 formation.

Evra was a shock inclusion at left-back, recovering sufficiently from a calf injury in time to boost the Reds' ailing back line.

Milan had their own welcome injury news, with Brazilian international goalkeeper Dida taking his place in goal after shaking off a shoulder injury.

The effervescent vocals of Old Trafford's home contingent were inspirational in the quarter-final mauling of Roma, and the din which greeted the teams' arrival onto the pitch set the scene for a similarly deafening occasion.

Former United manager Wilf McGuinness reprised his role of pre-match cheerleader with another rousing call to arms for the home fans, and they certainly took heed early on.

They almost had a goal to celebrate as early as the fourth minute, but Alessandro Nesta did brilliantly to prevent Wayne Rooney's fierce shot.

Euphoria was only a few seconds away, however. Stand-in skipper Ryan Giggs whipped the resultant corner towards Ronaldo, whose powerful header was flimsily parried upwards by Dida.

The deflection looped up and, as Gabriel Heinze leapt to nod in on the goal-line, the Rossoneri stopper could only fingertip the ball over the line.

Ronaldo then sent another header goalwards after 11 minutes from Rooney's floated cross, but Dida gathered his tamer effort with considerably more comfort than the Portuguese's earlier attempt.

Pirlo curled a long-range effort into van der Sar's midriff almost immediately afterwards as Milan served notice of their attacking intent for the first time.

United's response was similarly quickfire as Carrick called Dida into action again, the big Brazilian scrambling across his goal to claw away the midfielder's left-footed volley.

The half-chances continued to come thick and fast. Ambrosini sent a looping header goalwards under pressure from John O'Shea, which van der Sar clutched gratefully. The Dutchman was redundant moments later when Kaka sent a free header well wide from a Pirlo corner.

The Brazilian wasn't nearly so charitable on 22 minutes as he drew the visitors level. Seedorf's excellent through-ball found Kaka inside the area, and he finished neatly with his left foot despite a desperate lunge from Heinze.

The pre-match billing had been one of two European giants doing battle, with the sub-plot pitting two of the game's best young talents against each other in Kaka and Ronaldo.

With the former evening the scores at a goal each, the latter set about having another say with a mesmerising run which bypassed the visitors' midfield and ended with Patrice Evra being ruled offside.

Giggs then flashed a header over from Fletcher's cross as the game continued to bear an enjoyably - albeit nerve-wrackingly - open quality.

The Welsh winger was involved again shortly afterwards as he crossed for Rooney but, despite Maldini's slip, the 21-year-old could only graze the ball with his studs rather than restore United's lead.

Ronaldo came far closer on 33 minutes as he stung Dida's palms with a rasping 25-yard left footer after another winding run. The Brazilian had gone some way to attoning for his earlier error, and he took another huge step by setting up Milan's second goal.

Dida's quick free-kick upfield found Kaka wide on the left flank under the watch of Darren Fletcher, Evra and Heinze. He made short work of their attentions, cutting infield before sliding the calmest of finishes beyond van der Sar.

A minute later the Brazilian almost struck again, but van der Sar did well to push his long-range shot around the post for a corner.

Events had taken a sudden turn for the worse, a state perpetuated four minutes before half-time as Evra was booked for dissent, ruling him out of next Wednesday's second leg in Italy.

United's attacking menace waned in the latter stages of the first half, but they should have been level almost immediately after the break.

Again a Giggs corner was the cause of Milanese concern as the unmarked Carrick sidefooted wide from just outside the six yard box.

Having replaced Maldini at half-time as a precaution against a second-leg suspension, Milan were dealt another blow just after the interval as abrasive midfielder Gattuso was stretchered off with a foot injury.

The visitors' attacking intent was far from curbed, however, and Kaka should have netted a his hat-trick after Seedorf's fine pull-back.

That miss was punished as United drew level on 59 minutes with a supremely well crafted goal from Rooney.

The Reds held possession in midfield, probing for an opening. Just when it seemed there would be no chink of light, Fletcher and Carrick found Scholes, whose impudent lob gave Rooney the chance to fire home, despite Dida's best efforts.

Buoyed but still disadvantaged by the Rossoneri's two away goals, United were soon testing the Brazilian again. Dida was equal, however, two minutes later to a low drive from Fletcher after a defensive mix-up between Nesta and Bonera.

Giggs came close to putting United ahead on two quickfire occasions as first Dida clutched his whipped cross-shot before watching as the Welshman's free kick curled just wide.

The inspiration behind United's second half dominance was a rousing display across Sir Alex Ferguson's midfield.

Scholes was at his bewitching best, Darren Fletcher reprised the magnificence of his performance against Roma, Carrick oozed calmness while Giggs was a constant thorn in the visitors' side.

It was the latter who picked the lock for United to take a precious advantage to the San Siro for next Wednesday's second leg.

Giggs and Rooney broke at speed as the game entered the first of two added minutes; the skipper slipped the ball to Rooney, who lashed a first-time shot inside Dida's near post from the edge of the box.

Old Trafford, which had been bubbling all evening, erupted as the ball hit the net, with the jubilation continuing long after the final whistle, which came a minute later.

United now take a slim advantage to the San Siro next Wednesday. On this showing they can travel to Italy on their guard, but without a sniff of fear.

Team line-ups

United: Van der Sar; O'Shea, Brown, Heinze, Evra; Fletcher, Carrick, Scholes; Ronaldo, Rooney, Giggs.
Substitutes: Kuszczak, Smith, Solskjaer, Dong, Richardson, Eagles, Lee.

AC Milan: Dida; Oddo, Nesta, Maldini (Bonera, 46), Jankulovski; Gattuso (Brocchi, 53), Pirlo, Ambrosini, Seedorf; Kaka, Gilardino (Gourcuff, 84).
Substitutes: Kalac, Cafu, Inzaghi, Favalli.

Monday, April 23, 2007

Staff : Manager : Sir Alex Ferguson


Sir Alex Ferguson is the most successful manager in British football history – winning 18 major trophies during his time in charge of the Reds. Yet despite almost two decades at the Old Trafford helm he remains focused on increasing that tally, bringing yet more silverware to Manchester United.

The Reds boss enjoyed a playing career north of the border that saw him take in spells with Queen's Park, St Johnstone, Dunfermline, Glasgow Rangers, Falkirk and Ayr United. But it is not for his playing of the game that Sir Alex was to become a success.

Following a spell out of the game he moved into coaching, taking up the role of manager of East Stirlingshire, St Mirren then Aberdeen. It was his time at Pittodrie where he earned his reputation as a top coach. He broke the Glasgow dominance of Scottish football to lead Aberdeen to three Scottish titles, four Scottish cups, one League Cup and one European Cup Winners’ Cup.

Following the sacking of Ron Atkinson as manager of Manchester United, the Old Trafford hierarchy moved quickly for his services. They got their man on 6 November 1986.

Ferguson inherited a dispirited team of underachievers who had consistently, to their supporters’ discontent, failed to break Liverpool’s domination. Stuck in the bottom four of the Division One table, Ferguson immediately set about attempting to stave off the very real threat of relegation. Without resorting to the transfer market, he guided United up the table to and eleventh place finish.

By now it was clear to Ferguson that he faced a major job in turning the club around. United were an entertaining side but one that seemed unable to cope with the more physical aspects of League football. In his second season the Reds fared better finishing second behind Liverpool, but the position painted a false picture. The turning point came in the 1989/90 season.

Following a run of games in which the Reds were drawn away in every round, United picked up their first silverware of the Ferguson era. Lee Martin scoring the only goal in a final replay against Crystal Palace to in the FA Cup.

This first trophy opened the flood gates. The European Cup Winners’ Cup was won the following season in Rotterdam, Barcelona defeated 2-1 thanks to a brace from Mark Hughes. Then in 1991/02 the League Cup was added to United’s list of honours.

Sadly the title remained elusive. It was the Holy Grail to United fans, the 26 championships free years being exacerbated by Liverpool’s dominance of the domestic and European game.

In 1992/93 the long wait for the League championship came to an end. The Reds, inspired by £1m signing Eric Cantona, pipping Aston Villa in the final weeks of the season.

The shackles were broken: the double followed in 1993/94, the double-Double (with ‘kids’) in 1995/96, and another title in 1997. Finally United were matching off-field might with on-field success. Liverpool’s dominance was well and truly over.

Sir Alex’s greatest achievement came in 1998/99. No side before or since has achieved a treble haul of Premiership title, FA Cup and European Cup. On an unforgettable night in Barcelona his decision to throw on substitutes Teddy Sheringham and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer assured history was made. The pair scoring injury-time goals to win the Champions League and complete the treble.

Ferguson was knighted following that success and some suggested he should retire, believing his desire would wane following the realisation of a dream. Not a bit of it. Another title followed in 1999/2000 and he made it three-in-row in 2000/01. His eighth Premiership duly arrived in 2002/03; his fourth FA Cup a year later came against Millwall in Cardiff.

The Reds had by now entered a period of rebuilding. The side of homegrown players he’d first put together in 1995/96 was now breaking up and he’d recruited new stars like Wayne Rooney and Cristiano Ronaldo, brought in to spark a new era of success.

Sir Alex believes that the Carling Cup win of 2005/06 – where the Reds beat Wigan Athletic 4-0 - may well provide the catalyst for a new era of success. And whilst Chelsea may well be the dominant force in the transfer market, Sir remains as hungry
as ever for more silverware.

So hungry in fact, that he has put on hold plans for retirement and has set his sights on making Manchester United English football’s - and Europe’s - premier force again.


Nationality: Glasgow, Scotland
Manager From: 06 Nov 1986
Years as Manager: 21
Premier League Title 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003
FA Cup 1990, 1994, 1996, 1999, 2004
League Cup 1992, 2006
UEFA Champions League 1999
UEFA Super Cup 1992
UEFA Cup Winners Cup 1991
Inter-Continental Cup 1999
FA Charity / Community Shield 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997, 2003
Joint holders 1990