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*** Tottenham Hotspur vs Manchester United OMT ***

http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2012/sep/29/manchester-united-tottenham-hotspur-premier-league

[h=1]Tottenham Hotspur's Gareth Bale banishes Manchester United hoodoo[/h]


[h=2]Premier League[/h]
Manchester United 2
  • Nani 51,
  • Kagawa 53
Tottenham Hotspur 3
  • Vertonghen 2,
  • Bale 32,
  • Dempsey 52




Gareth-Bale-008.jpg
Gareth Bale scores the second goal for Tottenham against Manchester United during the Premier League game at Old Trafford. Photograph: Carl Recine/Action Images

It was a match of extraordinary drama and in the end Tottenham Hotspur had their first victory at Old Trafford since 1989 and André Villas-Boas could reflect on his finest moment in English football. His team played with authority and togetherness and their supporters will like to believe that this result could be a defining moment under the direction of their ambitious new manager.
Spurs survived some fraught moments during the late, final onslaught as Manchester United tried desperately to demonstrate why there is probably no better side in the world at rescuing seemingly irretrievable positions. Eleven years ago to the day Sir Alex Ferguson was in charge of a team that came back from 3-0 down at half-time to score five times at White Hart Lane. Three years ago Spurs had a two-goal lead at Old Trafford before being swamped by five United goals in 22 minutes. This time there was no feat of escapology; no late, dramatic twist. The visitors dug deep, refused to crumple and now they surely deserve to be taken more seriously when it comes to the teams competing for the top places.
Ferguson will reflect that his players had left themselves with far too much to do after Jan Vertonghen opened the scoring inside the first two minutes and Gareth Bale brilliantly doubled the lead during a first half in which Spurs were magnificent, superior in every department, while United were so short of ideas their manager could barely explain it.
United did not burst into life until a second half that incorporated a high form of drama and began with three goals in as many minutes. Nani and Shinji Kagawa got two of them, but in between Clint Dempsey registered his first goal for his new club, while in that last half hour when Spurs had to defend for their lives, they did so in a manner that makes it feel absurd that Villas-Boas woke up to headlines about a mutinous dressing room.
Tottenham have been a soft touch far too often during that 23-year barren run at this stadium. They had to give everything here during those last moments and they did so with nerve and competitive spirit against a team that finished the game with four strikers on the pitch. Rooney hit the woodwork with a free-kick, a Michael Carrick header looped on to the crossbar and Robin Van Persie screwed his best chance of the match wide. There were penalty appeals, as well as any number of close misses. The Spurs of old would have capitulated but the new-look side refused to be cowed.
They had started the match as though affronted that their record on this ground could be so undistinguished. Bale was superb, staggeringly so given that he almost missed the match because of a virus. Mousa Dembélé excelled, just as he had when Fulham visited Old Trafford last month, reminding Ferguson of the talents that had seen United bid for him earlier in the summer. Vertonghen's willingness to break forward and supplement attack, playing at left-back in place of the injured Benoît Assou-Ekotto, was one of the features of the game. Aaron Lennon offered width and penetration on the right. Jermain Defoe was sharp, lively and confident. In the opening 45 minutes Spurs played with great ambition, knocking the ball around with a lovely balance to the team. It was rare to see United lacking so many ideas on their own ground and, just as disappointingly for Ferguson, reacting so sluggishly to the shock of going behind so early.
From a United perspective it was a terribly soft goal to concede, but Vertonghen deserves an enormous amount of credit for his perseverance, surging into the penalty area and playing a one-two with Bale to elude the two nearest players, Nani and Michael Carrick. The Belgian moved inside Rio Ferdinand to take aim with his right foot and when Jonny Evans slid in to try to block the shot, he succeeded only in diverting it past his own goalkeeper.
Tottenham's second goal was counter-attacking at its best – fast, incisive and devastating. Dembélé's clever pass set Bale running clear and from there the Welshman reminded us that when he is running full-pelt with the ball at his feet there are few more exciting sights in the sport. His change of direction and burst of acceleration was enough to keep Ferdinand at bay and the shot was angled perfectly to go across Anders Lindegaard into the bottom corner.
United's improvement coincided with Wayne Rooney's introduction as a half-time substitute, replacing the ineffectual Ryan Giggs and quickly making his impact felt, crossing from the right for Nani to direct a shot past Brad Friedel. The excitement was unremitting from that point. Within a minute smart work from Defoe teed up Bale inside the penalty area. Lindegaard saved but was hopelessly exposed as Dempsey put in the rebound. Straight from the kick-off United were on the attack again. Van Persie slipped a pass into Kagawa's path and the Japan midfielder's control and turn was exquisite, culminating in a shot just inside the post.
Villas-Boas has his own painful memories of United's comeback habit, with a 3-0 lead becoming a 3-3 draw when he was at Chelsea last season. Now he had to endure some nerve-shredding moments at the end of the game, but William Gallas and his defensive colleagues excelled and the Stretford End howled with anguish. The final whistle went and the Spurs manager could be seen pumping his fists on the touchline.
 
[h=1][/h]

Premier League
Saturday 29 September 2012 17.30
Score Manchester United 2 – 3 (HT 0 – 2) Tottenham Hotspur

  1. Nani 51

  1. Kagawa 53

  1. Vertonghen 2

  1. Bale 32

  1. Dempsey 52
Possession 74%
26%
Corners
(9) 64%
(5) 36%
Goal attempts (16) 61%
(10) 39%
On target (7) 63%
(4) 37%
Fouls (7) 43%
(9) 57%
Offside (2) 50%
(2) 50%
Manchester United
  • Anders Lindegaard,
  • Patrice Evra,
  • Rafael,
  • Jonny Evans,
  • Rio Ferdinand (Javier Hernández, 92),
  • Paul Scholes,
  • Shinji Kagawa (Danny Welbeck, 79),
  • Ryan Giggs (Wayne Rooney, 45),
  • Nani,
  • Michael Carrick,
  • Robin van Persie
Tottenham Hotspur
  • Brad Friedel,
  • Steven Caulker,
  • William Gallas,
  • Jan Vertonghen,
  • Kyle Walker,
  • Gareth Bale,
  • Sandro,
  • Aaron Lennon,
  • Mousa Dembélé (Tom Huddlestone, 84),
  • Clint Dempsey (Gylfi Sigurdsson, 70),
  • Jermain Defoe (Michael Dawson, 92)
RefereeChris Foy
VenueOld Trafford
Attendance75,566
 
Fergie's injury time 'rant' is so transparent that it's laughable. He must have a list of these slightly left-field topics (like unfit refs) to throw out there whenever his team performs poorly. Sure enough, watch as SSN & Talksport pore over the details involved in attributing extra time instead of looking at why United have lost two of their opening six league games.
 
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepag...oas-hails-Tottenham-3-2-win-over-Man-Utd.html
Redemption day for AVB warriors

Manchester United 2 Tottenham 3

bale_1593222a.jpg
BALE AND HEARTY ... Gareth Bale puts Tottenham 2-0 up at Old Trafford



By IAN WHITTELL

Last Updated: 30th September 2012


ANDRE VILLAS-BOAS heard the jeers turn to cheers among the Spurs faithful last night after his side’s astonishing victory.

And the Spurs boss has tipped his side for “big things” in his debut season after their first Old Trafford win in 23 years.
Goals from Jan Vertonghen, Gareth Bale and Clint Dempsey secured one of the most stunning results of the new Premier League campaign despite a spirited second-half comeback from Manchester United.
And, after a slow start to his reign at White Hart Lane, three straight league wins seem to have turned the tide for the Portuguese chief.
He said: “When you see a team with so much desire to hold on to a historic result you can count on each other to do big things this year. “That’s the most important thing, the most important lesson we take out of tonight. We wrote history for our team and the satisfaction comes from that.
“The players really felt they could nick a win here and the first and second half is an expression of that desire and ambition, though in different ways. In the first half we attacked and kept the ball. In the second we defended.”
It was December 1989 when Spurs last enjoyed success at Old Trafford — before United subs Danny Welbeck and David de Gea were even born!
AVB added: “This is a very, very special night for us. It must serve as an example to us for what we want to achieve in the future.
“In the end it is just an important three points that will hopefully serve as an inspiration for the future. But the fans believe a lot in what we are doing. We need them to follow us with this passion and this ambition they showed here.”
The Spurs boss had special praise for goalscorer and man-of-the-match Bale and revealed the Welsh wizard only trained one day this week with a throat illness.
He said: “Gareth still has a sore throat and fever. We had problems with Gylfi Sigurdsson as well, who had diarrhoea and vomiting.”
But, despite the stunning upset, Villas-Boas refused to talk about Spurs in terms of title contenders.
He added: “Our quest is to qualify for the Champions League. It is very difficult to go for the title. “We understand it is a place where the great teams of this country belong. We want to win a trophy this season. We want Champions League qualification.” Shell-shocked United boss Alex Ferguson was left to rue at least two strong penalty claims — best of all a clear two-handed grab by Vertonghen on Nani.
However, ref Chris Foy decided the winger had made a meal of the foul — and Fergie agreed!
He said: “I think there were quite a few penalties. The one in the first half was a clear penalty kick but maybe Nani made a meal of it.
“He didn’t need to do that but certainly he was pulled back. I’m not sure about those in the second half.”
But the United boss was seething that only four minutes were added at the end of the match.
He fumed: “They gave four minutes. It’s an absolute insult to the game.
“Substitutions, the trainer came on — that’s four minutes right away.
“The goalkeeper must have wasted two or three minutes, they were taking their time at every goal kick.
“That is obvious and a flaw in terms of refs being responsible for time-keeping.” Ferguson left fit-again Wayne Rooney on the bench but brought him on at the break and the England star responded by setting up Nani for United’s first.
Shinji Kagawa pulled back a second for the Reds, after Dempsey had made it 3-1, and Ferguson hinted strongly that it had taken a blast of his famous “hairdryer” at half-time to get the desired change.
He said: “The attitude changed and that’s the most important thing.
“Wayne’s ability does help but the attitude of the players was absolutely brilliant, everywhere on the pitch.
“They started going to win the ball rather than standing off as they had in the first half.
“We should have dealt with it better after scoring but there are a 100 ways to look at goals.”
 
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepag...tch-report-pictures-and-video-highlights.html

[h=1]Man Utd 2 Tottenham 3[/h] By NEIL CUSTIS

Published: 29th September 2012












[h=3]CLINT DEMPSEY did something no Tottenham player has done since Gary Lineker — score a league winner at Old Trafford.[/h] So no wonder Andre Villas-Boas and his shattered side celebrated like they had clinched a Champions League spot at the final whistle.
Terry Venables was the manager who last masterminded a Spurs victory in Alex Ferguson’s backyard in the league, in 1989.
El Tel became a hero with most of the Spurs faithful. Perhaps now, AVB will have the full support of those passionate fans.
Dempsey’s 52nd-minute goal won a wonderful match that looked for most of the second half like providing more than five goals.
Spurs were brilliant in the first period, going 2-0 up through Jan Vertonghen and Gareth Bale.
Three goals in just over two minutes from Nani, Dempsey then Shinji Kagawa came after the break.
And from then on, Spurs were pegged back and defended for their lives.





Video:[h=3]My Spurs stars made history with Man Utd win[/h]
ANDRE VILLAS-BOAS hailed his Spurs stars after their stunning victory at Old Trafford




It was 11 years to the day that Manchester United had fought back from 3-0 down to win 5-3 at White Hart Lane — and they looked set to mount another trademark comeback.

This time, Spurs would not be denied and Villas-Boas’ celebrations showed just what this meant to him.

It was all breathless stuff from the first minute to the last.

If anybody wants to know why the Premier League is loved around the world, tell them to get this DVD.

The game was only two minutes old when Old Trafford was stunned.

Left-back Vertonghen burst forward and played a one-two with Bale before heading for the box.

A huge gap opened up for him which he gladly charged through before easily evading Rio Ferdinand and shooting. The effort towards the far post hit a sliding Jonny Evans and deflected into the near corner.

Teams can freeze here when they take the lead, not quite knowing what to do next. Tottenham just decided to go for another goal. Their pace was overwhelming United with Bale and Aaron Lennon on either flank.

Dempsey, playing in behind Jermain Defoe, was causing problems too and curled an eighth-minute shot just wide. Next up, Lennon stormed into the box and had a shot deflected wide by Ferdinand.

It was 2-0 to Spurs on 32 minutes. What a goal it was as they broke from the edge of their box in a blur of white.
Sandro robbed Robin van Persie and fed Mousa Dembele. The Belgian marched through the centre before sliding to Bale on halfway.
From that point on, the contest was uneven as the lightening winger stormed away from Ferdinand. The clever Defoe took Evans away with his movement off the ball and Bale shot across keeper Anders Lindegaard with his right foot into the far corner.
Ferguson was down in his technical area and the hairdryer was already being plugged in.
United had a good shout for a penalty when Vertonghen got a handful of Nani’s shirt but the way the United player went down probably put the referee off.
Ferguson answered the crowd’s cries for the introduction of Wayne Rooney at the break.
He was immediately involved in an incredible period of 139 seconds that brought three goals.
First, on 51 minutes, Rooney put in a great near-post cross from the right which Nani met to fire the ball under Brad Friedel. The cheers from the fans in Red were just fading when those in white were back in dreamland.
Defoe turned Ferdinand too easily on the left and found Bale. His shot was saved but Dempsey tapped in.
There was hardly time to draw breath as United immediately replied.
Van Persie forced the ball through to Kagawa, who fired past Friedel.
At 3-2, the noise was deafening and then Rooney almost took the roof off.
United were awarded a free-kick just outside the area and the striker curled over the wall and hit the post.
Van Persie then had the ball in the net but it was correctly ruled offside.
United kept up the pressure and a superb pass on 69 minutes from Michael Carrick put Van Persie in on an angle. But his shot was woeful and went well wide of the far post.
United were virtually camped in the Spurs half in the final 15 minutes.
Paul Scholes’ piledriver was parried by Friedel and with six minutes left, Van Persie’s corner was headed against the angle by Carrick.
As the clock ticked on, Patrice Evra missed a chance from Rafael’s cross, the left-back heading at Friedel.
Four minutes of injury time went up on the board and another roar went up from the home faithful.
So many times they have seen their team snatch something at the last.

Not this time.
 
Re: Heroes!!!!!!!!!!!

I have just got back in from the game and everyone is forgetting the fans. I've lost my voice, I am buzzin' and I've got fcuk all chance of sleeping just yet. Well done to everyone who turned up and sang their hearts out for 94+ minutes, fcuking awesome!! =D>

=D>=D>=D>
 
Re: Heroes!!!!!!!!!!!

We were lucky more than good. We play that game 100 times, we'll lose 95 times. No different to every other game at Old Trafford for the past 20 years, United just didn't have the luck today.

Delighted at the result but the performance wasn't amazing

:ross:

Superb. I never ever figured out, until now, that RICHIE is an anagram of TAGGART!
 
Fergie's injury time 'rant' is so transparent that it's laughable. He must have a list of these slightly left-field topics (like unfit refs) to throw out there whenever his team performs poorly. Sure enough, watch as SSN & Talksport pore over the details involved in attributing extra time instead of looking at why United have lost two of their opening six league games.

The commentators on my stream spent the entire 90 minutes bemoaning United's team selection and discussing what they could do to improve.
 
Re: The 'I'm confused but think I need to start a new thread THREAD'!

holy brick, did that really happen? yesterday wasn't a dream, right?
 
Re: The 'I'm confused but think I need to start a new thread THREAD'!

Up at 5:30am, can't sleep - got up to watch bits of the game (think I passed out before MOTD) and read the reports!
 
MOTD Spurs upto a heady 5th !!!! WTF

Weve been either 5th or 4th the last 3 seasons FFS, bell-ends, couldnt resist a dig
 
Fergie's injury time 'rant' is so transparent that it's laughable. He must have a list of these slightly left-field topics (like unfit refs) to throw out there whenever his team performs poorly. Sure enough, watch as SSN & Talksport pore over the details involved in attributing extra time instead of looking at why United have lost two of their opening six league games.

=D>
 
MOTD Spurs upto a heady 5th !!!! WTF

Weve been either 5th or 4th the last 3 seasons FFS, bell-ends, couldnt resist a dig

Looking at where WBA are our point at home doesn't look quite so bad. But i dearly want to smash Norwich up in the league & in the cup.
 
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