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Van Persie hat-trick salvages United season
Van Persie hat-trick salvages United season
Robin van Persie scored a hat-trick as Manchester United beat Olympiakos 3-0 to make the quarter-finals of the Champions League on Wednesday. (AFP)
Reuters/Manchester
Robin van Persie’s hat-trick lifted the gloom surrounding Manchester United and manager David Moyes as the English side beat Olympiakos Piraeus 3-0 to overturn a 2-0 first-leg deficit and reach the Champions League quarter-finals on Wednesday.
United, mounting a dismal defence of their Premier League title in Moyes’s first campaign since replacing Alex Ferguson, kept alive their last remaining hope of lifting a trophy this season.
Asked to show character by their manager, United responded with Van Persie showing a clinical edge that has been missing of late while the recalled Ryan Giggs was also instrumental on his first start since late January.
Van Persie began the Old Trafford comeback with a 25th-minute penalty, awarded after he had been shoved in the back by Jose Holebas. The Dutchman levelled the tie on aggregate in first-half stoppage time, steering in Wayne Rooney’s cross and Van Persie completed his hat-trick with a free-kick six minutes after the break that left Olympiakos keeper Roberto rooted to the spot.
Moyes, who cut a defiant figure this week despite his troubled start, praised a “magnificent team performance”.
“There were no passengers tonight, everyone fought their corner and we played some really good football,” the Scot said after United joined Premier League leaders Chelsea as the only English representatives in the last eight of Europe’s elite club competition.
“It’s especially pleasing as we did not play well in the first leg in Greece but came back strongly tonight. We might not be favourites to win the Champions League this season but if we go into the quarter-finals as underdogs that’s fine by me. With this squad this club can be more than a match for anyone.”
Giggs provided the passes for two of the goals on his 140th appearance in the competition, just two off the record held by Raul.
“It was always going to be tough not to concede a goal and to score three goals but we managed it. The crowd got us over the finishing line. Hopefully tonight can be the turning point in our season,” Giggs said.
Only twice in their long European history had Manchester United recovered from a 2-0 first-leg defeat to advance—the last time 30 years ago when they came back from the same first-leg score to beat Barcelona 3-2 on aggregate in the European Cup Winners Cup quarter-finals.
They also had history on their side with Olympiakos having lost all of their previous 11 European matches in England and had not scored a goal against United in their two previous meetings at Old trafford.
A repeat performance of the famous 1984 comeback over Barca appeared possible after United started with a much brighter tempo than they showed at any time in their humbling 3-0 defeat by Liverpool in the Premier League on Sunday.
After Arsenal loanee Joel Campbell went close in the second minute for the Greeks, United took control of the game with Giggs, Danny Welbeck and Antonio Valencia, dominating the midfield both centrally and on the flanks.
Giggs picked out Rooney to head against the foot of the post after 18 minutes and it was from another angled delivery that Van Persie was pushed over by Holebas to put United ahead from the spot.
Giggs was involved in United’s second, finding Rooney with another flighted pass for the striker to cross low for Van Persie to steer past Roberto.
United could never relax at the back with Olympiakos a constant threat on the counter-attack and it needed a superb double-save from goalkeeper David De Gea to keep the Greek side out.
He first kept out a header from David Fuster, then the follow-up from Alejandro Dominguez to keep United in the tie.
Van Persie’s free-kick early in the second half proved decisive, although the Dutch striker was carried off on a stretcher in the final minutes with an apparent leg injury.
Moyes said the striker took a knock behind the knee but was “hopeful it was not too bad”.
Olympiakos coach Michel said his side’s first-leg lead was never going to prove enough. “We tried for the early quick goal to kill off the tie, but it did not come,” he said. “We played as well as we could play, but I always felt 2-0 was never going to be quite good enough.”
Moyes, however, is not getting too carried away by the win and is keeping his feet firmly on the ground.
“What I am not going to say is that this result is the start of a change in our fortunes, though I hope it is,” Moyes said. “There have been a few false starts already this season and while this is a really good result and a really important win I cannot say that everything will change now. I have a big job to do here, a lot of changes and it will take time.”
The one thing that is sure is that if United had gone out to Olympiakos, the pressure on Moyes would have been even greater than it has been over the last few months. They have suffered a series of ignominious home defeats and the performance against Liverpool was probably their worst of the season.
United return to league action tomorrow when they visit one of their least popular grounds in West Ham’s Upton Park. A good result there and victory over neighbours Manchester City next Tuesday and perhaps Moyes might start to believe that the season really is beginning to turn around.