in

Premier League – Fergie laments injury time surrender

Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson described his side’s late collapse at Everton to draw 3-3 as “unthinkable.”

Having gone behind to Steven Pienaar‘s 39th-minute goal, United appeared to be cruising to victory after Darren Fletcher, Nemanja Vidic and Dimitar Berbatov put them in control. However, Tim Cahill powered home a header in the first minute of added time and Mikel Arteta‘s deflected strike levelled things up 60 seconds later.

“It’s amazing. We’ve thrown it away, like we did at the Fulham game (when Brede Hangeland hit an equaliser in the 89th minute),” he said.

“You have to have determination in situations like that. We were so wasteful with our chances. We could have scored five or six in the second half with great opportunities and that has come to haunt us.

“But saying that, to lose two goals in injury time is unthinkable. We had it under control and the game is finished – even when they scored a second. It is a terrible end for us.”

Despite finding themselves under pressure for most of the first half, United were never overwhelmed by their hosts and once they equalised just before the break there appeared to be only one winner.

Ferguson was left to rue a number of missed chances which would have put the game beyond the Toffees’ reach before their dramatic late comeback.

“We have thrown the points away and hopefully at the end of the season we don’t sit back and regret it,” he added.

“We had some great opportunities in the first half and I think most of the time we were the team who threatened most in terms of playing football.

“Vidic’s goal was a good time to score but going 3-1 up you think you are in a comfortable position but football comes back to bite you. It has happened before and we have done it ourselves.”

PA Sport

Enhanced by Zemanta

Report

Written by Israel Saria

I have been involved with sports in Tanzania as a Volleyball Coach for many years—and was a Tanzania Amateur Volleyball Association (TAVA) leader. I studied sports management at Leipzig University in Germany and understand the science behind sports. That led me to work as a football pundit, with the BBC ( Swahili service) in London. That experience and exposure took me to covering the 2010, World Cup in South Africa. This provided me with a great insight into international level football commentary and the opportunity to carry out extensive research into the game including its players, the stadiums, the rules and tactics.I have also been grateful to meet a wide range of people connected to football in the UK, Tanzania, Germany, Italy, Belgium, Ireland, France, Kenya etc, and visited almost all of the key football stadiums across United Kingdom, and Europe.

What do you think?

71 Points
Upvote Downvote

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Loading…

0

Premier League – Gallas may captain Spurs on debut

Simba, Yanga maintain wins