Manchester United 0-0 Chelsea: Match Report
The Match David Moyes’ first home match will surely
have been everything he expected as United and Chelsea went toe-to-toe
in a game that bristled with intensity but never boiled over. In an
encounter with few clear-cut chances, the Reds were the better team but
missed the chance to go top of the fledgling league table.
The Choosen One vs The Special One |
Sub-plot
Following his substitute cameo at Swansea, Wayne Rooney started his
first game of the season and enjoyed a vociferous reception, before
producing an inspired display in a dynamic United attack. He played the
full 90 minutes and, even in injury time, looked the man most likely to
open Chelsea up.
Star men Playing in the hole
behind Robin van Persie and flanked by Antonio Valencia and Danny
Welbeck, Rooney was in the mood from minute one and was at the heart of
most of United’s best moments. On his 150th club appearance, Valencia
worried Ashley Cole as he motored up and down his wing, while Michael
Carrick was rarely flustered in his holding midfield role. Nemanja Vidic
and Patrice Evra were both commanding at the back.
The opposition
Jose Mourinho is known for his pragmatic tactics but it was something
of a surprise that Chelsea started the game without a recognised
striker, and with Juan Mata only on the bench. The Blues were largely
restricted to hitting United on the break and you sense they’ll be
slightly more pleased with the result.
Move of the match Just before the break, Carrick’s
forward pass was beautifully cushioned first-time by Rooney into van
Persie’s path – but Petr Cech just got to the ball ahead of the
Dutchman. Early in the second period, Patrice Evra ran onto Rooney’s
inside pass, attempted a one-two with Danny Welbeck and only narrowly
failed to reach the striker’s backheeled return. Those two half-openings
were symptomatic of a tight game.
In the stands
The noise before kick-off was akin to a big European night and it hardly
relented all evening. Rooney found himself in the unusual position of
having his name sung by both sets of fans, but it was support for Moyes
(“Come on David Moyes/play like Fergie’s boys/we’ll go wild, wild
wild/we’ll go wild, wild wild”) that made up a big slice of the
Stretford End’s repertoire. Even when the action on the pitch didn’t
quite live up to the game’s pre-match billing, noise levels still
exceeded the usual. Moyes and Nemanja Vidic’s pre-game plea for support
certainly didn’t fall on deaf ears.
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