Manchester United win FA Cup as Jesse Lingard sinks Crystal Palace.
Manchester United’s Jesse Lingard wheels away after scoring the winning goal in the FA Cup final against Crystal Palace. Photograph: Shaun Botterill/Getty Images |
Lingard might never have struck the ball any better than he did for the goal that completed United’s recovery after Jason Puncheon had struck first for Crystal Palace. United had to win the hard way after Chris Smalling’s second yellow card late in the first period of extra time and, in the process, they brought United their first piece of major silverware since Sir Alex Ferguson’s retirement.
Van Gaal could be seen charging down the touchline after Lingard’s winner though whether it is enough to save his job remains to be seen amid the latest reports that United have decided the current set-up is not working.
The same could be said of the Football Association after another final when the people who gave us 5.30pm kick-offs, Budweiser-sponsored ribbons and all sorts of ridiculous razzmatazz seemed intent on throwing whatever was left of tradition into the nearest waste-paper bin. With the teams waiting to come out, the build-up here involved shooting flames, a bemusing cameo from Tinie Tempah and enough nonsense to delay the start by five minutes, all capped off by the singer who was supposed to be taking us through the national anthem missing her cue. Karen Harding later described herself as “mortified”.
By half-time, it was certainly clear that Palace needed more from Wilfried Zaha and Yannick Bolasie in the wide positions. Connor Wickham could be encouraged by one attack when he outsprinted Smalling, leading to the United centre-half committing a yellow-card challenge, but De Gea was largely untroubled apart from a Bolasie back‑header and, even then, it was a fairly routine save to turn it over the crossbar.
Wayne Rooney was given the benefit of the doubt when he chased Zaha back into the penalty area and slid in without connecting with the ball but United seemed relatively comfortable during the opening 45 minutes and could reflect on the outstanding chance of the half when Fellaini rose to meet Daley Blind’s corner inside the six-yard area. Wayne Hennessey had already saved, one-handed, from Juan Mata and Palace were spared again later in the half when Marcus Rashford beat Damien Delaney on the right and picked out Anthony Martial on the other side, only for Joel Ward to block the shot.
These, however, were moments to encourage Van Gaal’s team. The players from Manchester had a lot of time on the ball when it might have been expected that their opponents would close them down more quickly. West Ham had provided a blueprint of how to rattle United in the final game at Upton Park and now, like then, Palace had the backing of a raucous crowd. Yet they did not always chase the ball so effectively and it was surprising to see the space they gave their opponents.
What a noise, though, their fans created and in the 78th minute the volume went up again. Fellaini had headed a corner away but when the ball came back into the penalty area Puncheon, on the pitch only seven minutes, had not been picked up, controlled the cross and beat De Gea inside his near post with a powerful left-foot shot. It was a brilliant, weaving run and cross from Rooney to help create the equaliser. Fellaini chested the ball into Mata’s path and the Spaniard’s volley denied Palace the first major trophy of their 110-year history.
source: www.theguardian.com
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