Wayne Rooney let his feet do the talking as he capped a superb all-round display with the only goal at Chelsea on Wednesday to give Manchester United the clear advantage in their Champions League quarter-final.
The FA confirmed yesterday that Rooney would be banned for two matches following his -expletive-laden tirade at a television camera after scoring against West Ham United on Saturday.
Rooney will now miss United’s upcoming Premier League clash with Fulham as well as their FA Cup semi-final clash with Manchester City on April 16 after an appeal by the club was rejected.
Photo: Reuters
However, he was the consummate professional in the 1-0 United Champions League win at Stamford Bridge.
He sidefooted past Petr Cech after 24 minutes following a perfect pull-back by Ryan Giggs to send United confidently into next Tuesday’s return at Old Trafford, where they have been formidable all season.
The goal was the icing on a particularly tasty cake for the England striker, who looked sharp, committed and absolutely up for the job in hand despite the latest off-field distraction.
Photo: Reuters
“His performance was tremendous, he is now scoring more regularly,” United manager Alex Ferguson told reporters after the re-run of the 2008 final when his men were also victorious, after penalties.
“Wayne was in tremendous form. Excellent, absolutely superb. [His] work rate, desire to play is marvelous. He got a lot of abuse tonight, he got a lot of late tackles on him, but he got up and played,” he said. “It shows the courage of the player. He takes great credit.”
Chelsea will feel aggrieved that they are not traveling north level at 1-1 after the Spanish referee Alberto Undiano Mallenco ignored a strong stoppage-time penalty claim when Patrice Evra brought down Ramires.
“Everyone saw what happened — you can see it clearly on the TV — but the most important person [the referee] didn’t see it,” Chelsea goalkeeper Cech said.
Chelsea should be more concerned with their own frailties, however, as they struggled to impose themselves.
A scramble late in the first half when Didier Drogba hit a post and Frank Lampard’s rebound was cleared off the line was the nearest they came to scoring. Squeezed for space in midfield and around the United box they looked short of ideas.
Fernando Torres endured another torrid night and never looked close to breaking his goal drought that now stretches to nine games at his new club.
The desperate Spaniard’s final contribution was to get booked for diving in a vain bid to secure a penalty under a challenge from Antonio Valencia.
United had arrived looking for their first win at Stamford Bridge in 10 games stretching back to 2002, but they looked sharper from the off.
Rio Ferdinand was back after an 11-game absence and his reliable partnership with Nemanja Vidic swamped Torres and forced Didier Drogba to hunt wide and deep for scraps of possession.
Organized in defense and quick to break, United created an excellent counter-attacking goal when Michael Carrick swept a pass into the path of Giggs.
The Welsh winger killed the ball with his first touch, hit the byline and pulled it back into the path of Rooney who steered it past Cech via a post.
Ancelotti spent most of the second half standing hands-on-hips in his technical area, while the Chelsea fans were reduced to near-silence as their side huffed and puffed with little obvious sign that they would break through.
The Italian eventually sent on Nicolas Anelka and Florent Malouda for Drogba and Yuri Zhirkov, but little changed.
Cech had to stay alert to twice deny substitute Nani, while Torres mistimed a header with his best chance of the night.
BARCA 5, SHAKTAR 1
REUTERS, BARCELONA
Barcelona took a giant stride towards securing a likely semi-final against archrivals Real Madrid when they swept to a 5-1 demolition of Shakhtar Donetsk in their Champions League quarter-final first leg on Wednesday.
Andres Iniesta starred for the rampant 2009 winners, three days after becoming a father for the first time, scoring Barca’s opener in the second minute at the Camp Nou and creating a second for Daniel Alves just after the half hour.
Gerard Pique added to the home side’s tally in the second half and their domination was only briefly checked by a Yaroslav Rakitskiy goal before Seydou Keita and Xavi put Barca almost out of sight ahead of next week’s second leg in Ukraine.
A mouthwatering all-Spanish semi-final is a near certainty following Real’s 4-0 drubbing of Tottenham Hotspur at the Bernabeu on Tuesday, meaning the La Liga giants would meet an incredible four times in just over two weeks.
They play in the domestic league on April 16 and clash in the final of Spain’s King’s Cup four days later and would bid for a place in the May 28 Champions League final over two legs.
Barca coach Pep Guardiola had warned against underestimating Shakhtar, who recorded a shock 3-2 win at the Camp Nou in December 2008 before Barca went on to win the final and Shakhtar triumphed in the UEFA Cup.
The two teams also met in the final of the European Super Cup in 2009 when a Pedro strike in extra time sealed a 1-0 win for the Spanish side.
“The result is not definitive,” Guardiola said in a TV interview. “They are a very good team.”
Spain midfielder Iniesta, scorer of the only goal in last year’s World Cup final, punished a Shakhtar defensive error and gave Barca the perfect start when he picked up a loose ball and burst through to finish low inside the near post.
Brazil fullback Alves raced through unmarked on to Iniesta’s curled pass to double the home side’s lead in the 34th minute and center half Pique made it 3-0 eight minutes after halftime with a -deflected shot from a corner.
Yaroslav Rakitskiy briefly checked Barca in the 59th minute when he flicked the ball past Victor Valdes, but Mali midfielder Keita smashed the ball into the top corner from the edge of the area a minute later.
Xavi tapped in the fifth from an Alves center after 86 minutes.
Perhaps the biggest surprise of the night was World Player of the Year Lionel Messi failing to rank among the scorers, as his one shot in the net was ruled out for offside.
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Taiwanese judoka Yang Yung-wei on Saturday won silver in the men’s under-60kg category at the Asian Judo Championships in Hong Kong. Nicknamed the “judo heartthrob” in Taiwan, the Olympic silver-medalist missed out on his first Asian Championships gold when he lost to Japanese judoka Taiki Nakamura in the finals. Yang defeated three opponents on Saturday to reach the final after receiving a bye through the round of 32. He first topped Laotian Soukphaxay Sithisane in the round of 16 with two seoi nage (over-the-shoulder throws), then ousted Indian Vijay Kumar Yadav in the quarter-finals with his signature ude hishigi sankaku gatame (triangular armlock). He
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