MANCHESTER
A case of mistaken
identity helped Wayne Rooney return Manchester United to winning ways
in the Premier League with a brace in a 2-0 victory over Sunderland on
Saturday.
Beaten 2-1 at Swansea City last weekend,
Louis van Gaal's United were frustrated by Sunderland until the 64th
minute at Old Trafford, when John O'Shea conceded a penalty for dragging
back Radamel Falcao.
However, referee George East
elected to send off O'Shea's team-mate Wes Brown — like O'Shea, a former
United player — despite protests from Sunderland's disbelieving players
that he had got the wrong man.
Rooney planted the
penalty into the bottom-left corner and then added a second goal to take
United up to third place in the table, two points above Arsenal, who
host Everton on Sunday.
Van
Gaal made five changes to his starting XI, with Chris Smalling, Jonny
Evans, Antonio Valencia, Ashley Young and Falcao brought in as the
Dutchman switched to a 4-2-3-1 formation with Rooney at number 10.
Sunderland
had enjoyed their two previous visits to Old Trafford, beating United
in a League Cup penalty shootout and then winning 1-0 in the league last
May, and they started brightly.
SUNDERLAND THREATEN
United
goalkeeper David de Gea had to turn a low shot from Connor Wickham
around the post, while Jermain Defoe fired over the bar.
United
began to make inroads at the other end, with Young shooting over and
then seeing a shot deflected onto the bar by O'Shea, before Sebastian
Larsson cleared off the line from Marcos Rojo.
But the
home side's play lacked penetration and Van Gaal elected to withdraw the
disappointing Angel di Maria at half-time, with Adnan Januzaj coming
on.
Then came the penalty incident, with Falcao
brilliantly bringing down a right-wing cross and darting away from
O'Shea and Brown. O'Shea hauled the Colombian back, but it was an
incredulous Brown who was shown the red card.
Rooney's
goal saw him end an eight-game scoring drought in the league and he
claimed a second in the 84th minute, heading in after Januzaj's shot was
parried by visiting goalkeeper Costel Pantilimon.
SOUTHAMPTON'S SLUMP CONTINUES
Southampton
lost further ground in the battle for Champions League qualification
after sinking to a second successive defeat at West Bromwich Albion.
Saido
Berahino scored the only goal in the first minute, slamming home
left-footed when Chris Brunt's free-kick was partially cleared by Maya
Yoshida, but was later forced off by injury.
Southampton
now trail fourth-place Arsenal by two points and could be overtaken by
Liverpool — who won 2-0 at Southampton last weekend — if Brendan
Rodgers's side win at home to second-place Manchester City on Sunday.
WEST HAM'S MISERY
Leaders Chelsea are not in league action this weekend as they play Tottenham Hotspur in Sunday's League Cup final.
Out-of-form
West Ham United have now gone five matches without victory after losing
3-1 at home to London rivals Crystal Palace, who made club history with
a fifth successive away win in all competitions.
Palace
took a 41st-minute lead when Glenn Murray's downward header was sliced
into his own net by West Ham left-back Aaron Cresswell and another
header by Scott Dann made it 2-0 early in the second period.
Murray
glanced in another header, only to then be sent off after receiving a
second yellow card for a late challenge on Winston Reid, before Enner
Valencia reduced the arrears with a dipping 18-yard shot.
Tim
Sherwood's wait for his first points as Aston Villa manager continued
as his second-bottom side lost 1-0 at Newcastle United, with Papiss
Cisse scoring a 37th-minute winner.
Burnley also remain
in the bottom three after a Kieran Trippier own goal gave Swansea City a
1-0 win at Turf Moor, while a Peter Crouch header earned Stoke City a
1-0 victory at home to Hull City.
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