Monday, February 28, 2011

Roberto Martinez reveals Wigan were priced out of move for Manchester United striker Javier Hernandez before Old Trafford switch

Roberto Martinez reveals Wigan were priced out of move for Manchester United striker Javier Hernandez before Old Trafford switchWigan Athletic boss Roberto Martinez has revealed the club were interested in signing Javier Hernandez before he moved Manchester United. Hernandez was on target twice at the DW Stadium on Saturday as United recorded a 4-0 victory over Martinez's side.

The Mexican striker had caught the eye of the Latics, but the Premier League strugglers were priced out of a move for the player, who then plied his trade at Chivas de Guadalajara. “He was a player that went out of our market," Martinez said, according to The Daily Mirror.

“I think everyone was aware of him when he played for Mexico. “But obviously he’s a real talent who Manchester United probably captured before he caught the eye of anyone. “He’s very clever with his movement, tactically impressive and a real asset to United.”

It is thought Hernandez cost the Old Trafford club between £6-8 million upon acquiring a work permit to move to England in May 2010, before the striker went on to impress at the World Cup in South Africa. Hernandez - nicknamed 'Chicharito' - has scored 13 goals in all competitions in an impressive first season in the Premier League. Wigan, meanwhile, are bottom of the table following West Ham United's 3-1 victory over Liverpool on Sunday.
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Friday, February 25, 2011

United to pile pressure

With second-placed Arsenal preparing for the League Cup final against Birmingham, and defending champions Chelsea with no fixture, a United win at Wigan will leave their rivals with little margin for error. A United victory would leave them a mammoth 15 points clear of Chelsea ahead of the two sides re-arranged fixture at Stamford Bridge next Tuesday.

United manager Sir Alex Ferguson will be certain to remove any trace of complacency from his team's ranks as they prepare to meet a Wigan side mired in a relegation dogfight at the foot of the table. Ferguson's squad have struggled to find their best form in recent matches, with a lacklustre 1-0 win over non-league Crawley last weekend followed by a mind-numbing 0-0 Champions League match with Marseilles on Wednesday.

United captain Nemanja Vidic believes the club are entering what could be the decisive part of their season, with next Tuesday's clash with Chelsea followed by games against Liverpool and Arsenal in coming weeks. Vidic is insisting that the club abide by the old adage of taking each game as it comes -- starting with Wigan.

"We have other important games to play first and the next is Wigan. We have to take three points and I believe we can," Vidic told the club's website. Wigan meanwhile have prepared for the game by re-laying the notoriously boggy playing surface at the DW Stadium, a move that will assist both sides, who favour a slick passing game.

Latics boss Roberto Martinez said he had qualms about preparing a surface which is likely to benefit United as much as his own team. "You don't want to go into a game where the players cannot express themselves and cannot play the game they want to play or we want to play," he said. "I'm extremely proud of that.

"From now until the end of the season every point is going to be valuable and it is important we do everything we can to help our players."Elsewhere at the top of the table, Manchester City, who sit in third spot, eight points behind United, will attempt to keep their flagging title hopes alive with a win over Fulham, managed by former City boss Mark Hughes.

Fulham have prepared for the game with a trip to Portugal, as Hughes seeks to rejuvenate his squad following last weekend's disappointing FA Cup exit to Birmingham. "Man City will be a big test, they are a good side," Hughes said. "I think the disappointment (of the FA Cup) will help us in that respect."

At the other end of the table, basement club Wolves will be hoping to drag Blackpool back into the relegation quagmire at Molineux. Wolves remain anchored to the foot of the division on 25 points, and need to start winning if they are to preserve their Premier League status.

Wolves boss Mick McCarthy, who watched Blackpool defeat Tottenham 3-1 at Bloomfield Road in midweek, said nothing less than three points will do for his team, who drew with West Bromwich Albion in their last outing.

"It's a game we have got to win, there's no point dressing it up," McCarthy said. "Had we got six points out of the West Brom and Blackpool games then that would have been fabulous. But after drawing the first one, we need to make it four points out of the two matches."
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Thursday, February 24, 2011

Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson is more akin to Abraham Lincoln than Mahatma Gandhi

Sixteen years after uttering that line — the one public response to an assault conviction over his kung-fu kick at Crystal Palace — King Eric has lost none of his ability to be abstruse.

For this week he has, if we can ever credit comparisons from one so intellectually detached and so, well, French, decided to bracket Sir Alex Ferguson with Mahatma Gandhi. In a riot of an interview with The New York Times, he declares: “Today, he is like Gandhi on the game side. With Manchester, I prefer to say, to think, to realise that Ferguson is a kind of genius.

On the surface, Cantona is merely alerting United to the “problems” likely to beset the club upon Ferguson’s retirement. But his ruminations raise some absorbing questions: how, for example, did the father of the Indian nation ever establish a yardstick for top-flight management? Gandhi offers, suddenly, a fashionable reference point.

AC Milan’s loan star, Zlatan Ibrahimovic, was at it earlier this winter when he said of his former mentor at Barcelona, Pep Guardiola: “With the way he dresses and talks, he always wants to look like a philosopher. He reminds me a bit of Gandhi”.

Ibra’s subtle grasp of satyagraha, or 'force of truth’, had evidently gone unnoticed. And yet, the juxtaposition of Gandhi and football is not as jarring as might first appear.

While a lawyer in South Africa, the young Gandhi saw that the game’s popularity among the poor would allow him to reach people whose political activism he most wanted to stir.

As a figurehead for non-violent protest against the apartheid regime, he established three football clubs in the 1900s, all under the banner of 'Passive Resisters’.

There are even images in Durban’s Old Court House museum that picture him alongside members of the teams. Gandhi appeared enraptured by football’s inherent nobility and its elevation of the team ethic.

Poobalan Govindasamy, president of the country’s indoor football association, goes further, arguing that it allowed him to “find spiritual peace”.

All very powerful, but by what measure does Cantona discern a link with Ferguson? Would Gandhi have mustered the slightest affection for Manchester United and their Croesus-like wealth? Plus, could he have dared imagine, having visited the Lancashire mill towns in the 1930s, that Blackburn’s team would one day be owned by a family from India?

As Ferguson, a keen amateur historian, would doubtless acknowledge, any equating of his leadership style with Gandhi’s, risks being horrendously glib. All that can be said with certainty is that the Scot has always been animated by the same searing sense of social injustice. He recalls only too acutely the moment when, glimpsing his father’s payslip, he discovered that the reward for a 70-hour week at a freezing Clydeside shipyard was £7.

Choosing to be a footballer did not make him any less militant. As Falkirk’s centre-forward, he led a players’ strike when the management withheld their lunch allowance.

He does not forget, either, that he acquired a mansion in Cheshire thanks to his determination in a grim Govan tenement to “make something of myself”.

Here, alas, parallels must end. The irascible Ferguson has never been remotely in touch with Gandhi’s emollient rhetoric — save, perhaps, for the time he sent up his own notorious abruptness to reporters ahead of United’s Champions League final in Moscow. “I love you all,” he told the press conference. “I’ve come to spread peace!”But if he is hardly forged in Gandhi’s image, he has never lost sight of the lessons sport and politics can take from one another.

An Old Labour man, in 2009 he agreed to an interview with Alastair Campbell, his improbable ally at New Labour. The transcript illustrated his fascinating debt to Abraham Lincoln. Ferguson had been handed a copy by Campbell of Doris Kearns Goodwin’s acclaimed Lincoln biography, Team of Rivals the previous summer.

“My God, what a brilliant book,” he said. “I can learn about the art of team building from all sorts of places. It’s all about managing people and relationships, in the end.”So there you have it. If only Cantona had said: “Today, he is like Lincoln.”As with Sardine-gate, we shall have to put it down as another case of the mangled metaphor.
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Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Manchester United owners the Glazer family set to issue statement in reaction to Qatari takeover speculation

United's results for the financial quarter ending Dec 31, 2010, must be posted by March 1 because of regulations accompanying the £500 million bond issue by the Glazers in January last year.

And it is understood that United’s Florida-based owners are considering a statement to bondholders, within the accounts, to clarify their position on the record to avoid accusations of allowing the value of the bond to continue to grow because of constant links with a Qatari buy-out.

The club’s high-yield bonds rose to record highs last Tuesday because of the speculation, prompting sources close to Qatar Holding to insist that the investment arm of the Gulf state’s sovereign wealth fund “is not and has never been in discussions to buy Manchester United”.

Despite the regular insistence of the Glazers’ spokesmen that the family is not looking to sell, the absence of a direct rebuttal from the family has ensured continuing speculation.

Following attempts by the Red Knights to raise funds for a takeover early last year, however, the Glazers sanctioned a statement in their quarterly accounts last May, declaring: “The owners remain fully committed to their long-term ownership of the club.

"Manchester United is not for sale and the owners will not entertain any offers.”

A similar statement in the coming week would be viewed by the City as clarifying any ambiguity, with the Glazers also aware that a failure to repeat last May’s statement would only fuel speculation of an ownership battle at Old Trafford.

United travel to Marseille on Tuesday for the first leg of their Champions League last-16 tie against the French club having confirmed that defender Patrice Evra has signed a new contract committing him to Old Trafford until June 2014.

The 29 year-old, a £5.5 million buy from Monaco in January 2006, had been linked with a summer move to Real Madrid amid uncertainty over his readiness to extend his current deal beyond June 2012.

Gabriel Heinze, the full-back who left United in August 2007 after losing his place to Evra, is set to face his former club for the first time when United face Marseille on Wednesday.

The Argentine’s three-year spell at Old Trafford ended in acrimony, with Ferguson refusing to allow Heinze to leave United for Liverpool before instead selling him to Real Madrid following a Premier League tribunal aimed at resolving the dispute between the two parties.

But despite Heinze’s bitter departure, the 32 year-old insists he has no axe to grind with the United manager. Heinze said: “It is difficult to define Ferguson, but he is a person who brought me a lot on the field and off it. “It made me learn things that made me grow as a man and that is the most important thing. He is also someone with character, who has a winning culture, and I like that.”
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Friday, February 18, 2011

Manchester United v Crawley Town: match preview

Manchester United v Crawley Town: match previewTwo teams nicknamed the Red Devils meet at Old Trafford where the Premier League leaders face the Blue Square Premier's second-placed side. United have conceded only eight goals in their last 15 FA Cup matches and not more than once in a game during that sequence.

Middlesbrough were the last team to score two goals against United in the FA Cup, in a sixth round tie in 2007, when the teams drew 2-2 but United won 1-0 in the replay. Crawley are only the sixth non-league since World War Two to reach the fifth Round and none of those sides have progressed further. But the last three non-league teams to play against Manchester United in the FA Cup have earned a replay.

United have not conceded a goal in their last four FA Cup matches against non-league opposition. This is the first time Crawley have ever played a top flight team in the FA Cup. In their run-up to the biggest game in their history, Crawley have beaten Newport County, Guiseley, Swindon, Derby and Torquay.

Crawley's Matt Tubbs has scored three goals in five games in this season's FA Cup. There have been three red cards in Crawley's last three FA Cup matches. United will be without Park Ji-Sung, ruled out with a hamstring strain, while Rio Ferdinand is unlikely to be ready with a calf strain. Owen Hargreaves, Antonio Valencia and Johnny Evans are also absent for the Premier League leaders.
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Thursday, February 17, 2011

Crawley face Man United in dream tie with a catch

If ever there was a tie to remind doubters why the FA Cup remains so special it is Manchester United's fifth-round meeting with Crawley Town at Old Trafford on Saturday. At first glance the game represents the classic FA Cup dream - the minor league team taking on mighty United, winners of the world's oldest cup competition a record 11 times, at a great stadium in front of live TV cameras with a peak evening viewing figure that will run into the millions.

Crawley are the first minor league team to make the fifth round since 1994 and, unlikely though it might be, they are bidding to be the first into the quarter-finals for 97 years. Progress, however, is not Crawley's aim as they have already landed the juiciest of plums and they will make getting on for a million pounds from the match.

Those are funds that would have been unthinkable in the 1990s and early 2000s when Crawley were in and out of administration and within a whisker of going out of business altogether while bobbing along in the Southern League. However, things are very different now for the club based in the shadow of Gatwick Airport in southern England.

Not only are all the players full-time but the club has, by minor league standards, bottomless pockets and are well placed for promotion to the League for the first time. FA Cup-loving neutrals the world over will be urging Crawley to do pull off the greatest shock of all but there will also be large proportion of fans of England's minor league clubs hoping they come spectacularly unstuck.

Jealousy at their funding plays a part but much of the ire is directed at manager Steve Evans, who was convicted of tax evasion and fined and suspended by the FA after a contract irregularity investigation during his time as manager of Boston United -- issues that contributed to that club also coming close to liquidation.

FURTHER SUBSTANCE: Crawley's status as the Millwall of the Conference - "no-one likes us, we don't care" - gained further substance this week with when one of their fans was arrested for posting an abusive song about the 1958 Munich disaster, forcing the club to issue an apology. All that will matter not a jot to the players, however, when they achieve their dream of walking out at Old Trafford to face the most famous team in the land.

"We've beaten three League sides ( Swindon Town, Derby County and Torquay United) already and the club deserves a great tie," said Crawley physio Mark Stein, who lost 4-0 to United when playing for Chelsea in the 1994 final. "To be honest it's unbelievable, it just gets better and better. Hopefully now we can go there and do alright.

It is not just Crawley flying the flag for Sussex, hardly a traditional hotbed of the English game, as Brighton are also enjoying a run of giant-killing and wins over Watford and Portsmouth have earned the League One (third division) club a trip to Premier League Stoke City.
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Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Manchester United begin contract talks with top scorer Dimitar Berbatov

Manchester United begin contract talks with top scorer Dimitar BerbatovManchester United have opened initial talks over a contract extension for Dimitar Berbatov. The 30-year-old Bulgarian was dropped from United’s starting line-up for the derby victory over Manchester City on Saturday but his agent Emil Danchev flew into Manchester over the weekend for talks with chief executive David Gill.

The 20-goal striker has 18 months left on his current contract worth around £100,000 a week and United are happy to extend the deal. However, they are unlikely to put a massive pay increase on the table, despite Wayne Rooney’s recent pay hike, due to Berbatov’s age.
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Monday, February 14, 2011

MANCHESTER UNITED SNUB FOR FEMALE PHYSIO

In his note, Manchester United manager Sir Alex says football is “very much a male sport”. The letter emerged after pundits Richard Keys, 53, and Andy Gray, 55, were sacked for making sexist comments about female assistant referee Sian Massey, 25.

Sir Alex, 69, wrote: “I receive hundreds of letters from young people asking for work within the club and I am sorry but it is not possible on this occasion. “However, the general thoughts of the players regarding a female physiotherapist were that they would prefer to be treated by a male physiotherapist.

“Most of the players felt that football was very much a male sport and did not really like the thought of females being involved with the treatment of sports injuries within the training complex.”Although it was written in 1994, the unnamed physio, who now works at an NHS hospital, said: “When I re-read it after the Sky row blew up, I was really quite shocked by the language.”Employment law expert Karen Jackson, of Didlaw Solicitors, said: “The letter demonstrates the way certain elements of society persist in thinking about women.

“The position hasn’t radically improved since the 90s, at work or in wider society.”A United spokesman said: “Sir Alex was talking about the thoughts of the players at that time. The football environment is different now. We have a female physio working with the academy players.”
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Thursday, February 10, 2011

Manchester United's interest in Manuel Neuer could be scuppered by Schalke's contract negotiations

Manchester United's interest in Manuel Neuer could be scuppered by Schalke's contract negotiationsNeuer, who impressed during Germany’s run to the World Cup semi-finals in South Africa last summer, is on United’s shortlist alongside Ajax’s Maarten Stekelenburg and Atletico Madrid’s David de Gea to replace Edwin van der Sar when the 40 year-old retires at the end of this season. Neuer, 24, is also a target for Bayern Munich.

United and Bayern are ready to take advantage of Neuer’s contract situation at Schalke, with his deal due to expire in June 2012. It is understood that Neuer’s contract includes an escape clause that can be triggered by Champions League participants offering in excess of €15 million for the player.

However, the deal also allows Schalke to reject such an offer with the proviso that they increase Neuer’s €2 million-a-year salary by 20 per cent. With growing interest in their goalkeeper, however, Schalke are ready to open talks over a new deal. Felix Magath, the Schalke head coach, said: “He is definitely with us until 2012. But we are in conversation and will meet again in the spring.

“The discussions so far suggest that we have a chance to extend Manuel’s contract.”

United goalkeeping coach Eric Steele admitted this month that the club had identified three leading contenders to replace Van der Sar.

Liverpool's Pepe Reina has been considered by United, who are aware of the £20 million release clause in the Spaniard’s contract at Anfield, but the difficulties in prising a player from Liverpool, including the off-field furore that could affect any player moving between the clubs, has rendered Reina as an outsider to replace Van der Sar.

United could yet turn to Reina, who continues to interest Arsenal, should they fail to land any of their top three targets. Schalke’s determination to retain Neuer could prompt United to firm up their interest in Stekelenburg, who is expected to leave Ajax this summer, but Atletico youngster De Gea has reiterated his readiness to remain in Madrid.

The Spain Under-21 goalkeeper said: “If you’re comfortable in your club, you do not look for anything. Football is so that, when you feel comfortable in a club, there is no need to change. That’s my situation.”
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Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Manchester United striker Wayne Rooney set for further court battle with former agents

Manchester United striker Wayne Rooney set for further court battle with former agentsManchester United forward Wayne Rooney could face another date in court after his former sports management company, Proactive, were granted permission to appeal the right to appeal a decision made last year, report.

Rooney, who left the firm in 2008, had a contract with Proactive that stated they would receive 20 per cent commission for deals while the striker was with Everton so when the payments were not received they took the striker and his agent Paul Stretford, the founder of Proactive, to court.

And in July 2010 Proactive’s claim to recoup the £4 million they were owed in commission was deemed unenforceable by the judge at Manchester Mercantile court.

However yesterday, at the Court of Appeal in London, the sports management company was given permission to appeal that decision which could see Rooney back in court in the near future.
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Sunday, February 6, 2011

Mick McCarthy hopes win over Manchester United will silence survival doubters

Mick McCarthy hopes win over Manchester United will silence survival doubtersMick McCarthy is full of pride after his side’s heroics in sending Manchester United crashing to their first defeat of the season and the Wolves boss insists his side's place in the Premier League does not reflect their performances.

Suffering a last-gasp defeat at Bolton in midweek, McCarthy was left fielding questions on how he would raise his shattered side for the visit of a side yet to taste defeat.

McCarthy told the club’s official website: "I am very proud of the lads but I always am for the way they go about their job. "I was on Wednesday night as well even though we made a rick which cost us the game.
"I get a little bit tired of people asking about team spirit and morale and having to lift them up but again this performance shows everyone the character in the squad.

"My teams are built on team spirit but we've a bit more quality than just that.”In his 100th game as a Premier League manager, McCarthy watched his side fall behind to an early Nani strike before stunning United with two goals before the interval.

"We'd started great and with a good tempo and could have been 1-0 up but then Nani showed a bit of brilliance,” he added. "I guess a lot of teams may have capitulated especially after the disappointment in the week but it speaks volumes for the players to be honest."

George Elokobi and Kevin Doyle both headed home from set-pieces prior to the interval and set up a second-half in which Wolves defended doggedly to clinch their first win in four and their first victory over United since 2004.

"We've played well this season and perhaps not had the results we deserve,” added McCarthy.

"I always thought it was going to be a season of trials and tribulations and never for one minute thought it would be plain sailing and happy every weekend.

"But Saturdays like this make up for the disappointment from Wednesday."McCarthy who is 52 on Monday, also moved to praise defender Ronald Zubar who came under-fire on Wednesday for a poorly hit back pass which gifted Daniel Sturridge a debut goal and Bolton a 94th minute victory.

"I trusted him and picked him because I know what he is all about," said McCarthy. "You have to show faith in players and don't just leave him out for one aberration. "And what a terrific response from him after - I'm thrilled for him - we all love him and he's a terrific guy.”

Wolves now face a trip to the Emirates next week but will have one eye on tomorrow’s relegation six-pointer between West Ham and Birmingham, sides who accompany Wolves in the dreaded drop zone.
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Saturday, February 5, 2011

Manchester United boss thanks Carlisle Utd for looking after youngsters

Manchester United boss thanks Carlisle Utd for looking after youngstersIn an exclusive interview with News & Star Sport, Ferguson revealed how impressed he has been with Blues boss Greg Abbott which has led to his willingness to send some of his future stars to the League One club.

Highly-rated left-back Joe Dudgeon is the latest Old Trafford kid to arrive at Carlisle on loan after being packed off by Ferguson to gain first-team experience.

The 20-year-old, who made his senior football debut in last Saturday’s 2-2 draw at home to Oldham Athletic, has followed in the footsteps of James Chester, who spent three months on loan at Carlisle before signing for Hull City last month in a £300,000 deal.

Corry Evans and Oliver Norwood are two other promising Manchester United youngsters who have been on loan at Carlisle.

The Manchester United supremo’s delight at how his young players have flourished during loan spells at Carlisle raises the tantalising prospect of more Fergie fledglings landing at Brunton Park.

Ferguson told News & Star Sport: “Greg is doing a really good job up there, and he is a young, positive manager. Carlisle look after our players very well and are a well organised club. They always keep us updated on how our players are progressing.

“We send our players out on loan to give them more playing time and Greg has done a great job with the players he has had from us.”

Ferguson is keen for his young players to get senior football experience with lower-league clubs like Carlisle rather than play reserve team football, and he has fostered a close working relationship with Abbott.

Abbott revealed last week that he had spent 20 minutes on the phone to his Manchester United counterpart while arranging Dudgeon’s loan move to Carlisle.

The Blues boss said: “The manager rang me personally to talk about him and he holds Joe in the highest regard.

“It is one of the pleasures of the job getting to speak to Sir Alex. He told us to keep things going and said if he could ever be of help he would try to help us. He likes the way we’ve done things.

“It was great that he took the time to ring as he has enough things to concentrate on. They are fighting for four trophies and the Johnstone’s Paint Trophy isn’t one of them!”
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Thursday, February 3, 2011

Manchester United Defender Retires

Manchester United defender Gary Neville retired after a 20-year career spent entirely with the club. Neville, who turns 36 on Feb. 18, signed with United and played 602 games in its most successful era. His career was curtailed the past four years by recurring injuries.

Luis Suárez, who was acquired at Monday’s transfer deadline from Ajax of Amsterdam, scored in his Liverpool debut. He entered as a substitute and scored in the 78th minute of a 2-0 win over Stoke in an English Premier League game.
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Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson's drive can help us match Treble winners, insists Rio Ferdinand

Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson's drive can help us match Treble winners, insists Rio FerdinandUnited will stretch their unbeaten run in the Premier League to a club record-equalling 29 games if they avoid defeat against Aston Villa on Tuesday night.

Unbeaten in the league since losing to Chelsea at Old Trafford last April, Ferguson’s team will match the run between December 1998 to October 1999 if they take a point or more against Gérard Houllier’s resurgent Villa.

During the record-breaking run in the Nineties, United won 20 and drew nine games before Chelsea thumped them 5-0 at Stamford Bridge.

United have won 18 and drawn 10 of their league fixtures this time around, but their ability to rescue seemingly lost causes with fightbacks at Villa and Blackpool has been the stand-out feature.

Against both Villa and Blackpool United overturned a 2-0 deficit late in the game to emerge unbeaten and Ferdinand, who has declared himself fit to return on Tuesday night after missing the last three games in all competitions, insists that the determination to sustain the unbeaten run comes directly from Ferguson. “You never lose faith when you play for Manchester United,” Ferdinand said. “It’s in our make-up that the game is not over until the final whistle has blown and, until then, you try your hardest.

“It comes from the manager because the manager has got that desire and will to win. He has been here for almost 25 years and if he’s still got it, then why haven’t players that have only been here for a year, two years, 10 years, whatever?

“It comes from him and filters down through the club and that’s always the way it has been. That’s why you see so often that we can come back from adverse situations and create results like we did against Blackpool.

"If you do that week in, week out you get a bit of luck and you get your rewards.

“We’ve done it all season, gone goals behind and come back. We did it at Villa when we were 2-0 down and got a draw.

“During the Blackpool game last week, I’ve never had so many tweets in my life! People tweeting and saying ‘you’re this, you're that, you’re finished.’ But we showed otherwise.”

United are now 11/1 by bookmakers Betfair to emulate Arsenal’s Invincibles of 2003-04 by remaining unbeaten in the league for the rest of the season and leading goalscorer Dimitar Berbatov claims that confidence is growing within the squad that they can rise to the challenge.

“I remember Arsenal winning the title without losing a game and it was a tremendous run,” said Berbatov. “But I’m confident we can do it too. We know we have some difficult away matches, but I believe we’re capable of finishing without a single defeat.”

Ferguson is expected to restore his first choice back four to the starting line-up against Villa after making wholesale changes for Saturday’s FA Cup victory at Southampton.

But the United manager expects Villa, for whom £24 million new signing Darren Bent scored on his debut against Manchester City last week, to provide a stern test of his team’s unbeaten run.

Ferguson said: “Whatever you say about Bent, he’s certainly got a reasonable goal ratio at all his clubs. He cost a lot of money but that will be justified if he gets them into a far better position.

“When you are down there in the Premier League it’s not easy to get out of it, but two victories can make a difference and they are getting their squad back after injuries.”
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