After 89 minutes of tension and toil Cristiano Ronaldo lifted the gathering
gloom around Old Trafford to revive expectation and optimism among Manchester
United's legion of support.
The howling gale billowing across the north-west this afternoon might have
provided a useful metaphor for a season dramatically blown off course over the
last fortnight.
Clinging nervously to the lead Ryan Giggs had given them with his impudent
29th-minute finish, United were set to advance into back-to-back meetings with
Arsenal with the air of a condemned man until Ronaldo - the man who will
eventually be asked to fill Giggs' illustrious boots - made his dramatic
impact.
Picking up possession just inside his own half, the 19-year-old strode forward
with the confidence of youth and unleashed a devastating finish that left Kasey
Keller with no chance as it crashed in off the post.
The noise cascading down from the stands was fuelled by the relief felt at a
first league win since the end of January and a first clean sheet from two weeks
before that and grew even louder when David Bellion slotted home an injury time
third.
It is not a result that will end the pain of a Champions League exit and
disastrous derby day defeat, the fall-out from which has been swift and
condemnatory but it does ease the suffering slightly.
Even within the Old Trafford camp there has been open talk of players fighting
for the futures and the list of potential departures has been long.
Sir Alex Ferguson decided it was time to rally the troops with a defiant 'the
empire is not crumbling' message in his pre-match programme notes, which
probably had a galvanising effect on his team, but not as much as the return of
Ole Gunnar Solskjaer to his starting line-up.
The loss of the Norwegian to knee surgery since mid-September might not have
been an influence in the recent defensive catastrophes but as an attacking
inspiration and replacement for departed England skipper David Beckham, his loss
has still been keenly felt.
Just how much was emphasised in the opening period as Solskjaer embarked on
half a dozen right-wing surges that would probably have brought greater reward
that just a single goal had he been anywhere near match fit.
Instead, United had to settle for Giggs' eighth goal of the campaign, but only
his second on the league since November.
Solskjaer had already had a sighter, delivering a drilled cross from close to
the by-line which evaded both Giggs and Diego Forlan.
That chance had been set up by the selfless industry of Ruud van Nistelrooy
and it was the Dutchman's willingness to roll his sleeves up and graft that won
the throw that was eventually worked to Solskjaer on the right edge of the Spurs
box.
The delivery was no less powerful than it had been before but this time it
hardly got off the ground and, arriving at the near post, Giggs delivered the
inspired right-heel flick which gave United the advantage they desperately
craved.
Solskjaer might have added a nerve-easing second but did not have the strength
to muster a finish to match a 30-yard burst over halfway and van Nistelrooy also
saw a good chance go to waste when he took Giggs' pass in his stride, rounded
Kasey Keller but then got the ball stuck under his feet and allowed Anthony
Gardner to clear.
In such abysmal conditions, the efforts of both sides to get the ball down and
play deserved credit. One Paul Scholes shot was actually blown away from goal
such was the ferocity of the wind and the howling gale added strength to a
Stephen Carr effort that Roy Carroll turned away late in the opening period.
That was about the best opportunity Tottenham had in the opening period but
the interval introduction of Stephane Dalmat provided the visitors with an
attacking impetus they had previously lacked.
Happily for the hosts though, the defensive brittleness so evident in recent
weeks was absent as Wes Brown and Mikael Silvestre remained resolute in their
efforts to keep Spurs at bay.
It was United who had all the best opportunities after half-time but
frustratingly none of them went in.
Forlan was caught completely off-guard when a Keane cross bounced off his
thigh after van Nistelrooy had failed to connect with an attempted header,
although the Uruguayan almost redeemed himself late on with a superb curling
effort Keller was at full stretch to tip over.
Giggs nearly profited from John O'Shea's gallop down the left wing but the
Welshman blazed a first-time effort over.
In the end, it did not matter. United would probably have won without the late
strikes from Ronaldo and Bellion but at a time when confidence is so fragile,
those two goals could turn out to be so important to the Red Devils' season.
Teams
Man Utd: Carroll, O'Shea, Silvestre, Brown, Phil Neville,
Solskjaer (Ronaldo 74), Scholes (Bellion 90), Keane, Giggs,
van Nistelrooy, Forlan (Butt 80).
Subs Not Used: Howard, Fletcher.
Booked: Giggs.
Goals: Giggs 30, Ronaldo 89, Bellion 90.
Tottenham: Keller, Carr, Gardner, Doherty, Taricco (Dalmat 45),
Marney (Redknapp 65), Brown, King, Ziege, Keane,
Defoe (Kanoute 79).
Subs Not Used: Hirschfeld, Kelly.
Booked: Carr.
Att: 67,634
Ref: D Gallagher (Oxfordshire).
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