United 2 Otelul Galati 0
2 NOVEMBER 2011, OLD TRAFFORD Attendance: 74,847
02/11/2011 21:30, Report by Nick Coppack          
United's Champions League victory over Romania's  Otelul Galati was workmanlike rather than wonderful. But a win's a win  and this one was enough to leave Sir Alex's men in a commanding position  at the top of Group C, with two games to play.
Antonio  Valencia's eighth-minute tap-in was all that separated the sides on the  scoreboard until Wayne Rooney's late long-range effort deflected off  Cristian Sarghi and past the Galati goalkeeper. But it wasn't as if  United found the going particularly tough against Galati; the Reds  actually looked comfortable, if not wholly convincing, for long periods.
It  was a similar story a fortnight ago in Bucharest when two second-half  spot-kicks, both won and converted by Rooney, handed United the three  points. Rooney didn't quite get his name on the scoresheet again in this  match (UEFA have declared the Reds' second an own goal), but he still  had a big impact, albeit from a much different area of the pitch.
Indeed,  Sir Alex took the unusual step of deploying Wayne in a deep-lying  midfield role. And although it was unfamiliar teriitory, the Reds' no.10  didn't disappoint. Within 40 seconds he had chased Liviu Antal down  towards the corner flag and harried the Romanian into coughing up  possession.
Rooney then went on to demonstrate, in understated  fashion, a knack for keeping the ball moving with simple first-time  passes, interspersing these with a steady array of more ambitious long balls. In many ways,  his performance was reminiscent of the way Paul Scholes used to quietly  dictate a game's rhythmn.
Indeed, it was the Reds' no.10 who was responsible for launching the  attack that yielded the early opener. His long, raking pass to the right  wing found Dimitar Berbatov, who held the ball up briefly before  releasing Phil Jones on the overlap. His ball to the near post just  eluded Michael Owen’s stretch, but waiting behind, unmarked and only  three yards from goal, was Antonio Valencia. He was never going to miss.
The  joy in the stands was tempered a minute later when Owen, who appeared  to have injured himself while attempting to reach Jones' cross, limped  down the tunnel and was replaced by Javier Hernandez. It was United's  two full-backs, though, who came closest to adding a second before  half-time. First Fabio embarked on a dribble from the left-back position  that only ended when his attempt to roll the ball across goal for  Berbatov was blocked by a last-ditch tackle. Along the way he'd left  countless Romanians in his wake.
Then Jones surged down the right,  cut inside the penalty area and unleashed a curling left-footed effort  that looked bound for the far corner until Sergiu Costin intervened with  a headed clearance. Galati, too, almost troubled the scorers on 42  minutes when Ionut Neagu pounced on Anderson's loose pass and advanced  on goal. His effort took a touch off Rio Ferdinand, which forced David  De Gea, hitherto unworked and 
untroubled, into a smart reflex save.
Just after the break,  Berbatov, Jones and Hernandez sparked brief panic inside the Galati  penalty area with some neat interplay that cut the Romanian defence  apart before goalkeeper Grahovac spread himself well to snuff out the  danger. Down the other end, De Gea had to be equally alert to punch the  ball clear as Antal raced to get on the end of a left-wing centre.  Minutes later he gleefully clutched the ball to his chest after Costin  rose at the back post to meet subsitute Sorin Frunza's corner.
Costin  was in the thick of the action again when he raced back to clear off  the line after Anderson combined with Berbatov to reach the return pass  first and lift the ball past the onrushing Grahovac. Hernandez had a  long-range shot saved and Berbatov poked a presentable chance wide of  the near post on 75 minutes before Rooney added the icing on the cake  with his deflected effort.
It made the final scoreline look more  respectable and probably reflected more accurately the balance of play  (although Galati did try and force their way back into it late on). In  many ways, though, the sloppy nature of the goal summed up a match that  probably won't live long in the memory of many United fans.
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| Rooney is running | 
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| Anderson is flying | 
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| Antonio Valencia celebrate his goal | 
source : www.manutd.com







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