Manchester United have taken a huge step towards reclaiming the
Premiership title after an unlikely stoppage-time winner over
Liverpool allowed them to preserve their nine-point lead over
Chelsea at the top of the table.
Chelsea minimized the impact of United's win by beating
Portsmouth 2-0 on Saturday evening. But even though the champions
have a game in hand, time is rapidly running out for them to close
the gap.
United's 1-0 win was secured when John O'Shea smashed in a
rebound after Liverpool goalkeeper Jose Reina had spilled a
Cristiano Ronaldo free-kick at the end of a match in which the
visitors were, for long periods, on the back foot.
After Ronaldo's late winner at Fulham last weekend, Sir Alex
Ferguson's side have now secured two wins from contests in which -
even their own manager admits - they deserved to drop points.
Manchester United's John O'Shea (left) celebrates scoring an
injury time winner in the game against Liverpool with Rio Ferdinand
during their English Premier League soccer match at Anfield
Stadium, Liverpool, England on Saturday. AP
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"You need that bit of luck to win a championship and that is
what we have had in the last two weeks," said Ferguson.
"Without question this is a massive result for us. We were very
lucky. Liverpool upset our rhythm a bit and we had a lot of narrow
escapes."
Chelsea boss Jose Mourinho however declined to repeat the
assertion he made last week that United had enjoyed a huge amount
of luck this season -- a claim that provoked Ferguson to tell him
to "button his lip".
Mourinho admitted: "Of course it is not just luck that they have
won so many points. The manager and the players deserve big
respect."
Didier Drogba's 29th goal of the season gave Chelsea a
first-half lead at Portsmouth.
But they had reason to be grateful to goalkeeper Petr Cech, who
produced two superb saves to deny Pompey an equaliser before
Salomon Kalou made the points safe, prompting Mourinho to suggest
that the head injury Cech suffered earlier this season could end up
costing his side a third straight title.
"How many points would Chelsea have if Petr had not been out for
four months?" he said.
Gunners down Reading
Arsenal, who must overturn a 1-0 deficit against PSV Eindhoven
to stay in the Champions League next week, moved closer to ensuring
a return to Europe's top table next season by beating Reading 2-1
at the Emirates Stadium.
A 51st-minute penalty from Brazilian midfielder Gilberto Silva
after Gael Clichy was brought down was followed by a Julio Baptista
strike as the Gunners made light of the absence of injured captain
Thierry Henry.
A late own goal by Cesc Fabregas got Reading on the scoresheet
but the Royals were never really in the contest.
Everton leapfrogged Reading into sixth place after a 1-1 draw at
Sheffield Utd, Mikel Arteta's penalty cancelling out Rob Hulse's
first-half strike for the Blades.
The north-east derby between Newcastle and Middlesbrough ended
in a goalless stalemate that did little to boost either club's
European hopes.
(China Daily via AFP March 5, 2007)