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Saturday 21 March 2015


Carrick signs United contract extension



Manchester United midfielder Michael Carrick has signed a one-year contract extension, the Premier League club said on Friday.
The 33-year-old has been at Old Trafford since 2006, winning five Premier League titles and becoming a cornerstone of the United midfield with his cultured passing and disciplined defensive work.
"He is, for me, my second captain behind Wayne Rooney and he can also read the game as a team player so that's very important," manager Louis van Gaal told the club website.
"He has also an excellent pass forward. I like, as a manager, forward passers so that's very important for me."
Carrick, who started his career at West Ham United before moving to Tottenham Hotspur, has played nearly 400 games for United.
He has also made 31 appearances for England and was named in Roy Hodgson's squad this week.

LVG turns whistleblower before Reds tie



Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal has been refereeing training games to help his players keep their emotions in check for the Premier League top-four showdown with Liverpool at Anfield on Sunday.
The Dutchman has a reputation as a disciplinarian who keeps his players on a tight leash but has seen emotions boil over in big games this season with Chris Smalling sent off against Manchester City and Angel Di Maria seeing red against Arsenal in the FA Cup.
With Anfield proving a traditionally hostile environment for visiting United sides and only two points separating the teams in the battle for a top-four finish, Van Gaal was keen to lay down the law.
"I have been the referee on the training pitch and I have whistled when they have to control their aggression, for example, to prepare already for the atmosphere," the Dutchman told reporters on Friday.
"Control of emotion is also a talent."
The United boss has been heavily criticised for his side's frequently negative playing style this season, but there were few complaints after last weekend's emphatic 3-0 win over Tottenham Hotspur.
For all the talk of long-ball tactics and a move away from United's traditions of attacking football, Van Gaal seems to have stumbled across a formula that could yet appease the purists.
Despite still focusing heavily on the ruggedly physical attributes of Marouane Fellaini, there was plenty of attacking verve on show against Spurs.
Yet it will count for nothing, Van Gaal said, unless they can build on that performance at Anfield.
"I think we played very good in the first half – it was also good to have an evolution that is very positive," he said.
"(But)it says nothing when you lose the next match. Liverpool is not a ground where Manchester United have won a lot.
"When we have won at Liverpool, that will have shown we have improved further."
Both teams come into the game in superb form with Liverpool having won five league games in a row and eight of their last nine while United have won three in succession and are undefeated in 17 of their last 19.
With United desperate to keep their noses ahead in the top-four battle, Van Gaal described it as a game they dare not lose.
"I want to win against them again. It's very important," he said.
"I think every player knows the importance of this game. We are in a very crucial stage and cannot lose."

Cahill wants Blues to seize title initiative



Gary Cahill believes Chelsea will take a major step towards winning the Premier League title if they can secure victory at Hull on Sunday.
Jose Mourinho's side head into the latest round of matches with a commanding six-point lead at the top of the table, having played a game less than their main rivals.
Their Champions League exit at the hands of Paris Saint Germain means Chelsea's focus is trained solely on the domestic championship as they attempt to add to their success in the League Cup earlier this season.
Mourinho believes the lack of European action will ensure his side are not affected by fatigue during the closing weeks of the season, and England centre-back Cahill agrees this should boost the club's hopes of claiming a first English title since 2010.
"Of course we're disappointed to go out of the Champions League, we wanted to go all the way in the competition. Unfortunately it wasn't to be and we can't go back in time, so we switch our minds now with 10 games to play and a huge prize at the end of it," Cahill said.
"We have a bit of a luxury in that we can prepare for a full week for most games now, and train as a group more than we usually can do. Hopefully that can benefit us as well."
-BREATHING SPACE
The Blues faltered last weekend when they were held at home by Southampton, but a shock defeat for second-placed Manchester City at Burnley meant the London club still managed to strengthen their position at the top.
And with the international break to come, three points this weekend will provide more breathing space as the countdown to the end of the season continues.
"The title is in our hands," Cahill said.
"We have a lot at stake but we're in a fantastic position. We also know there is hard work ahead. We're in the run-in and we all want to achieve the same thing.
"We're definitely in a good place. At the start of the season if we'd been offered being six points clear and a game in hand, we'd have been absolutely delighted.
"We're in a fantastic position but there's a lot of hard work still to be done.
"It's a huge game on Sunday and going into the internationals we want to have a feel-good factor, so we need to perform well in the Hull game beforehand and make sure we're not disappointed when we go away."
Struggling Hull will be without Nikica Jelavic after the Croatian striker underwent an operation on a knee that has troubled him for most of the season.
The rehabilitation process is expected to take at least six weeks but it could be that Jelavic misses the remainder of the season.
Jelavic is Hull's leading scorer with eight goals and manager Steve Bruce has challenged Abel Hernandez to take the chance to finally make his mark.
Hernandez moved to Hull for a club-record £10 million ($14.9 million, 13.8 million euros) from Palermo in September but has scored just three goals since.
"Now is the time for Hernandez to fill the role," said Bruce, whose side are only three points above the relegation zone.
"I have been very pleased with him, especially over the last three or four weeks.
"He looks far more settled. He looks as if he is happier round the place. He is learning the language and looks used to being in England."

No more confrontation’



Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho no longer feels the need to implement a "confrontational leadership" style with his players because their season is going largely to plan.
The 52-year-old Portuguese returned to Stamford Bridge for his second spell in charge last season but got off to a disappointing start by his own high standards and failed to win any silverware in 2013-14.
This season, however, Chelsea have already won the League Cup and boast a six-point advantage over Manchester City at the top of the Premier League table with a game in hand.
"This season I don't need confrontational leadership, last season I felt I needed it a few times," Mourinho told reporters.
"Basically, it's when you are ready to provoke your players to try to create some conflicts with the intention to bring out the best of them.
"In this moment I don't think I need that with this group because things are going in the direction I want."
It has not been all smooth sailing for Mourinho this season, however, as Chelsea were knocked out of the FA Cup by League One (third tier) Bradford City and were eliminated in the last-16 of the Champions League by Paris St Germain.
"Obviously you can say 'but you lost in the Champions League', or 'you lost against Bradford'," Mourinho said.
"But globally, generally, the way they work, the way they behave, the way they live together, their motivations, their responsibilities, their frustrations, the way they react to the negative moments, the way they react to the positive moments, the absence of complacency, all this is going well.
"So I just need to be present. I don't need to be a big leader, or even try to find strategies as a leader."
Belgian forward Eden Hazard felt the wrath of Mourinho's "confrontational leadership" style last season after neglecting his defensive duties during Chelsea's Champions League semifinal exit to Atletico Madrid.
Hazard, however, has been Chelsea's standout player this season but Mourinho said he is unsure if the 24-year-old's development is down to the criticism he received.
"I don't know if it was that or it was his maturity coming, his level of ambition," he said. "I just think that was a natural evolution.
"He wants to be the best, to improve his game, score more goals. I still call him a kid but he's a man. He's a great player."

Ramsey a believer in QPR survival



QPR may have lost their last four games and be four points adrift of safety in the Premier League but their manager Chris Ramsey is convinced they will retain their place in the elite league.
Ramsey – who was given the job till the end of the season when he replaced Harry Redknapp in early February – hopes that the process of saving their place in the Premier League will begin at home to an Everton side who have had a poor season themselves and come in to the game on the back of a humiliating 5-2 defeat to Dynamo Kiev in the Europa League – going out 6-4 on aggregate – last Thursday.
QPR, though, have not won since beating fellow strugglers Sunderland 2-0 on February 10 and have the worst defence in the league having conceded 52 goals.
"I still think we can get the points that we need," said Ramsey.
"If we stop believing that we can stay up now, then the whole season has been a washout. We must maintain the grit and determination we have shown in our past few games," added the 52-year-old.
QPR's home form has been considerably better than their away trips – they have taken just three of their 22 points on their travels – so for Ramsey their four remaining games at Loftus Road could be pivotal.
"We are aware that we are running out of time and out of games," said Ramsey, whose high in a decent if unspectacular playing career was playing for surprise finalists Brighton in the 1983 FA Cup final against Manchester United which went to a replay but he missed the 4-0 defeat in the second game due to injury.
"We have to go out on Sunday and give our best."
Ramsey, who face an Everton side that has lost its last three Premier League games way from home, is hoping his players can put behind them their disappointing first-half performance at Crystal Palace and build on a positive second half.
"Apart from the Crystal Palace game, the performances have been good," said Ramsey, whose side have not scored more than one goal since beating Sunderland.
"We have been unlucky in certain games.
"We just have to make sure that we don't give away silly goals like we have done and that we stay together."

Pulis wants video tech after mix-up



Frustrated West Bromwich Albion manager Tony Pulis called for video technology to be introduced into the Premier League after referee Neil Swarbrick sent off the wrong player during his side's 3-0 defeat by Manchester City on Saturday.
Gareth McAuley was sent off in a case of mistaken identity for West Brom after 90 seconds at the Etihad Stadium when Swarbrick failed to spot that Craig Dawson had been the culprit in bringing down Wilfried Bony when he was through on goal.
"These decisions change games," Pulis told BBC Sport. "In the modern world today refereeing is a tough job.
"I speak for a lot of managers in the professional game that the standard of refereeing hasn't been good enough this season.
"If we can help them with a 30-second call-back option, say two times in a game, it would stop us talking about the referees and more about the game itself instead.
"If we can help them in shape or form we should."
West Brom resisted for 27 minutes before Bony fired City in front with his first goal for the club and Brazilian midfielder Fernando made it 2-0 before halftime from a corner.
David Silva added a third after the break.
Pulis was unhappy with the build-up to the hosts' second goal though.
"The second goal shouldn't be allowed," Pulis told BT Sport. "Fernando kicked Saido (Berahino) in the face while jumping and it's a decision which leads to the second goal and kills the game.
"Let's be fair, it was going to be tough here today. Saido missed a great chance to make it 2-1 but obviously it's a game that was decided in the first couple of minutes."
Defeat for West Brom leaves them in mid-table with 33 points from 30 matches

City cruise past West Brom, Arsenal win



Manchester City profited from a case of mistaken identity to keep their slim title hopes alive with a 3-0 win over 10-man West Bromwich Albion in the Premier League on Saturday.
Gareth McAuley was sent off for West Brom after 90 seconds at the Etihad Stadium when it should have been real culprit Craig Dawson and City ran out comfortable winners with goals from Wilfried Bony, Fernando and David Silva.
A 100th win as City manager for Manuel Pellegrini moved City on to 61 points from 30 matches, three behind leaders Chelsea who have two games in hand and play Hull City on Sunday.
Arsenal, knocked out of the Champions League by AS Monaco on Tuesday, remain one-point behind City after a 2-1 victory over Newcastle United at St James' Park.
Tottenham Hotspur striker Harry Kane celebrated his first senior England call up with a hat-trick as Spurs beat bottom side Leicester City 4-3 at White Hart Lane.
Sixth-placed Southampton stay above Spurs on goal difference after their 2-0 win at St Mary's against struggling Burnley who remain in the bottom three.
Crystal Palace came from a goal down to beat Stoke City 2-1 at the Britannia Stadium, while Aston Villa's recent resurgence came to end with a 1-0 home defeat against Swansea City.
New Sunderland boss Dick Advocaat takes his struggling side to West Ham United later on Saturday.

Forster felled as Saints choke Burnley



Southampton reinvigorated their push for an improbable Premier League top-four finish by beating Burnley 2-0 on Saturday, but at the cost of an injury to England goalkeeper Fraser Forster.
The former Celtic goalkeeper had to be stretchered off after appearing to hurt his knee as he made an early clearance, casting doubt over his participation in England's forthcoming matches against Lithuania and Italy.
But it was an otherwise satisfying afternoon for the hosts at St Mary's, as a Shane Long strike and a Jason Shackell own goal provisionally took Southampton to within three points of the Champions League places.
Burnley had pulled off a superb 1-0 home win over champions Manchester City on their previous outing, but defeat kept Sean Dyche's side in the relegation zone with eight games remaining.
Southampton's afternoon got off to a bad start when Forster had to be stretchered off, with veteran understudy Kelvin Davis coming on.
Southampton manager Ronald Koeman restored misfiring striker Graziano Pelle to his starting line-up after he started last weekend's 1-1 draw at Chelsea on the bench and the Italian squandered an early chance.
Dusan Tadic picked Pelle out inside the visitors' area, but he took a touch too many, allowing Shackell to intervene.
Davis, 38, was making his first appearance since February last year, but he showed that the time on the bench had not dulled his reflexes with a sharp save to repel a Sam Vokes volley.
The hosts struck in the 37th minute, with Long lifting the ball into the roof of the net after Pelle had failed to apply a touch to Nathaniel Clyne's drilled shot from the edge of the box.
Pelle's misfortunes continued when he hit the bar from only six yards, while both goalkeepers produced flying saves before halftime, Davis thwarting Danny Ings and Vokes and Tom Heaton denying Steven Davis.
Victor Wanyama replaced Tadic at the break, but the Serbian's departure did not diminish the hosts' threat, with Steven Davis and Long both shooting narrowly wide before Shackell's own goal made it 2-0 in the 58th minute.
Ryan Bertrand fizzed a cross into the Burnley box from the left and the ball struck Shackell on the knee before cannoning into the net.


Kane trebles as Spurs sink Leicester



Harry Kane celebrated his first England call-up with a first Premier League hat-trick as Tottenham Hotspur edged Leicester City 4-3 at White Hart Lane on Saturday.
But it was also a game that illustrated the fragility of Tottenham's top-four challenge, with the hosts letting a 2-0 lead slip before a Kane penalty and a Jeff Schlupp own goal carried the London club over the line.
And it said much about Spurs' performance that as David Nugent claimed the last goal of the game for Leicester, manager Mauricio Pochettino angrily threw a water bottle to the ground in frustration.
The game had not started positively for Spurs either, as Hugo Lloris had to go off after sustaining a serious-looking gash to his right leg following an early collision with teammate Kyle Walker.
The medical team took two minutes to strap up the France international's leg and Lloris received a standing ovation from the crowd as he was stretchered from the field.
It was not long, however, until Kane gave the home fans something to really cheer by putting Tottenham into the lead.
An Andros Townsend corner was flicked on by Erik Dier and after Kasper Schmeichel pawed the ball away, Kane reacted quickest to stab a shot between Esteban Cambassio's legs and in.
It was very soon 2-0, but there was some doubt about to whom the goal would be attributed.
Robert Huth attempted to clear a Spurs cross, only for the ball to fall to Kane at the edge of the box. He scuffed his effort, but the ball took a wicked deflection off Huth and looped past Schmeichel.
At that point, both Spurs and Kane were threatening to tear Leicester apart.
The striker had another goal ruled out, for offside, and Christian Eriksen forced Schmeichel into a fine save with an effort from just outside the box, the goalkeeper just about touching the ball onto the post.
NUGENT PENALISED
Kane was again central to all the hosts' key moves.
Such an impact, particularly against Leicester, only emphasised the impressive nature of his rise, given that the youngster spent an underwhelming spell at the East Midlands club as a teenager, scoring twice in 15 games.
He could have doubled that tally in the space of the first half, but instead Leicester surprisingly halved Spurs' lead on 37 minutes when Jamie Vardy turned in Nugent's inviting cross with a fine drive.
All of a sudden, Spurs were hanging on, during the kind of spell that Eriksen referred to in mid-week as "Spursy" and which Pochettino has been desperate to eradicate.
Danny Rose had to put in a desperate last-ditch tackle to prevent Nugent equalising shortly before the interval.
But the home side eventually succumbed as Leicester came out sensing blood after halftime, and soon drew it.
After a Cambiasso effort had been deflected narrowly over, Wes Morgan headed in from a corner to make it 2-2.
That was finally the spark for Spurs to look something like themselves, but it was not just greater aggression in their play that they showed. Nabil Bentaleb was lucky to stay on after appearing to strike Leonardo Ulloa.
There was another confrontation at the corner of the Leicester box in the 64th minute, albeit with less contact, as Nugent bundled Rose to the ground.
Referee Mike Dean hesitated before awarding the penalty, but there was no hesitation about Kane's finish as he completed his hat-trick.
Spurs then claimed another as Schlupp unluckily bundled in Eriksen's attempt on goal.
There was still more drama, with Nugent powering in Leicester's third goal in the last minute, but the Championship still beckons for Nigel Pearson's team.


Giroud keeps Arsenal on course



Olivier Giroud tormented Newcastle yet again as he scored twice for Arsenal in a 2-1 away win that cemented their place in the Premier League's top four on Saturday.
France striker Giroud has now scored eight times in his last six games against Newcastle, who have not achieved a home win against Arsenal in the past decade and have now lost their last seven meetings with Arsene Wenger's side.
The Gunners remain third, one point behind second-placed Manchester City and six ahead of fifth-placed Liverpool as the battle to qualify for the Champions League approaches its finale.
Yet, what appeared likely to be an embarrassing day for Newcastle when they went two goals behind inside the opening 28 minutes, ended with an ovation from their fans after a splendid second-half revival which warranted more than a solitary goal from Moussa Sissoko.
It had looked bleak for United after they went behind in the 24th minute when they needlessly conceded a free-kick which was headed on by Danny Welbeck before Giroud's knee diverted it past goalkeeper Tim Krul.
Then Welbeck was off-target with a volley before Giroud added his second goal from a corner taken by Santi Cazorla and headed inside an unguarded post by the forward who so relishes facing United.
Newcastle had already been warned because Arsenal had gone close to the opening goal when Krul saved from Alexis Sanchez and Aaron Ramsey's first touch betrayed him after he was set up by Giroud.
Such early domination by Arsenal did not come as a surprise to Newcastle's supporters, who had been warned beforehand of the difficulties facing their manager John Carver.
Injuries and suspensions left him with only 13 senior outfield players and his team inevitably possessed a makeshift look, with midfielder Jack Colback forced to play at left-back and right-back Daryl Janmaat starting at centre-half for the first time in his career.
Arsenal made three changes from the team that won at Monaco in midweek.
TOTAL CONTROL
They still went out of the Champions League on away goals despite that victory and, worryingly for Newcastle, had performed well in the past two seasons following their departure from that competition.
They were to continue that trend with ease as Giroud's goals gave them total control and, in truth, it seemed to be only a question of how many Arsenal would score after the second one went in.
However, they failed to add further goals before the interval, leaving Newcastle in a better position than four years ago again when they trailed 4-0 in the same fixture.
On that occasion, they fought back to draw 4-4 and Newcastle hinted at a similar revival in the opening stages of the second half.
They pulled back a goal inside three minutes when Ryan Taylor and Remy Cabella combined down the right flank before the Frenchman's cross was steered in by Sissoko, the midfielder who is regularly linked with Arsenal.
And they went in search of an equaliser with an appetite that had been largely absent in the opening half when no Newcastle fan could have predicted such a fightback.
Yoan Gouffran directed a 61st minute chance straight at keeper David Ospina and Sissoko was only denied a second goal by a point-blank save by the keeper from his glancing header.
Janmaat was also close with an ambitious effort from more than 30 yards and Cabella almost opened the Arsenal defence with a surging run that suggested the France midfielder is coming to terms with the demands of the Premier League.
Arsenal's response was muted, although Krul did well to block a 79th-minute shot from Welbeck after the England striker outpaced Mike Williamson on his way inside the United area.
And Newcastle were only denied a deserved equaliser when the outstretched leg of Ospina diverted a shot from Ayoze Perez in the 87th minute. It proved to be Newcastle's final chance.

English Barclays Premier League | RESULTS

21 March 
West Ham United1 - 0Sunderland
Diafra Sakho (88) 
Boleyn Ground
21 March 
Newcastle United1 - 2Arsenal
Moussa Sissoko (48)Olivier Giroud (24)
Olivier Giroud (28)
St. James' Park

21 March 
Stoke City1 - 2Crystal Palace
Mame Biram Diouf (14)Glenn Murray (pen 41)
Wilfried Zaha (47)
Britannia Stadium
21 March 
Tottenham Hotspur4 - 3Leicester City
Harry Kane (6)
Harry Kane (13)
Harry Kane (pen 64)
Jeffrey Schlupp (og 85)
Jamie Vardy (38)
Wes Morgan (50)
David Nugent (90)
White Hart Lane
21 March 
Aston Villa0 - 1Swansea City
 Bafetimbi Gomis (87)
Villa Park
21 March 
Southampton2 - 0Burnley
Shane Long (37)
Jason Shackell (og 58)
 
St. Mary's Stadium


21 March 
Manchester City3 - 0West Bromwich Albion
Wilfried Bony (27)
Fernando Francisco Reges (40)
David Silva (77)
 
Etihad Stadium

Zaha, Murray seal win for Palace

Crystal Palace's Wilfried Zaha and Glenn Murray sealed a 2-1 win over Stoke City in an entertaining midtable Premier League clash at the Brittania Stadium on Saturday.
Ivory Coast-born England winger Zaha showed few signs of the hip injury which troubled him in last week's 3-1 win against QPR in which he also scored, as he netted the match winner minutes after a Murray penalty.
All three goals came in the first half with Senegalese striker Mame Biram Diouf putting Stoke ahead on 14 minutes with his ninth goal of the season.
The hosts had looked firmly in control early only to concede a penalty minutes before the break. Murray stepped up to convert and was followed closely by Zaha's winner in the last action of the first half.
Since manager Alan Pardew's arrival in January, the Eagles have been soaring and continued their push up the table to move 11 points clear of the relegation zone.
"Character got us the win today and this is one of the best teams I've managed for that. Incredible character," said Pardew, who believes his side are just one point away from safety.
"I'm overjoyed for the players because they worked really hard, we had to dig deep.
"To get to 36 points is us done, really. With eight games and the way we're playing you'd expect us to be there."
Palace's Murray and Yannick Bolasie both missed early shots at goal with Diouf also having an effort blocked after 11 minutes.
But the Senegalese forward made no mistake three minutes later. Charlie Adam's free-kick deflected off Palace's Damien Delaney into the path of the Stoke forward, who fired past Julian Speroni from close range.
Senegalese striker Pape Souare came close to opening Palace's account after 37 minutes only for his header to go wide.
But the visitors levelled through Murray's penalty three minutes before the break after an Asmir Begovic foul on Bolasie.
The visitors pulled ahead just before the break when Murray headed a cross to Zaha to fire into the net.
Both sides had chances early in the second half with Diouf flicking in a low cross from Charlie Adam but Speroni held firm.
Another Zaha low cross was half-cleared but went straight to Jason Puncheon, who spooned over the bar.
Stoke poured forward but Palace's Scott Dann and Delaney did well to close down defence to secure their fifth away win of the season.
Palace are now 11th with 36 points, two places below Stoke.