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Sports

2 Pogba penalties give Man Utd win

By : Tetteh Djanmanor on 13 Apr 2019, 10:48

Pogba

West Ham manager Manuel Pellegrini said he is “sure” his side would have beaten Manchester United at Old Trafford had VAR been in place.

An under-par United won thanks to two Paul Pogba penalties, returning to winning ways after back-to-back defeats.

But the decision to award United their first penalty – when Robert Snodgrass was deemed to have fouled Juan Mata – was contentious, and West Ham should have taken the lead in the ninth minute but Felipe Anderson’s goal was incorrectly ruled out for offside.

Pellegrini also said United’s second penalty should not have stood because Anthony Martial, who was fouled by Ryan Fredericks, was offside in the build-up – although replays seemed to show he was onside.

“I am not complaining about the referee because they were not big mistakes, difficult mistakes, but with technology we have a different score,” Pellegrini said.

“With VAR, I am sure we would win the game 1-0.

“Felipe Anderson was onside. It was not a penalty from Robert. The last goal from Man Utd was offside, the last pass.”

The Hammers deservedly equalised through Anderson shortly after half-time, when he converted Manuel Lanzini’s cross at the back post and Michail Antonio twice came close to putting Pellegrini’s side 2-1 in front.

First he smashed a shot from the edge of the box off the crossbar and minutes later had a header excellently saved by David de Gea.

United manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer admitted his side “got away with it”.

“They played better than us, it is fair to say, I don’t think anyone will disagree,” he added.

“Sometimes you get more than you deserve and today is one of those nights.”

The win sees United climb to fifth, two points behind fourth-placed Chelsea who play Liverpool on Sunday, while West Ham stay 11th.

Fortune favours Man Utd in important win

EPL table

With the second leg of their Champions League quarter-final against Barcelona to come on Tuesday, Solskjaer made five changes to his team and for much of the game they lacked fluidity, giving the ball away repeatedly in the first half in particular.

They should have fallen behind early when replays showed Diogo Dalot played Anderson onside.

For the first penalty, Snodgrass rushed back to prevent Mata shooting from the edge of the penalty area and did not get to the ball with his challenge. But there was to be little contact with the Spaniard either, who appeared to kick his own heel as he went down.

West Ham were the better side in the first half and overcame a good United spell following the introduction of Marcus Rashford, to shade the second.

Had Antonio put away either of his chances then few would have argued the Hammers deserved to lead.

There was little doubt around the foul for United’s second penalty, when Martial got in behind the defence and Fredericks brought him down when making a last-ditch attempt to deny the Frenchman a shot.

Pellegrini, however, complained that Martial was offside because he ran on to a flick by Rashford – but replays did not show any touch by the England international, meaning Martial was onside from the original pass.

Pogba calmly converted the penalty, as he had done with the first, to ensure United won for just the second time in their past six games.

With Barcelona to come on Tuesday and Premier League games against Everton, Manchester City and Chelsea to follow, it could prove to be an important victory in the race for the top four.

“[We were] lucky it wasn’t Barcelona but West Ham played well, played better than us,” Solskjaer said.

“We have one of the best goalkeepers in the world. That save is unbelievable.

“He won us the game because at 2-1 we would have struggled to create enough.

“We got away with it, got three points. In a few years no-one will remember how we played if we finished in the top four.”

West Ham’s good work to no avail

West Ham’s inconsistency has held them back this season, with wins over Manchester United and Arsenal earlier in the season often followed by poor performances like those in their three defeats in their past four games.

At Old Trafford on Saturday they impressed with Declan Rice excellent in midfield, and Anderson and Lanzini threatening in attack.

Lanzini, who has been restricted to just six starts this season due to injury, went off with what appeared to be a groin problem in the second half, but the introduction of Antonio almost immediately paid off.

Pellegrini furiously protested at the disallowed goal and the penalty decision in the first half. His side, who are in 11th place with 42 points, were unfortunate.

He must, however, take pride in the performance despite a third successive defeat.

“We had the possession and the chances of the game but you need a bit of luck to win the games,” the Chilean said.

“It is more difficult to finish in the European places but my target is to finish as high as we can and we will fight to the last day to achieve that.

“Playing like we did today will make it easier.

“It was a pleasure to see the team playing the way we did against Man Utd in their own stadium.”

Man of the match – Paul Pogba (Manchester United)

Paul Pogba

Source BBC