Date:
Venue:
Competition: English Premier League.
Score:
Scorers:
Attendance: 35,106.
Teams:
Referee: Mr J. Winter (
Stephen McPhail doesn't score many goals, but when he does they are
usually decisive. It was he that proved to be the unexpected provider of a
hard-earned victory against ten-man
McPhail
and his young team-mates were refusing to count their chickens, but the goal-scoring
midfielder admitted they were enjoying the ride. "We've come far in a
short space of time and now we just have to keep it up," said McPhail after the 2-0 win. "But we're having fun.
We're not thinking about whom the opposition is, we're just concentrating on
our own performance and we don't think about any pressure. We came to
Nigel Martyn was United's veteran
performer at
He may be
called McPhail but don’t be fooled because he does
not live up to his name. Stephen McPhail, born in
London of Irish parents and brought up in the notorius
There was never
any mistaking that this fixture was the acid test. It was known that United
were good, but not quite how good. Now, even manager David O’Leary, thus so far
immovably determined to play down the prospects of what the season might hold for his young guns,
was forced to concede that they might, indeed, be mouth-watering. “We are not
embarrassed to be at the top” He said. “We rather like it. There have been a
couple of occasions when I have told the boys that they have had the lead
stolen from them and it’s up to them what they do about it. Manchester United
again threw down the gauntlet by winning on Saturday and to get back to the top
we had to beat
In the true
traditions of encounters with Chelsea, this was a faint-hearts’ nightmare, from
the moment after all of seventy-five seconds that Lee Bowyer sparked a
match-long personal vendetta with Dennis Wise to the sending off of French
hot-head Frank Lebouef.
The Gallic
defender was despicable, impetuously scything down Harry Kewell
in full flight and then stamping on him just to make sure. The Frenchman just
has no answers to the silky skills and speed of the mercurial Australian and he
once again resorted to cynical fouls as his only answer to his plight, and for
the second time he was sent off for going well outside of the laws of the game,
not to mention sportsmanship, in a vain attempt to stop Kewell
making a fool of him.
O’Leary
said “Yes, it was physical. My boys know that it is part of the game and they
know what to do. I want my teams to be hard but fair and you only have to look
at young McPhail for the perfect example of how I
want my players to be. He is lovely on the pitch, with this awful habit of
finding one of his own team-mates every time he passes the ball, and is lovely
off it, a true gent.”
Match
observer and
David Batty’s continuing injury problems kept him out of
contention and allowed Darren Huckerby a place in the
starting line-up, while new signing Jason Wilcox was on the bench alongside
former
Chelsea,
desperate for a win to kick-start their bid for a top-three position shocked
the home faithful by relegating Gianfranco Zola to the bench and giving a
second Premiership start to Jon Harley. But their front pairing of Tore Andre Flo and Chris Sutton would clearly hold many threats, with Flo having previously attracted a degree of interest from
There was a
stirring start with Dennis Wise elbowing Lee Bowyer in the face, the Leeds man
taking his gloves off and throwing them to the dug-out and then steaming in
with a retaliatory challenge on the Chelsea captain, earning a tenth yellow
card of the season and another ban. Sutton and De Matteo
forced two corners in the first six minutes and from the second of Wise’s flag kicks Leboeuf brought
Nigel Martyn to his knees with a stinging shot. It
was a lively start, and Martyn again did well when
Chris Sutton climbed for Frank Leboeuf’s free-kick
and the keeper leaped above everybody to collect his header.
United
replied with a dipping and swerving shot from Michael Bridges which Ed De Goey collected at the second attempt and it was fast
becoming an absorbing contest. Eirik Bakke was stretchered to the
touchline after Marcel Desailly got in a dubious
blocking challenge but was back in the action after Ian Harte’s
free-kick cannoned off the wall. Leeds were more than holding their own by
half-time due to some sterling work by Lucas Radebe
and, in particular, Jonathan Woodgate and some fine
midfield invention by Eirik Bakke
and Stephen McPhail.
Only three
minutes into the second half action substitute Jason Wilcox made his bow in
Di Matteo incurred the wrath of Chris Sutton when he preferred
a wayward shot to a telling pass but
Uproar was
soon to follow as Harry Kewell again skipped past Leboeuf and was felled with unbelievable cynicism. The
Frenchman had to go, but he did not depart before stamping on his prostrate victim,
arguing furiously and then wanting to fight the entire
It was a
monumental victory and, all cautionary notes thrown aside, the championship
looked as if it might develop into a straight fight between United and their
Old Trafford rivals. United went on to hold top spot until January, but they
slowly lost their grip in the final weeks and had to be content with a
third-place finish and the promise of Champions League football.
Match Action:
Stephen McPhail
scores the second goal (inset) and celebrates
Stephen McPhail
celebrates
Darren Huckerby
tangles with Albert Ferrer
Frank Leboeuf kicks
Harry Kewell on the ground after fouling him in
frustration at being given the runaround
Referee Winter justifiably shows Frank Leboeuf his red card. Ian Harte tries to dispossess Roberto Di Matteo Players: Stephen McPhail
scored both Nigel Martyn saved well
Lee Bowyer was involved in
Harry Kewell received heavy the goals the
first goal
treatment from the mesmerised
Leboeuf and the Frenchman
was deservedly red-carded David Batty was still not fit Darren Huckerby was
in the side while Jason Wilcox came
on as a substitute and Michael Duberry was on the bench Eirik Bakke’ clever dummy Ian Harte’s
free-kick Lucas Radebe and Jonathan Woodgate were
resolute defenders brought the third goal. cannoned off the
wall. Gary Kelly tackled well Michael Bridges limped off Matthew Jones replaced Lee Bowyer Ed De Goey
was in goal injured Albert Ferrer
and Jon Harley were the full-backs Marcel Desailly
and Frank Leboeuf were the centre-backs Roberto Di Matteo, Gus Poyet, Didier Deschamps and Dennis Wise were in midfield. Wise and Poyet were
later to be Manager and Assistant Manager at Leeds Tore Andre Flo, who
later had a spell at Chris Sutton were the
strikers.