The Malta Independent 23 June 2025, Monday
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Manchester clubs victorious, Liverpool surprised by Villa

Malta Independent Saturday, 15 December 2012, 23:40 Last update: about 12 years ago

Manchester United stayed in control of the English Premier League by beating Sunderland 3-1 on Saturday, keeping Manchester City at arm's length following the champions' impressive win at Newcastle by the same scoreline.

Robin van Persie and Wayne Rooney teamed up to preserve United's six-point lead, with the in-form strikers both scoring at Old Trafford to add to a sublime strike by midfielder Tom Cleverley.

City recovered from its agonizing derby loss to United last weekend by winning at St. James' Park, courtesy of goals by Sergio Aguero, Javi Garcia and Yaya Toure, but United's victory ensures Alex Ferguson's side will be top at Christmas.

"Some of our football was very good and we could have scored lots of goals," Ferguson said. "We will try and keep the momentum going and consistency going."

Liverpool's resurgence was ended with a surprise 3-1 home loss to Aston Villa, Everton drew 1-1 at Stoke in a match marred by an apparent headbutt by visiting midfielder Marouane Fellaini on Ryan Shawcross, and Queens Park Rangers climbed off the foot of the table by beating Fulham 2-1 for its first victory this season.

Reading now occupies bottom spot ahead of its home match against Arsenal on Monday.

Also Saturday, Norwich claimed a fifth straight home win by beating Wigan 2-1, lifting the team into seventh place and just two points off the Champions League positions.

With Van Persie and Rooney firing in the goals, United looks an unstoppable force at present.

Van Persie's 12th goal of the season — the equal-highest in the league with Swansea midfielder Michu — set the 20-time champions on their way in the 16th minute and Cleverley made it 2-0 three minutes later. Van Persie set up Rooney to wrap up the win in the 59th minute, giving United breathing space and giving Ferguson an opportunity to send Nemanja Vidic on from the bench for his first game since September.

Frazier Campbell's 72nd-minute consolation against his former club sparked a late fightback by Sunderland that didn't produce any more goals.

"Manchester United are not top of the league for nothing," Sunderland manager Martin O'Neill said. "They are what they are, but we should take a lot of positives from the second half."

City had put the pressure on hours earlier, producing some fine football to take a 2-0 lead at halftime through Aguero's tap-in and Garcia's header from a corner.

The champions conceded a header by Demba Ba early in the second half and then had to weather an onslaught by Newcastle before Toure clinched victory 12 minutes from time.

"It's important because when you come from a defeat — any defeat, but particularly against United — it's important to start to win quickly, and we started here, where I don't think a lot of teams can win," City manager Roberto Mancini said.

"The season is long. He (Ferguson) knows football better than me. He knows that this championship is not finished."

Fellaini, one of the league's top players this season, may have landed himself in trouble with the Football Association after appearing to headbutt Shawcross to the ground as they jostled during a second-half corner.

"I've seen it, it's a terrible thing to do and I expect him to be punished," Everton manager David Moyes said.

The incident overshadowed a match that saw Shawcross gift Everton the lead with an own goal in the 36th minute, before Kenwyne Jones equalized in the 52nd.

Everton could have moved level on points with third-place Chelsea, which is on Club World Cup duty in Japan, with a win at the Britannia Stadium.

Christian Benteke was Liverpool's tormentor at Anfield, scoring twice and setting up Andreas Weimann for Aston Villa's other goal with an audacious backheel.

 

Steven Gerrard grabbed a late consolation for Liverpool but the result made a mockery of manager Brendan Rodgers' pre-match assertion that his team could challenge for a top-two spot this season.

"I don't know where that came from as it's not been like us," said Rodgers, whose team dropped back into the bottom half of the table. "We will have to take that as a bad day at the office and move on."

Enigmatic Morocco winger Adel Tarrabt scored both of QPR's goals at Loftus Road, as the hosts ended their winless start at the 17th attempt.

"He has the ability to be up there with the best," said QPR manager Harry Redknapp, who also claimed a first win in charge of the London club. "I thought it was one of the all-round great individual performances."

 
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