Date:
Venue: Philips Stadion,
Competition: UEFA Cup, Fourth Round, First Leg.
Score: PSV
Scorers: PSV
Attendance: 32,000.
Teams:
PSV
Referee: Stefano Braschi (
PSV Eindhoven were
United’s next opponents in the UEFA Cup and they
returned from
The UEFA
Cup may never have been a priority to United boss David O'Leary, but the clash
with PSV was just the tonic his faltering side had been craving. The performance
was much more like what was required from David O'Leary's boys. After two
months of under-achieving they finally cranked up a gear and showed that news
of their demise was a little premature with a display which, quite frankly,
scared the Dutch champions into submission. The Dutch Champions, who had lost
only one of their previous thirty-six League games at home, were, in the final
analysis, fortunate not to allow David O’Leary’s to go back to
After an initial
uneasy opening, United settled into a pattern and gave the performance that
finally went some way to matching what everyone knew they were capable of. In
truth, they were still a long way short of the heights hit during the previous
year's terrific Champions League run, but if they were to rub shoulders once
again with the likes of Real,
The fact
that it took the razzmatazz of a big European night to finally pull the Whites
out of their slumber is possibly no surprise. O'Leary's boys have always
enjoyed the big occasion. Gone was the uneasy, tentative football which had
plagued 2002 and all-but destroyed their chances of a top four finish. In its
place, slowly evolving as the game progressed was a team re-building its
confidence and standing up to its critics and shouting its intentions for
another fling. While the UEFA Cup was important and was most certainly there to
be won, it was the effect that the result and display would have on the league
form which took paramount importance. If it could herald another brilliant run
over the final dozen league matches then maybe that impossible dream of the
Champions League wouldn't turn out to be that impossible after all.
O'Leary had
recalled the bad-boy trio of Alan Smith, Lee Bowyer and Danny Mills as he
dropped both David Batty and Gary Kelly to the bench. David Batty, who had travelled to
The
atmosphere within the Philips Stadium was more akin to the Champions League
experiences of the previous season and everyone was buzzing. Home fans,
especially, were baying for early blood, and had it not been for the wonderful
goalkeeping of Nigel Martyn, pulling off two quality
saves within the space of a minute, then PSV would have taken the lead. The
highly-rated Marc Van Bommel was first to be denied
as his fierce drive from the right angle of the penalty box was brilliantly
tipped away by the
PSV's
strong start continued and they should have scored on the quarter hour mark
when Arnold Bruggink directed a free header wide. But
their failure to break the deadlock early on gave United the chance to settle
down and organise themselves into a unit which from
then on never looked like letting in a goal. At the other end
Just before
the half hour
United then
completely bossed the second half. It seemed that PSV had realised
just how good
Marc Van Bommel did see one volley fly just too high, but Nigel Martyn had little to do in the second half and the home
fans streamed out of the ground with a joyous rendition of the United anthem Marching On Together ringing in their ears.
The only downside for
A pleased
David O’Leary said, “The team I put out was one I’ve been wanting to field for
a while, and it’s been a long time since I have been able to do that.”
Match Action:
Lee
Bowyer beats Andre Ooijer and Georgi
Gakhokidze to the ball but shoots wide of Patrik Lodewijks
Olivier Dacourt beats
Lee
Bowyer gets in a header on goal
Mark Viduka turns away in despair after seeing his header
cleared off the line
Mark Viduka duels with Wilfred Bouma for a high ball
Alan
Smith beats Kasper Bogeland
Olivier Dacourt beats
Mark Viduka’s strength sees him through Eirik Bakke skips past Mark Van Bommel Mark Viduka
beats Kevin Hofland to a header
Andre Oijer watches as Nigel Martyn
pulls off
a
fine save
Mark Viduka on one of his runs through the PSV defence
Alan Smith salutes the crowd at game’s end
Harry Kewell is stopped by Marc Van Bommel
David O’Leary congratulates Lee Bowyer
Teams:
Back Row:
Mark Viduka, Ian Harte.
Front Row: Harry Kewell,
Eirik Bakke, Lee Bowyer,
Olivier Dacourt.
Players:
Bad boys
Alan Smith, Danny Mills and Lee Bowyer were all back
Robbie Fowler was ineligible
Harry Kewell and Mark Viduka both came
close to a winner Ian Harte provided
Dominic Matteo blocked Nigel Martyn
made
chances
fine saves
Gary Kelly and David Batty returned to
the bench with Eirik Bakke
taking his place in midfield Patrik
Lodewijks was in goal
Kasper Bogeland and Wilfred Bouma were
the full-backs Andre Ooijer and Kevin Hofland were in
central defence
Dennis Rommedahl, Mark Van Bommel,
Johann Vogel and Georgi Gakhokidze
were the midfield
Arnold Bruggink and Jan Vennegoore of Hesselink were the strikers
PSV substitutes used were John De Jong,
Mateja Kezman and Yuri Nikiforov
Goalkeeper Gino Coutinho was unused
and
unused outfield substitutes were Ernest Faber, Adil Ramzi and Eric Addo