Reds deposed as Kings of Europe

Wednesday, May 27, 2009
 Edwin van der Sar

United’s dreams of becoming the first team to retain the Champions League ended in heartbreak in Rome, as goals from Samuel Eto’o and Lionel Messi gave an impressive Barcelona a deserved victory in the Stadio Olimpico.

It meant that the Reds tasted defeat in a European Cup final for the first time - having won the previous three final appearances of 1968, 1999 and 2008 - but on the night there could be few arguments with the outcome.

Barcelona were simply the better side over all bar the first 10 minutes and in deposing the reigning champions, Pepe Guardiola's side - Spain's first Treble-winners - proved themselves worthy new holders of the crown.

United began the stronger side and came close to opening the scoring, but after Eto’o had fired the Spaniards into an undeserved early lead, Barcelona dominated, with Messi, Xavi and Andres Iniesta repeatedly probing the Reds' defence.

Sir Alex Ferguson brought on Carlos Tevez for Anderson at half-time and later replaced Ji-sung Park with Dimitar Berbatov as United went in search of an equaliser. But just as the Reds were sensing a way back into the game, Barcelona delivered the crushing blow. A spell of pressure ended with Xavi sending in a teasing cross which found the unmarked Messi, who headed home past the stranded van der Sar.

Not even the introduction of Paul Scholes - match-winner against Barcelona in last season's semi-final at Old Trafford - could turn the tide of possession in United's favour. Despite the efforts of all fourteen players deployed at the end of an epic season, the Reds were, for once, second best on the biggest stage.

Barcelona 2 United 0

Cristiano Ronaldo

We were told this Champions League final would be a game displaying the beauty of the counter-attack; no two teams in Europe more adept at carrying it out. But United would certainly have hoped not to be so heartbreakingly on the end of its devastation.

Twice United looked to be in control of proceedings here in Rome, and both times Barcelona hit the Reds on the break as goals from Samuel Eto'o and Lionel Messi secured a 2-0 win for the Spanish champions. Make no mistake, the intricate passing football of Pepe Guardiola's side was brilliant at times, and there is no real injustice in the result.

That said, United could have been two or three goals up inside the first seven or eight minutes but, sad to say, this was to be Barcelona’s night.

Sir Alex went with the team many predicted, full of pace and set up to counter. There were no real surprises in the Barcelona outfit either, Andres Iniesta and Thierry Henry recovering from recent injuries to take their place in the starting line-up.

Gary Neville was the noticeable absentee from United’s 18-man squad. The Reds skipper lost out to Rafael on the bench. And even in choosing the young Brazilian’s speed over Neville’s experience, it said everything about the type of game Sir Alex sought to play.

As kick-off approached, the teams tantalisingly walked past the trophy both clubs so keenly covet. Sir Alex passionately feels that his side have not triumphed in Europe enough but Barcelona, going for their third European title, would say the same. And so the stage was set for one of the most eagerly-anticipated finals in years.

The fans roared on the Reds, playing in white, as Anderson earned an early free-kick with a cheeky nutmeg. Ronaldo inevitably smacked the resulting 25-yard set-piece goalwards. Victor Valdes struggled to stop it and spilled the ball back into Ji-sung Park’s path. But Gerard Pique blocked the rebound from the Korean, who was the first player from his country to play in a Champions League final.

It was a blistering start from United, attacking as expected down Barcelona’s exposed flanks. And on seven minutes Ronaldo, playing as a threatening central striker, sent another shot fizzing at Valdes. Seconds later another opportunity came his way. This time he chested a ball down in the area and fired a left-footed volley narrowly wide.

Barcelona’s fans were muted, their team were being outplayed. But in their side’s first real foray forward after ten minutes, the Catalans scored. Iniesta made a piercing run forward and fed Samuel Eto’o on the right; the Cameroon international cut inside Nemanja Vidic and poked the ball past Edwin van der Sar from eight yards. It was completely against the run of play, but this was always bound to be a contest punctuated by breakaways. Now United were on the ropes, and composure was needed.

Barcelona’s play was typified by Iniesta, who orchestrated their imposing short possession game. United had lost the speed that characterised the team’s early attacks and seemingly some of the patience to wait and pick the right pass. The fans didn’t lose hope, however, and in Ronaldo the Reds always had a threat, some hope, but something would have to change in the second half for United to turn the final around.

Sir Alex wasted no time and replaced Anderson with Carlos Tevez at the break. Could the Argentine make the crucial influence as he has done so many times this season? The Reds nearly weren’t given a chance to find out as Henry twisted and turned to beat Ferdinand before forcing an excellent point-blank save from van der Sar four minutes into the second half. Then on 52 minutes Xavi hit the post with a free-kick after Park’s foul on Iniesta.

After that the Reds had a really good spell of possession. The Barcelona fans whistled, largely because they knew United were becoming a threat. Rooney, now playing on the right, swung in a cross switch Ronaldo and Park both narrowly missed. Another right-wing Rooney cross was blocked by Pique, while the resulting corner almost found Vidic, who rose above the Barcelona defence. Promising, but not potent enough.

Sir Alex then made sure he had all his trump cards on the table, bringing off Park and putting on Dimitar Berbatov to join Ronaldo, Rooney and Tevez in attack. But again United’s attempts were thwarted with 20 minutes to go; Xavi’s cross from the right tempted Messi, probably the smallest player on the pitch, to rise and head in a second for Barcelona. United had gambled – simply had to – and had again been hit on the break.

The final minutes were galling for United as Barcelona’s supporters cheered their team’s every touch. The Reds never stopped running or trying to attack however, as the fans who almost painfully sang; ‘We’ll never die…’. How true. Responding to adversity is a character trait ingrained in the club. Sometimes you have to suffer lows to revel in the highs. This wasn’t United’s greatest showing, but one thing is certain, this team will be back.

Boss: Beaten by the better team

 Sir Alex Ferguson

United boss Sir Alex Ferguson paid tribute to the newly-crowned European champions Barcelona, admitting, "We were beaten by the better side."

The Catalan club ended the Reds manager's dream of becoming the first boss to lead his team to back-to-back triumphs in the Champions League, but after the game he graciously conceded that United had been second best on the night.

“We started the game well, and we could have been in front,” Sir Alex told ITV Sport.

"The (Eto'o) goal was a killer for us. It’s hard getting the ball back off them, because they use it so well. They were the better team on the night.”

Sir Alex feels defensive errors let his side down in Rome.

“They were two bad goals to lose at this level,” he said. “Our defence has excelled this season, they’ve been fantastic. But they were two very shoddy goals tonight.

"I don’t think we played as well as we can, but we were playing against a very good side, and we’ve got to give them credit.”

But despite the manner of United’s first Champions League defeat since the 2007 semi-final, Sir Alex paid tribute to his team’s efforts throughout a successful season.

“We’ve done well. It has been a long season - that was our 66th game - and you’ve got to give the players great credit for the courage and resilience they’ve shown throughout.

"Now we have to come back stronger. That’s what we do at this club. We have to accept it, we’ve been beaten by the better team. Next season, we’ll be stronger.”

Carrick nurses wounded pride

 Michael Carrick

Michael Carrick insists United can feel proud after blazing a two-year trail through Europe - but admits the untimely end of that run is a bitter pill to swallow.

The Reds' 2-0 reverse to Barcelona in Rome was the club's first defeat in the Champions League since the semi-final of 2007, when Carrick was coming to the end of his first campaign at Old Trafford. He's since lifted the famous trophy of course and was 90 minutes away from doing it again when he kicked off with his comrades at Stadio Olimpico.

"We had high expectations of wanting to play well and to win but it didn’t work out for us on the night," Michael told MUTV.

“We started very well and made chances and if we’d scored one then maybe it would have been a different game. After that, things didn’t go right for us really. We still had opportunities to score but we just didn’t take them.

“Credit to Barcelona though – they’re a good team with good players and they deserved to win tonight. We can’t argue about that."

“We had gone unbeaten in this competition for two years and sadly it’s come to an end on the wrong night. I think we can be proud of what we’ve achieved in the last couple of years, but it’s hard to take.

“However, the club moves on, we have to move on and come back stronger next season. We’ve got to defend the Premier League title and go again in this competition.

"That’s what we’re here for.”

Giggs determined to bounce back

Ryan Giggs

Ryan Giggs said "big teams have disappointments but they bounce back" after FC Barcelona outplayed Manchester United FC to usurp the Red Devils as champions of Europe.

Bright start
United started strongly at the Stadio Olimpico and Cristiano Ronaldo had three attempts on goal before Samuel Eto'o broke the deadlock against the run of play in the tenth minute. "Barcelona scored out of nothing and we didn't really recover after that," said Giggs. "Once they go 1-0 ahead they are the best in the business at keeping the ball and they can make teams look ordinary. We had chances in the second half, and if one of those would have gone in it's a different game."

'Fantastic season'
Instead the second goal went to Lionel Messi, the impish Argentinian finding space behind the United defence to loop a head over Edwin van der Sar with 20 minutes to play. Sir Alex Ferguson said Barça were deserved winners and his captain agreed, adding: "All credit to Barcelona, they deserved it tonight. It's been a fantastic season with what we've achieved this year. We won three leagues on the trot but have just failed at the final hurdle here."

'Bounce back'
United travelled to Rome full of confidence, with the Premier League, League Cup and FIFA Club World Cup in the trophy cabinet, yet fell short in their attempt to become the first team since AC Milan 19 years ago to claim successive European crowns. "It's a very difficult trophy to win," said Giggs. "Big teams have disappointments but they bounce back. That is what we will be doing."

'High expecations'
Fellow midfielder Michael Carrick lamented the fact the English champions lost their 25-match unbeaten run in the competition at the most inopportune moment. "We came here with high expectations but it hasn't worked out for us," he said. "We've gone unbeaten in this competition for two years and sadly it has come to an end on the wrong night, but I think we can be proud of what we achieved the last couple of years. We will go again in this competition, that's what we're here for."

Ryan: Still a fantastic season

Ryan Giggs

Ryan Giggs is looking on the bright side of United's epic campaign, despite the major disappointment of losing a European Cup final for the first time.

The 0-2 loss to Barcelona was the 66th result of a season in which the Reds have won four trophies - Barclays Premier League, Club World Cup, Carling Cup and Community Shield - and almost won three others - the Super Cup, FA Cup and Champions League.

"It’s been a fantastic season when you consider what we’ve achieved this year – including our third league title on the trot," Ryan told MUTV.

"We just fell at the final hurdle. No team has defended the Champions League, it's a very difficult trophy to win. We deserved to get to the final but we didn’t deserve to win.

"Barcelona did deserve to win. They are a good team and if they go one-nil up, they’re the best in the business at keeping the ball. They can make teams look ordinary.

"We didn’t really recover after conceding the first goal. In the second half we improved a bit but it just wasn’t to be."

Giggs and co will now strive to reclaim the trophy next term, when the final's in Madrid.

"That’s what we’ll be aiming for," said Ryan. "Big teams have disappointments but they bounce back. That’s what we’ll be trying to do.”

Gibson aims high

Darron Gibson

Darron Gibson says his match-winning goal at Hull was the perfect way to cap a memorable season for the young midfielder.

Gibson’s 25-yard screamer gave an under-strength United side all three points at the KC Stadium in what was the Irishman’s 14th appearance of the 2008/09 campaign.

“This season has been brilliant for me,” he told MUTV. “I’ve got a lot of experience and played a lot more games than I thought I would.

"I’ve really enjoyed it and I’m looking forward to next season where I’ll try and push for a regular spot in the first-team. That’s the aim.”

Gibson’s rattled in a number of long-distance efforts for the Reserves over the last few years, but he admits his strike on Sunday topped them all.

“It’s my first in the Premier League, so it’s probably my best,” he said.

The Irishman's goal was all that separated the sides on a day when Sir Alex made 10 changes to the team that drew 0-0 against Arsenal at Old Trafford eight days earlier.

But it was far from a meaningless fixture: Hull were fighting for top-flight survival, while United's youngsters all had points to prove.

Gibson said: “[The win at Hull] showed there’s good strength and depth in the squad and the young lads are good enough to come in and do a job in any game.”

And while Gibson's unlikely to feature in Wednesday's Champions League final in Rome, he will be travelling with the squad and revealed spirits are high in the United camp.

"Everyone’s looking forward to the match. Hopefully we can go out there, play well and get a result."

De Laet's debut delight

Ritchie De Laet

Ritchie De Laet admits making his United debut on Sunday against Hull City was a dream come true.

The young defender arrived at Old Trafford in a low-key move from Stoke City in January and has since made 14 appearances for the Reserves. But he never expected to play under Sir Alex before the season’s end.

In fact, even when the boss announced his team to play Hull at the KC Stadium, De Laet still wasn’t convinced he was about to run out for the Reds.

“During the team-talk, the manager said Richard, and of course there’s Richard Eckersley in the squad as well,” the 20-year-old told MUTV.” So I wasn’t sure until I asked somebody else and they told me I was playing left-back.

“Then I couldn’t think anymore. Everything went black before my eyes and I was thinking: ‘I just need to do well’. When I came off they said I’d done well so I’ll watch it again tonight and see how I did.”

De Laet was one of United’s best players on the pitch, covering a lot of ground down the left wing and making a number of crucial tackles. For those who have seen him at centre-back for the Reserves, his role out wide raised a few eyebrows, but he revealed he’s comfortable playing anywhere across the back four.

“I’m an all-round defender, to be fair. I like playing on the right and left because I enjoy going forward. When you’re centre-back you can’t do that all day, although I do try! But I really enjoyed today.”

His appearance at the KC Stadium capped a memorable seven days for the Belgian defender.

“I was given a new contract earlier in the week,” he revealed, “so it’s been a great week, signing a contract and making my senior United debut. I didn’t think I’d play a league game this season when I arrived from Stoke... so you can say it’s been like a dream.

“I need to thank [Reserve team coaches] Warren Joyce and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer for believing in me and giving me the opportunity to play with the Reserves. [Sir Alex] gave me a chance today and I think I grabbed it. I can enjoy my summer now because I’ve made my debut

“Hopefully I can push on next season and maybe go on loan or be in the first-team squad.”

Legend hails 'brilliant' Vida

 Nemanja Vidić

Sir Bobby Charlton has described Nemanja Vidic as the 'envy' of the Barclays Premier League after the Serbian defender deservedly scooped two Player of the Year Awards on Sunday night.

Vidic played a huge part in the Reds' title success and Sir Bobby believes the 27-year-old defender is a worthy winner of the accolades usually reserved for attacking players.

"It’s normally the glamour players who get these prizes, but Nemanja deserves this,” Sir Bobby told ManUtd.com.

“He has been such an influence. He is the envy of the whole league and he has been a brilliant, brilliant player for us.”

Vidic has proved a solid presence at the back - helping United to notch up 34 clean sheets in the 52 games he has featured in so far this season - while his versatility and keen eye for goal has yielded six goals in all competitions.

Scorer of the first goal in January's 3-0 demolition of Chelsea, Vida also grabbed a crucial winner against Sunderland in December and netted what proved to be the deciding goal in November’s thrilling 4-3 home victory over Hull.

Sir Bobby is particularly impressed with the Serbian’s aerial ability, believing his heading prowess to be the trait that sets him apart from others.

"Nemanja is unbelievable in the air,” said Sir Bobby.

“He wins absolutely everything. He is so powerful and brave, and he has a fantastic leap to get above the strikers. And he also comes up for set-pieces and scores goals.

"As a defender he makes the full-backs, the goalkeeper and the midfielders in front of him all feel secure. He is a player you can depend on and put your trust in, and that’s important.

"I like that he doesn’t try to do too much, he sticks to his task of defending, and does that job very well.

"It’s hard for me to imagine that Manchester United would be congratulated and lauded for our defensive capabilities. We’re not supposed to be defensive! But alongside Rio Ferdinand or young Jonny Evans, Nemanja has dominated our area this season, and you also have to give credit to Edwin van der Sar and his other colleagues in defence."

The title in two minutes

Gary Neville

It’s not how you start, it’s how you finish. We’re not holding our breath, but one day the facts – a popular word this season – might stack up enough for the penny to drop elsewhere. Cast your minds back to 1998/99. Notice any similarities? In that season United won two of the opening five games. Crisis, they said. Whatever. Last season? Slow start. This season? Slow start. There’s a pattern emerging.

Chelsea, under ‘Big Phil’ Scolari, made hay in the early-season sunshine. A(nother) new dawn broke over Eastlands. And Liverpool stirred their loins. All the while we waited in the wings, and when the supporting cast had delivered their best lines and started to ad lib, the leading men assumed centre stage, parts learned off by heart, roles well-defined and well-rehearsed. Lights, camera, action!

By October’s end and a 2-0 victory over West Ham – in which the newly-crowned World Footballer of the Year (Ronny, who else?) bagged his first league brace of the campaign – the boss had started to talk about “a momentum that I believe will take some stopping”. New boys Hull showed the teeth that had characterised the Tigers’ pre-Christmas campaign, leaving Old Trafford after a spirited 4-3 defeat, but, to quote the bard of Stretford, Morrissey, November spawned a monster – especially if you happened to be an opposing striker. For the 13 league games after the 2-1 reverse at Arsenal that followed Hull, our defence turned away all-comers, setting a British record shut-out of 1,311 minutes into the bargain.

To prove we’re not just take, take, take, we even offered Newcastle fans a rare moment of cheer as Peter Lovenkrands put the ball past Edwin van der Sar – the first time we’d gone behind since January. But in between, we’d won at Eastlands, returned from Japan with the Club World Cup, battered Stoke 5-0 (ton-up for Ronny), and made the Champions League knockout stage as group winners. Paul Scholes was back in the fold and the next generation had taken us to the Carling Cup final. Phew.

And so, here we are: champions once again. It wasn’t a sprint, it was a marathon, but we entered the final straight, firing on all cylinders to reach our third title in a row for the second time under Sir Alex Ferguson – something no English club has achieved before. Brilliant season? That’s a fact.