Sunderland continued their sensational form by beating
Manchester United 1-0 to relegate Fulham and Cardiff City from the Premier
League.
A draw at Manchester City and a win over Chelsea preceded
last weekend's vital 4-0 triumph for Sunderland against Cardiff and Gus Poyet's
men made it 10 points from the last 12 on offer thanks to Sebastian Larsson's
first-half volley.
Defeats to Stoke City and Newcastle United respectively
meant Fulham and Cardiff's fates were sealed, while Emanuele Giaccherini and
Fabio Borini both hit the United woodwork in the closing stages.
Sunderland now hold a three-point lead over third-bottom
Norwich City - who take on Chelsea on Sunday in their penultimate game - and a
vastly superior goal difference.
Following a vibrant 4-0 win over Norwich last Sunday,
interim United manager Ryan Giggs crashed back down to earth as a lacklustre
display that allowed the visitors to claim a first league win at Old Trafford
since May 1968.
A combination of illness and a minor groin injury kept
Wayne Rooney on the sidelines - the only enforced change of five made by Giggs
to his starting XI.
Former United defender John O'Shea almost turned Michael
Carrick's 16th-minute cross into his own goal, while Nani fizzed over and
Patrice Evra headed a 20th-minute corner into Vito Mannone's arms - though
clear-cut chances were at a premium.
However, United's early lethargy remained and the
travelling supporters were able to enliven a pensive Old Trafford atmosphere
when Sunderland took a 30th-minute lead.
Darren Fletcher allowed in-form striker Connor Wickham to
send over a cross from the right and Larsson sent a controlled volley into the
bottom-left corner.
Sunderland winger Adam Johnson twice failed to capitalise
on poor clearances from goalkeeper David de Gea as United staggered towards the
interval in disarray.
United's pedestrian tempo continued after the break but
Johnson switched off to allow the overlapping Evra into the box and his
50th-minute centre was superbly cleared behind by Wes Brown with Javier
Hernandez poised to convert.
Nemanja Vidic headed wide when the resulting corner was
worked back into the area and Sunderland suddenly found themselves defending
perilously deep.
Activity in front of the away team's goal became somewhat
frantic and Carrick and Vidic were both unable to force headers home when Phil
Jones chipped towards the back post.
Sunderland almost made the points safe on an increasingly
rare foray forward after 71 minutes - substitute Giaccherini hitting the post
before Jack Colback crashed the rebound into the side netting.
By that stage, Giggs had also called for considerable
reinforcements in the form of Adnan Januzaj, Danny Welbeck and Robin van Persie
and the latter almost enjoyed a dream return from his knee injury but prodded
wide from Jones' delivery.
Fellow striker Hernandez skied over from Evra's 81st
minute cutback before Borini came agonisingly close to compounding United's
misery, striking the woodwork with De Gea rooted to the spot.
Reports this week suggested Van Persie's countryman Louis
van Gaal is the front-runner to become David Moyes' permanent successor at Old
Trafford and he may have a major overhaul on his hands on this evidence.
Culled from Soccerway


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