Having put themselves on course for one treble at Villa Park in 1999,
Manchester United breathed life back into their fading season by bringing
Arsenal's bid for another clean sweep to a premature end.
And while Arsene Wenger's major selection gamble on Thierry Henry backfired,
Sir Alex Ferguson even achieved the feat without the services of his own chief
marksman, the injured Ruud van Nistelrooy.
Rarely can the FA Cup have mattered so much to United, but this was no
ordinary semi-final tie.
This was, after all, their one remaining chance to salvage their entire season
and this victory was achieved not just by Paul Scholes 32nd-minute strike but by
the sheer force of United's will not to finish the campaign empty-handed.
The Premiership title has gone, presumably to Arsenal. United's Champions
League campaign is over, with Arsenal still to the fore in that competition.
But the FA Cup? Well, that is surely now on its way to Old Trafford with
Sunderland or Millwall waiting in the final after their 11th consecutive FA Cup
semi-final victory.
There was one unsavoury incident at Villa Park, when what looked like a coin
was thrown from the crowd and hit Arsenal physio Gary Lewin on the head as he
stood next to Wenger.
However, Arsenal were, above all, left to curse their log-jammed fixture list,
which had beguiled Wenger into leaving Henry out of his starting line-up.
Having revealed his poker hand an hour before kick-off, it later transpired he
had been bluffing.
For not only was Henry on the bench, but so too was Jose Reyes, who sparkled
as a late substitute, but only when the game was already in United's control.
Instead, Jeremie Aliadiere made his first start since January 10 and to say
his touch was rusty and his movement was ponderous was putting it mildly.
The match had began with a ceremonial handshake between Ferguson and Wenger.
In fact, it was the handshake they never exchanged after the 1999 replay amid
the Frenchman's frustration in defeat.
And as this match burst into life within the first few seconds, it was almost
as if that titanic tussle had never ended.
For Dennis Bergkamp, with so much to prove after his last-minute penalty had
been saved back then by Peter Schmeichel, was sent bursting through the centre.
This time, he was denied by the excellent Roy Carroll, while the Dutchman's
follow-up effort was also headed off the line by Wes Brown.
The ensuing corner was cleared only as far as Edu, whose inspired lob struck
the bar, and although Kolo Toure headed the ball goalwards, Carroll had expertly
recovered his ground to claw it around the post.
United nevertheless surged back as Arsenal were penned back their own
inability to counter-attack, with Henry's absence only serving to prove just how
influential he truly is with his movement, work-rate and directness.
Sol Campbell took it upon himself to embark on a barnstorming run which led to
Robert Pires heading weakly over the top when unmarked.
However, it was a rare sortie and when Gary Neville put aside his simmering
feud with Pires, he produced an exquisite through-ball to send Ryan Giggs haring
into the penalty area.
Giggs sent an inviting cross across the box and Scholes arrived on cue to
hammer the ball past Jens Lehmann.
Advantage United. Arsenal were rattled and going down rather too easily in
search of free-kicks, even if Roy Keane headed the ball against the outside of
his own post under pressure from Vieira.
There was still no Henry at the start of the second half and Bergkamp's
ambitious attempt to win a penalty was the closest they came to an equaliser
before Wenger finally brought on the Frenchman.
Indeed, not only Henry but also Reyes came on with 33 minutes left in place of
Aliadiere and Pires.
It was too little, too late though, even with Kanu joining them in a
four-strong strikeforce in the latter stages.
Reyes, who made more of an impact in his first 10 minutes than Aliadiere
managed in the preceding hour, twice came close, while Mikael Silvestre escaped
with an apparent handball.
However, United, who brought on Phil Neville to stiffen their resolve, were
not about to pushed aside once again.
When Henry blazed an effort over the crossbar in the final minute it was not
only his first real chance of the game, it was also Arsenal's last.
The Gunners may remain the Premiership's leading side but they are not
invincible. Now they must just ensure that losing does not become a habit when
Chelsea come visiting next week.
The treble, after all, is now over and United retain the copyright.
Teams
Arsenal Lehmann, Lauren, Campbell, Toure, Clichy, Ljungberg,
Vieira, Edu (Kanu 76), Pires (Henry 57), Bergkamp,
Aliadiere (Reyes 57).
Subs Not Used: Keown, Stack.
Booked: Pires, Lehmann, Toure, Lauren.
Man Utd Carroll, Gary Neville, Brown, Silvestre, O'Shea,
Ronaldo (Bellion 84), Fletcher, Keane, Scholes, Giggs,
Solskjaer (Phil Neville 75).
Subs Not Used: Butt, Howard, Djemba-Djemba.
Booked: Scholes.
Goals: Scholes 32.
Att: 39,939
Ref: G Barber (Hertfordshire).