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Wayne Rooney's 100th career goal minutes before half time was in the end the only seperation between these two teams, well at least thats what the record books will show. The reality was quite different with United dominating City throughout the first half then comfortably holding them off and hitting them on the counter in the second.
"World class" Robinho was no where to be seen while Ballon d'Or favourite Ronaldo was causing all sorts of trouble with his skills and link up play. Unfortunatley the reds were on the end of some bias refereeing and Ronaldo was dismissed for his second yellow late in the second half...
Wayne Rooney's first-half goal gave Manchester United victory over rivals Manchester City in an eventful derby.
United were dominant early on but City came closest to scoring when Stephen Ireland hit the outside of a post.
Rooney followed up Michael Carrick's shot to break the deadlock
but City had hope when Cristiano Ronaldo's handball saw him sent off
for a second booking.
Richard Dunne had a shot cleared off the line for City but Joe Hart did superbly to keep out a late Rooney lob.
Hart, who had joined City's attack for an
injury-time corner, ran the length of the pitch as United broke and got
back to his goal just in time to deny Rooney his second goal of the
game.
The home side had come close to equalising seconds earlier when
Patrice Evra did brilliantly to block Dunne's effort but United were
still convincing winners.
Although they were against 10 men for the last 20 minutes
following Ronaldo's dismissal, Dunne's shot was the only time City came
close to breaking down a well-organised United defence in that period.
And Sir Alex Ferguson's side had been just as impressive going forward for the majority of the match.
The only blemish on an otherwise perfect day for Ferguson was
Ronaldo's red card, which came after an inexplicable handball by the
Portuguese winger.
Ronaldo had already been booked for bringing down Shaun
Wright-Phillips and, when he almost caught Rooney's corner at the near
post less than 10 minutes later, referee Howard Webb had no choice but
to dismiss him.
It was a bizarre incident but did not take the shine off an impressive display by the visitors.
While City began nervously, United were into their stride from
the start and could have been out of sight by the end of a one-sided
first half.
Dimitar Berbatov, operating behind the marauding Rooney,
tormented the City defence in the early stages while Evra and Rafael
were constant threats on either flank.
But, for all their possession, a goal continued to elude United.
Ronaldo nodded over from a corner, Hart brilliantly pushed a
Berbatov header round the post and Evra blazed over when his own cross
was cleared back to him in the box.
It took City over half an hour to create any sort of opening but, when it came, they should really have taken the lead.
A whipped Javier Garrido free-kick was only cleared as far as
Ireland, who fired the ball goalwards with United keeper Edwin van der
Sar out of position.
Ireland's shot bounced towards Micah Richards, who was stood in
front of the net, but instead of turning it home the defender left the
ball and it hit the outside of the post.
That sparked City's best spell of the first-half, with Robinho
inches away from collecting Didi Hamann's slide-rule pass in front of
goal, but United remained dangerous and it was no surprise when they
scored after 42 minutes.
The home side had plenty of opportunities to clear the ball but
instead it fell for Carrick to fire in a low shot that Hart could only
parry into the path of Rooney, who converted with glee for his 100th
club goal.
Understandably, City boss Mark Hughes made changes at the break
and, after moving Vincent Kompany into midfield, his side were
instantly more competitive.
City were seeing more of the ball too but they still had to be
alert to United's threat on the counter-attack and Ji-Sung Park was
twice denied by last-ditch tackles by Wright-Phillips and Dunne.
Ferguson's side continued to get plenty of men behind the ball
and even Ronaldo's dismissal did not help the home side, who looked to
have run out of ideas before Dunne's late chance came and went.
The scoreline would have reflected the game far better had
Rooney scored with his audacious injury-time lob and, in truth, the
match perfectly illustrated the gulf in class between the two sides
that City's wealthy new owners Abu Dhabi United are hoping to narrow.
BBC
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