For once Heurelho Gomes left White Hart Lane a hero as his last-minute save denied Manchester United a vital win at Tottenham.
So often ridiculed for his error-prone presence in the Spurs goal this season, Gomes' confidence has started to return.
And as United desperately searched for a winner to ensure they left
for Club World Cup duty in happy mood, the Brazilian produced a
fingertip save to turn away a Ryan Giggs free-kick that was going to
creep in.
It left the Red Devils rueing their failure to take advantage of
second-half superiority and opened the door for Chelsea to surge clear
in the Premier League title race by beating West Ham on Sunday.
Dimitar Berbatov will have been particularly disappointed at his
failure to make an impact, which just gave the Spurs fans - so used to
losing this fixture - more reason to cheer.
Sir Alex Ferguson predicted a hostile reception for the old Tottenham favourite and the
Spurs fans obliged with a stream of boos and jeers that began when
Berbatov emerged for the warm-up and continued throughout the game.
It should really have been no surprise that the four men Ferguson
claimed were major doubts should be in United's starting line-up,
Berbatov and Cristiano Ronaldo among them.
United would have wanted the quartet on the field too as, with
Arsenal and Liverpool failing to win earlier on, they had been
presented with a perfect opportunity to stamp their presence on the
title picture before heading to Japan.
Yet the visitors' attempts to break the Tottenham defence did not
get them very far, even though Ledley King's frail knee prevented him
from taking part and Jonathan Woodgate lasted just 10 minutes after
coming off worst in a tackle with Carlos Tevez.
Ji-Sung Park and Michael Carrick both had shots deflected wide but
Gomes, who Redknapp is persevering with despite a string of awful
mishaps, was relatively untroubled until Rio Ferdinand forced him into
a save in first-half stoppage time.
Tottenham did not exactly lay siege to United's goal but at least they made Edwin van der Sar work to keep them out.
The veteran Dutchman has just been awarded a new one-year contract,
with Ferguson adding a ringing endorsement of his enduring ability.
Van der Sar backed up the assessment with a couple of excellent saves.
The first denied David Bentley, who flicked the ball up perfectly
for a volley that had Van der Sar scrambling to make a low left-handed
save.
Van der Sar's next effort was even better as he palmed away a shot
from Aaron Lennon, who had been allowed to get too near the United
penalty area, then reacted quickly enough to block Roman Pavlyuchenko's
follow-up.
Luka Modric then launched himself at Didier Zokora's inswinging cross but his diving header was just off target.
With Pavlyuchenko getting in the way of a Tom Huddlestone
piledriver, it was easy to see why the Spurs fans were disappointed
their team were still being held at the break, although at least they
could revel in the failure of Berbatov to make a significant
contribution.
It took the 27-year-old just seven minutes of the second half to
suggest he intended to be more of a threat, spinning superbly on
halfway before embarking on a charge into the Spurs box that was only
halted by Michael Dawson's despairing lunge.
Ronaldo - another peripheral figure - had the ball in the net from
the corner. The Ballon D'Or winner claimed it should have stood but
referee Mike Dean correctly ruled it out for handball.
It was the beginning of a long period of United pressure, although
it took the introduction of Paul Scholes and Giggs to bring an air of
real menace to their attacks.
Giggs supplied the cross from which Nemanja Vidic's header forced
Gomes into his best save and the veteran Welshman was also responsible
for the corner Ferdinand nodded over at the near post.
A goalmouth scramble that ended with Michael Carrick driving a low shot at Gomes also came from Giggs' set piece delivery.
Park tested Gomes with a rasping drive but Van der Sar would have
been beaten if Modric's shot had curled just under that bar after
flicking off Ferdinand rather than just over it.
Two Ronaldo free-kicks brought no reward, which was probably why he
left Giggs to take the last one and give Gomes the chance to be a hero.
Teams:
Tottenham Gomes, Corluka, Dawson, Woodgate
(Huddlestone 10), Assou-Ekotto, Lennon, Zokora, Jenas (O'Hara 62),
Bentley, Modric, Pavlyuchenko (Bent 54).
Subs Not Used: Cesar, Bale, Gunter, Boateng.
Booked: Huddlestone.
Man Utd Van der Sar, Rafael Da Silva, Ferdinand,
Vidic, O'Shea, Park, Fletcher (Scholes 69), Carrick, Ronaldo, Berbatov,
Tevez (Giggs 69).
Subs Not Used: Kuszczak, Neville, Anderson, Nani, Evans.
Booked: Rafael Da Silva.
Att: 35,882
Ref: Mike Dean (Wirral).
sportinglife.com