INTRO: Super-sub Federico Macheda fired Manchester United back to
the top of the Barclays Premier League table with another late show at
Sunderland.
The 17-year-old, who snatched victory at the death against Aston
Villa last weekend, did the same within seconds of his introduction as
a 75th-minute substitute at the Stadium of Light.
United, who had earlier been knocked off their perch by Liverpool,
looked to be cruising when Paul Scholes headed them into a 19th-minute
lead, but Kenwyne Jones' 55th-minute equaliser left them having to dig
deep once again.
The former England international glanced home Wayne Rooney's
19th-minute cross to give the visitors a deserved lead after Liverpool
had earlier leap-frogged the leaders with a 4-0 win over Blackburn.
However, the Black Cats finished the half strongly and Carlos
Edwards saw Jonny Evans deflect his 40th-minute cross against the post
three minutes after keeper Ben Foster had tipped Djibril Cisse's
long-range effort over.
Dimitar Berbatov returned to the United starting line-up at Sunderland as Cristiano Ronaldo was left sitting on the bench.
Manager Sir Alex Ferguson made four changes to the side which drew
2-2 with Porto in the Champions League in midweek as Berbatov, Gary
Neville, Carlos Tevez and 'keeper Ben Foster were recalled.
Tomas Kuszczak was named on the bench with Edwin van der Sar not in
the 18 along with Darren Fletcher, but Ronaldo and Patrice Evra were
among the substitutes.
Sunderland boss Ricky Sbragia made five changes as Calum Davenport,
Teemu Tainio, Carlos Edwards, Andy Reid and Kenwyne Jones took over
from Tal Ben Haim, Dean Whitehead, Steed Malbranque, Kieran Richardson
and Daryl Murphy.
United kicked off knowing they had been overtaken at the top
of the table by Liverpool as a result of their 4-0 demolition of
Blackburn, and desperate for a win of their own to regain their
single-point advantage.
It took the visitors just 16 seconds to register their first attempt
on goal when Berbatov found Rooney wide on the left and he cut inside
before curling a right-footed shot just wide.
Paul Scholes and Michael Carrick were quick to seize control in the
middle of the park as Ferguson's men passed the ball swiftly and
accurately to leave the Black Cats chasing shadows.
Sunderland gradually settled and Jones started to make his presence felt against a defence missing the injured Rio Ferdinand.
However, it took a brave block from loan signing Davenport, making
his first start for the club, to keep out Scholes' blistering drive
from Berbatov's ninth-minute lay-off.
Neville, who had earlier been booked for diving, quickly redeemed
himself with a vital block from Reid five minutes later after Jones had
taken an eternity to lay off Edwards' cross.
Danny Collins kept Sunderland level with a goal-line clearance from
Nemanja Vidic's 17th-minute header, and the defender sent an acrobatic
overhead kick wide when the ball was recycled to him.
However, United were not to be denied and went ahead two minutes
later when Scholes rose unopposed to glance a delicate header past
Craig Gordon and into the top corner from Rooney's cross.
Park
Ji-Sung set off in pursuit of Carrick's enterprising 25th-minute long
ball and might have got there had Gordon not come from his line quickly
to intervene.
But with Jones troubling Vidic and former Black Cats loanee Jonny Evans in the air, there was at least hope for the home side.
That hope grew briefly when Vidic uncharacteristically made a hash
of shepherding Tainio's 26th-minute pass to Edwards back to Foster and
had to hurriedly concede a corner, although the Black Cats were unable
to profit from the set-piece.
But they were starting to make an impact and the visitors' goal came under threat twice within seconds on the half-hour mark.
First Vidic just managed to put Cisse off as the pair closed on
Salford-born Phil Bardsley's cross from the right, and then Davenport
stabbed a shot just wide with Foster wrong-footed.
Jones went close three minutes later when he got to another Bardsley cross just before Vidic, but he fired wide.
Foster was called upon for the first time eight minutes before the
break when Cisse took aim from distance and forced the keeper to tip
his effort over.
However, he needed the help of a post three minutes later when Edwards' driven cross clipped Evans and came back off the post.
HT: Sunderland 0 Manchester United 1
Rooney continued
to threaten down the left and Davenport had to head away another cross
after he had twisted his way past Bardsley once again.
But he turned up in a central position seconds later to hammer a
curling right-foot shot just wide from 25 yards with Gordon looking
anxiously towards his top corner.
The England star was soon in the thick of the action again to force
a corner off Davenport, but Sunderland managed to clear their lines.
It was they who went close with 52 minutes gone when Cisse was
picked out wide on the right and he drilled the ball across the face of
goal, crucially a yard or so ahead of Jones.
Sunderland were back on level terms within three minutes when Tainio
tricked his way past Park wide on the left and sent over a cross which
Foster could not claim under pressure from Jones.
The ball ran free and the Trinidad and Tobago international managed to stab it into the empty net.
Scholes powered a 58th-minute volley wide from 20 yards as United
stepped up a gear with the Black Cats far from content with a share of
the spoils.
With Ronaldo warming up on the sidelines, Tevez curled a 61st-minute
free-kick over, although Gordon was never in any real danger.
But it took a superb 63rd-minute block by Bardsley to deny Tevez after Berbatov and Scholes had combined to play him in.
Ronaldo replaced Park with 21 minutes remaining, but Cisse went
close to a second goal for the home side when he fired into the
side-netting with seconds of the Portugal international's arrival.
FT:
Sunderland 1 Manchester United 2 The visitors were appealing for a
71st-minute penalty when Berbatov played the ball onto Leadbitter's arm
inside the box, although Mr Styles was unsighted and his assistant kept
his flag down.
Last weekend's match-winner, Federico Macheda, replaced Berbatov
with 15 minutes to go and he had the desired impact within seconds of
his arrival.
Carrick's long-range shot looked to be going wide but the
17-year-old stuck out a foot to divert it past Gordon and restore his
side's lead.
Former United striker Dwight Yorke came on for Tainio with 85
minutes gone but there were few signs of the defensive frailty which
has cost the reigning champions in the recent past.
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