Manchester
United beat Aston Villa To Win Carling Cup
28th Feb 2010
Substitute Wayne Rooney
made the decisive contribution in the Carling Cup
final with a late winner as Manchester United beat
Aston Villa at Wembley.
Rooney entered the action just before half-time to
replace the injured Michael Owen and enabled Sir
Alex Ferguson's side to come from behind and retain
the trophy.
Aston Villa's Wembley showpiece started perfectly
when James Milner put them ahead from the spot after
five minutes following Nemanja Vidic's foul on
Gabriel Agbonlahor.
Villa clearly felt referee Phil Dowd should have
sent Vidic off after he hauled down Agbonlahor as he
closed in on goal - and their burning sense of
injustice was fuelled even further when United
quickly restored equality.
Richard Dunne lost possession to Dimitar Berbatov,
and when he attempted to repair his error he could
only find Owen, who slipped a perfect finish past
Villa keeper Brad Friedel.
Owen looked sharp in front of watching England coach
Fabio Capello, but his lingering hopes of persuading
the Italian to include him in his World Cup plans
for South Africa may have ended when he pulled up as
he ran into the area and was forced to leave the
action.
It was hardly good news for Villa as it allowed
Rooney to come on, with the striker clearly
desperate to make an impact after starting on the
bench.
Ji-Sung Park hit the post for United before Rooney
rose to head the outstanding Antonio Valencia's
cross past Friedel with 16 minutes left.
Rooney almost extended United's victory margin when
he hit the woodwork with another header, but his
amazing season continued as his 28th goal of the
campaign gave Ferguson another piece of silverware.
Vidic was fortunate to see Emile Heskey's header
deflect off him on to the bar late on, but by that
stage United were firmly in control and well on the
way to victory.
It was a bitter disappointment for Villa, who
started so promisingly, but they tired as the game
wore on at Wembley and United ultimately deserved
their triumph.
Ferguson decided to rest Rooney, who has been in
devastating form, from his starting line-up and give
Owen his opportunity in a Wembley final that was to
drag the England striker from one end of the
emotional scale to the other.
Villa's ploy was always going to be to test United
with pace and power up front - and it was rewarded
with the early goal boss Martin O'Neill must have
craved.
Agbonlahor was too quick for Vidic and the United
defender had already tugged at his shirt before
hauling him down. Referee Dowd did not punish Vidic
further, despite the fact that he was the last
United defender and flirted with a red card, and
Milner steered the penalty coolly past Tomasz
Kuszczak.
Villa's lead only lasted seven minutes, and it was
an error from the normally reliable Dunne that led
to United's swift equaliser.
Dunne lost possession to Berbatov, and even though
he recovered he could only divert the ball into the
path of Owen, who steered an expert precision finish
low past Friedel.
The game was remarkably open, with Milner a
prominent figure, and he brought a fine diving save
from Kusczcak with a 20-yard effort.
Owen had looked sharp, but his injury curse struck
again as half-time approached when he pulled up as
he raced for possession with Dunne in the area. It
was clear immediately that his game was over and he
walked away disconsolately to be replaced by Rooney.
United almost ended an enthralling first 45 minutes
in the lead when Park struck a post after James
Collins could only partially clear Valencia's cross.
And United posed the first danger after the break
when Friedel saved well from Michael Carrick, whose
shooting had been very erratic up to that point.
The second half was much more of a cat-and-mouse
affair, but predictably it was Rooney who gave
United the advantage when he struck with 16 minutes
left.
Berbatov cleverly played in Valencia, whose cross
left Rooney with work to do, but not only did he win
the aerial battle with the taller Collins, he sent a
towering header high beyond Friedel into the top
corner.
And the England striker almost repeated the feat
three minutes later when Valencia was once more the
provider, but he sent a more powerful header against
the post.
Villa responded by introducing the giant figure of
John Carew for Carlos Cuellar - and his presence
almost forced Vidic into an error that resulted in
an equaliser.
Stewart Downing's cross caused confusion, and Vidic
was lucky to see Heskey's header bounce off his
shoulder on to the bar.
United had one last anxious moment when another
Downing cross was just out of Dunne's reach at the
back post, but Ferguson's side held out for a
deserved victory.
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ADVERTISEMENT
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The BNP has been at
the fringes of politics in multi-racial Britain. It
has no seats in the national parliament but plans to
field hundreds of candidates in a general election
due by June.
The BNP's popularity has grown in recent years at a
time of rising unemployment and disenchantment with
mainstream parties fuelled by a parliamentary
expenses scandal. It has a number of local
councillors and in June won two seats in the
European Parliament.
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He said party members
overwhelmingly voted for the change to its
constitution.
"Some of them are happy with it, some of them
aren't, but virtually all recognise that the change
had to come," he said.
The matter will now go to court where it will be
decided whether the BNP has done enough to comply.
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