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21.3.10 BARCLAYS PREMIERSHIP
Man Utd vs Liverpool 2-1 (PA Sport)


Manchester United came from behind to clamber back to the Premier
League summit, trampling on Liverpool's top-four hopes in the
process.
Park Ji-sung headed home the winner after an hour, securing the
spoils after Wayne Rooney's 33rd goal of the season had
controversially levelled Fernando Torres' fifth-minute opener.
Although victory was not achieved without a nervy ending, during
which Torres spurned a glorious chance to equalise, the result
kept United's noses in front of Arsenal and Chelsea.
For Liverpool though, fight was not enough.
When they scored four times in the corresponding fixture last
season, it appeared to open the door to that championship Holy
Grail.
Not only has that been proved fool's gold, a 10th defeat of the
season leaves them requiring slip-ups from Tottenham and others
just to finish in a Champions League spot. What Rafael Benitez
claimed before Christmas was a guaranteed fourth-place finish
could hardly be further away.
Sir Alex Ferguson once claimed that a game of tiddlywinks
between what the majority still believe to be England's biggest
clubs could trigger the deepest of passions.
Certainly there was no sense of inferiority from the visitors
despite their present status, and with good reason.
It was the Merseysiders who had won the last three meetings -
each of which featured the dismissal of Nemanja Vidic, who it
seems in Torres has found someone he simply cannot handle.
Such is the mystique surrounding that duel there was an audible
gasp the first time Torres ran at the Serbian. Like so much of
the opening period's final half-hour, it petered out
disappointingly. The spark had been ignited long before that,
although Torres was the one who flicked the switch.
By his very demeanour, Torres gave the impression of being a man
on a mission.
Five minutes into the contest, he seized on the loose ball after
Michael Carrick had lost possession, sending Steven Gerrard away
at top speed with an inspired backheel.
As Gerrard found Dirk Kuyt to his right, Torres continued his
own run, United's defence never set properly to ensure the
Spaniard remained under their control.
By the time Kuyt dug out his cross, Torres was on his own.
Park's wayward effort from a similar position later on proved
the goal was anything but the routine effort it looked to be as
the Spanish star guided the ball out of Edwin van der Sar's
reach.
Quite apart from falling behind against such fierce rivals, an
increasingly enthralling title race demanded a United comeback.
For Liverpool, the equaliser came far too quickly. The
controversy was immediate too.
Benitez argued Javier Mascherano's attempt to haul back Antonio
Valencia was outside the box, which, indeed, was where the
infringement began. Ferguson countered the combative midfielder
had prevented a clear goalscoring opportunity.
The managers - no friends these two - continued their
finger-jabbing row long after Wayne Rooney had tucked home the
rebound from a spot-kick awarded by Howard Webb and saved by
Pepe Reina.
That was it for the goal threat until the hour mark arrived.
During his long career, Gary Neville has gone on plenty of
unselfish runs down the right wing, knowing David Beckham or,
more latterly, Cristiano Ronaldo were never going to give him
the ball.
Darren Fletcher is not quite of that attacking calibre but
Neville must have sensed his run was purely to provide space for
the Scot.
So it proved. As Neville flew past on the overlap, Emiliano
Insua edged to his right. In an instant, Fletcher had exploited
the gap and curled over a cross.
As Rooney and Jamie Carragher tussled and tugged, Park arrived
behind them, launching himself at the ball like a guided missile
and powering the diving header into the corner of Reina's goal.
Rooney had one more chance before the end, which he fired wide.
Torres was on the end of a far better one whe Gerrard drilled
over a low cross near the end.
For once against United, the Spaniard miscued and Yossi Benayoun
headed the loose ball straight at Edwin van der Sar.
United could celebrate, Neville and Ferguson doing the
cheerleading.
Liverpool's money men are staring at a big black hole marked
Champions League, Benitez is failing on his guarantees.
Teams:
Man Utd: Van der Sar, Neville, Ferdinand, Vidic, Evra,
Valencia, Fletcher, Carrick, Park (Scholes 87), Nani (Giggs 79),
Rooney.
Subs Not Used: Kuszczak, Berbatov, Rafael Da Silva, Jonathan
Evans, Obertan.
Booked: Valencia, Vidic.
Goals: Rooney 12, Park 60.
Liverpool: Reina, Johnson, Carragher, Agger, Insua,
Mascherano, Lucas (Benayoun 83), Kuyt (Aquilani 73), Gerrard,
Maxi (Babel 76), Torres.
Subs Not Used: Cavalieri, Kyrgiakos, Ngog, Kelly.
Booked: Mascherano, Torres, Carragher.
Goals: Torres 5.
Att: 75,216
Ref: Howard Webb (S Yorkshire).
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