Manchester United 2 West Ham 1
Managed to listen to the game on Absolute Radio and you
could certainly hear the West Ham fans singing “Cheerio!” when Wayne Rooney was
sent off for a stupid and dangerously high hack on Stewart Downing. Match of the Day confirms we were unlucky
not to get a point in the end as Nolan’s goal is disallowed by a dubious
offside flag.
Noble is injured and Poyet makes his full league debut,
while United have to give a debut to Paddy McNair at centre back. The Mancs go
ahead after seven minutes and it looks like the Irons are in for their normal
spanking. Creswell doesn’t boot ball and man into touch as Van Persie tussles
with him, allowing Rafael to nick the ball past him and rampage down the right.
The full back’s cross is met by Rooney who fires a great first time shot over
Adrian. Yes, our defence should have been tighter, but it’s a quality strike.
West Ham should equalise almost immediately, as a bad back
pass lets in Valencia, only for the West Ham man to fire way over the bar.
We’re two goals down when Song gets dispossessed in midfield, and Falcao finds
Van Persie, who fires a first time shot across Adrian and into the corner.
But this is not the invincible United of old. Demel wins a
corner. Valencia heads on to the bar and Sakho heads in the rebound for his fourth
goal in four games.
BYE BYE ROONEY
At the start of the second half Adrian makes a good save
from Falcao’s deflected shot. Cresswell crosses and Sakho volleys first time to
bring a great stop from De Gea. Rooney’s silly sending off, with the ball 70
yards from United's goal, gives us the chance to do a Leicester. “Oh no, we’re
up against ten men!” I text to Matt, remembering how we always seem to play
worse after an opponent is dismissed.
I’m not sure that bringing on Carlton Cole for Amalfitano is
a good decision, as it encourages West Ham to go more direct. Sakho has another
header into the side netting and we force an endless series of corners. It’s
not often West Ham have United desperately defending at Old Trafford. Debutant
McNair has to make a great headed clearance to prevent a goal. The key moment
is in the 89th minute, as lively sub Jenkinson crosses from the
right and Nolan prods home. His body is in line with the last defender and his
head a fraction in front. It’s a very harsh decision.
This was our chance to finally get something at Old Trafford
and in that sense it’s disappointing, but if we can finish better it’s still an
encouraging sign how close we pushed a side that has just spent £150m.
4 comments:
Harsh decision, my arse.
it was offside, clearly, dont try justify the loss with the word "dubious". it was offside. period.
It was harsh and if tmanure had the same decision they would feel the same.
In fact if manure were attacking in the same situation the goal would have been given, no linesman would have the bottle to refuse an equalising goal.
Technically Nolan's head was offside, but when it's that close a decision the attacking team usually gets the benefit of the doubt and as previous comment says I'm sure Rooney would not have had a goal disallowed in a similar situation.
Post a Comment