Date:
Venue:
Competition: English Premier League.
Score:
Scorers:
Attendance: 30,217.
Teams:
Referee: Mr S.Lodge (
Leeds
United demolished the walls of
Jim Smith’s
men had turned their impressive new stadium into a place where visiting teams
feared to tread. Only Aston Villa had managed to beat the Rams there in Premier
League that season. Villa did it by scoring just one goal, but George Graham’s
men went goal crazy for the second game in succession, battering the Rams with
a five goal salvo. The resulting three points hoisted United above
United had
been surprisingly knocked out of the FA Cup at the quarter-final stage by
Wolves and their response to that set-back was just what manager Graham had
wanted, and expected. Six points from two matches nine goals for and none
conceded. There could hardly have been a better answer to their critics.
The win at
Pride Park, United’s best since they hammered relegated
Swindon Town by the identical score on the last day
of the 1993-94 season, had the fans singing the praises of not only the team
but also manager George Graham, whose change of tactics for this game paid off
handsomely. There was some surprise when it was learned that David Hopkin and David Wetherall, who
had both figured in the 4-0 win over Blackburn Rovers, had been left out and
replaced by Gunnar Halle
and Robert Molenaar. But Graham had decided to switch
from a three-man backline and put pressure on the
United were
hitting the Rams hard, with Harry Kewell rampaging
down the left flank and Gunnar Halle
on the other, while Lee Bowyer and Haaland were not
slow to do the same from midfield when they got the opportunity. The result was
confusion in the
The
excellent Jimmy-Floyd Hasselbaink made the running
along the left and crossed, Alf-Inge Haaland could not get to the ball, but Gunnar
Halle was also in the penalty area and he drilled in
an angled shot to goalkeeper Mart Poom’s right to
record his first goal for United. Six minutes later United
were three goals to the good when Harry Kewell made a
run and crossed into the area to cause all sorts of problems for the
Derby
brought on Jonathan Hunt for the injured Stefano Erinio
and he created a fine opening for Paul Wanchope in
the first minute of the second half, but Nigel Martyn
came off his line to block the Costa Rican’s effort. But United continued to
push forward confidently as Alfie Haaland
fired over before Gunnar Halle
hit a post with a long range effort and Jimmy-Floyd Hasselbaink
shaved the post with another shot.
Any hopes
that
Kewell
came off with a groin injury, which gave Stephen McPhail
the chance of a twenty minute run out. The young midfielder made his presence
felt almost immediately with a brilliant piece of vision and passing skill.
Receiving the ball on the touchline he split the
Match Action:
1-0 as Alf-Inge Haaland forces Jacob Laursen to
concede an own goal
2-0 as Gunnar Halle slots the ball past Mart Poom
3-0 As Lee Bowyer makes no mistake
4-0 as Harry Kewell
scores with a copy-book shot
5-0 as Jimmy-Floyd Hasselbaink
capitalises on a magnificent pass from Stephen McPhail
Pressure from Alf-Inge
Haaland brings United’s
first goal
and celebrates with Jimmy-Floyd Hasselbaink
Gunnar Halle
celebrates his goal with Alf-Inge Haaland
Harry Kewell beats
Deon Burton to the ball
Players:
The United goals were scored by Jacob Laursen (own goal), Gunnar Halle, Lee Bowyer, Harry Kewell
and
Jimmy-Floyd Hasselbaink David Hopkin
and David Wetherall were surprisingly left out Lucas Radebe
blotted out Baiano
Gary Kelly’s free-kick Robert
Moleaar shone and Martin Hiden
was commanding Stephen
McPhail made the most of his chance
brought the first goal.
Nigel Martyn saved well Paulo Wanchope, Stefano Eranio, Igor Stimic
Deon Burton and Rory Delap
all played at Pride Park but not at Elland Road