Defeat Crystal Palace,Manchester United become the champion in FA Cup
If this was his last match as Manchester United
manager, Louis van Gaal at least went out on a note of triumph. He
arrived for his post-match press conference with the FA Cup, planting
the trophy on the table in front of him, and when the questions were
done he lifted it on two separate occasions as he made his way to the
door. “Thank you for the congratulations,” he repeated twice, glowering
at the people he described, with no great affection, as his “friends in
the media”.
United’s supporters must pine for those happy old days but at least
the club have won their first major trophy since Ferguson announced his
retirement three years ago. It has taken longer than the club might have
anticipated but finally, after all the disappointments of the Van Gaal
era, the accusations of blandness and the permanent suspicion that a
once-mighty club have been dramatically under-achieving, they have
remembered what it is like to win a trophy and the joys it can bring.
They also had to do it in the manner of the old United – or, at
least, with some of the old capacity for worrying their supporters –
given that Jason Puncheon had given Crystal Palace
a 78th-minute lead and Chris Smalling was sent off for his second
bookable offence after Juan Mata’s equaliser had taken the game into
extra time.
The winner came in the 111th minute courtesy of Jesse Lingard’s
equivalent of Lee Martin’s famous goal when these sides met at the old
Wembley 26 years earlier and Alan Pardew might come to regret his
touchline dance when Puncheon volleyed past David de Gea and Palace’s
manager showed the moves of a tipsy uncle at a wedding. Pardew looked
like he had been spent the morning practising in the mirror but Palace
were ahead for only two minutes and United showed great competitive
courage after Smalling’s dismissal late in the first period of
extra-time.
Lingard might never have struck a shot with more power and precision
and, on the balance of play, it was difficult to argue it was
undeserved. United had struck the post twice in the second half and
Marcus Rashford’s speed, directness and high confidence made him a
frequent danger until he was forced off with a second-half injury that
might threaten his involvement in England’s pre-Euro 2016 plans. Wayne
Rooney was prominently involved in his new midfield position and
Marouane Fellaini, often the player United’s supporters like the least,
justified his selection after three games out with suspension.
More than anything, United showed great competitive courage after the
jolt of going behind and, though the occasion will probably be
remembered for Lingard’s winner, perhaps the most impressive part was
the way they absolutely refused to accept defeat. Rooney, showing all
his leadership qualities, eluded three challenges on the run that led to
Mata’s equaliser. His cross was expertly turned across the six-yard
area and Mata provided the volleyed finish after Fellaini had chested
the ball down.
Pardew reflected afterwards about the moment in the first half when
Rooney chased Wilfried Zaha into the penalty area, missing the ball with
his sliding challenge but was given the benefit of the doubt by the
referee, Mark Clattenburg. Puncheon’s goal left Palace on the brink of
the greatest result in their 110-year history and the glory could still
have gone their way if another substitute, Dwight Gayle, had managed to
beat De Gea with their best chance of extra-time, with the score at 1-1.
What a noise the Palace fans created, rarely letting the volume drop
and urging on their team during those difficult moments when Fellaini
lashed one shot against a post, Anthony Martial struck the frame of the
goal with a header and Pardew’s men struggled to cause too many problems
at the other end.
It was unusual for United’s supporters to be out-sung so
comprehensively but, then again, it was an unusual occasion in many
ways. It was difficult to think of another FA Cup
final when the winning manager has been condemned so quickly and, if
that will be remembered as an embarrassment for United, there was an
awkward sub-plot for the Football Association as well, bearing in mind
the ridiculous razzmatazz that preceded the game. With the teams waiting
to come out, the build-up involved shooting flames, a bemusing cameo
from Tinie Tempah and enough nonsense to delay the start by five
minutes, all capped off by a singer who was supposed to be taking us
through the national anthem missing her cue. Karen Harding later
described herself as “mortified”.
Thankfully, a game of football did eventually break out and, though
it was certainly not a classic, that probably was not a tremendous
surprise for anyone who has watched United closely in the Van Gaal era.
On this occasion, though, he could legitimately argue that his
tactics and substitutions had worked. United have now equalled Arsenal’s
record of 12 FA Cup wins and Lingard will never forget the moment when
Antonio Valencia’s cross was turned back into his path on the edge of
the penalty area. Lingard’s volley was a peach, still rising as it hit
the net. “It was a beautiful goal,” Van Gaal said, and some way for a
manager to potentially go out, a trophy in his hands.
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