5 NOVEMBER 2011, OLD TRAFFORD Attendance: 75,570
05/11/2011 17:00, Report by Nick Coppack.
On the eve of Sir Alex's 25th anniversary in charge of  Manchester United, the Reds boss celebrated in a manner he's become so  accustomed to down the years: by guiding his team to victory.       
Rather cruelly for Wes Brown, though, it was his gift  of an own goal, on his first visit back to Old Trafford after leaving  for Sunderland in the summer, that settled the contest.
At the end  of a game that was largely devoid of, United had moved to within two  points of Manchester City (the Blues later beat Queens Park Rangers 3-2  to restore a five-point advantage), albeit without displaying much of  the artistry and adventure that has characterised so many of Sir Alex's  sides down the years. The tributes came from elsewhere, though. A giant  banner was hung the length of the Stretford End, supporters received  commemorative tribute magazines and Sir Alex himself was paraded before  Old Trafford before kick-off, entering the pith through a guard of  honour formed by the two teams.
Then came a bombshell: the club,  for the first time in the stadium's 101-year history, had taken the  extraordinary step of renaming one of its stands after an individual.  Fittingly, Old Trafford's grandest structure, the hulking  26,000-capacity North Stand, is now known as the Sir Alex Ferguson  Stand.
Of course, all this pomp and pageantry was just a prelude  to the main event: a Barclays Premier League fixture the Reds  were  desperate to win. The contest began badly for Sunderland striker Conor  Wickham, though, who appeared to twist his ankle in a freak off-the-ball incident  before even 60 seconds had elapsed. His afternoon was over barely after  it had begun.
Fellow Black Cats forward Nicklas Bendtner then  forced the first save of the game, placing a low shot to countryman  Anders Lindegaard's right. The Reds goalkeeper, making only his second  league appearance, was equal to the test and gathered the ball at the  second attempt after stretching to parry the initial shot.
United  took far longer to settle and were too often wasteful with possession in  the final third. In fact, it took until the 31st minute to muster a  shot on goal, Wayne Rooney blasting straight at Keiren Westwood in the  Sunderland goal.
Little improved soon after, although the Reds did  have a half-hearted shout for a penalty (correctly) turned down when  Sebastian Larsson bundled Chicharito to the ground after Darren  Fletcher's neat pass had sent the Mexican through on goal.
Summer  signing Phil Jones almost opened his United account in spectacular  fashion when he volleyed a bouncing ball just over the bar from 18  yards. He then combined well with Nani down the right in a move that  ended with Westwood making a sharp save down to his right to deny the  Portuguese.
From the resulting corner, the Reds took the lead in  first-half injury time, although there was plenty of doubt over who  should be credited with the goal. Danny Welbeck wheeled away in celebration, while Wes  Brown stood disconsolate on the edge of the six-yard box. What was clear  was that Nani's set-piece had ended up in the net after Welbeck and  Sunderland's central defensive pairing had challenged for the aerial  ball.
The goal may have sent United into the break 1-0 up and  spared Sir Alex's men the full force of a famous “hairdryer” team-talk,  but the boss will no doubt still have issued a few stern words. After  all, his side had been off the pace for long periods in the first half.
Happily,  the Reds did look brighter after the interval. Nani blasted a 30-yard  free-kick just wide of the post and Ji-sung Park posed Sunderland's left  side plenty of questions with some direct running. But it was another  corner that almost yielded a second goal. This time, another former Red,  Kieran Richardson, headed off the line to deny Hernandez.
Then  came a moment of extreme controversy. A curling cross was whipped into  the box towards Sunderland substitute Ji Dong-Won, Rio Ferdinand and  Nemanja Vidic. There was certainly contact with a hand and referee Lee  Mason blew his whistle. First, on what appeared to be the advice of his  assistant, he pointed to the penalty spot. But United defenders were  livid and argued it had been Dong-Won's hand – not one of theirs – that  had affected the ball's flight. So Mason consulted his assistant on the  touchline and, after a brief discussion, motioned instead for a Reds  free-kick.
Old Trafford breathed a sigh of relief and, but for the heroics of  Westwood in the Sunderland goal, the home side almost doubled the lead  moments later. First Westwood flung himself to his right to parry  Rooney's powerful shot. Then, when Patrice Evra looked to tuck the  follow-up into the roof of the net, the Manchester-born stopper somehow  reached skywards to tip the ball over the bar and out for a corner.
Unfortunately  for Sunderland, though, it was another Mancunian playing for the Black  Cats, Wes Brown, who ended up having the biggest impact on this game.

























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