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Juan
Mata and Marcos Rojo both claimed the winner as Manchester United survived a
nerve-jangling finish to beat Stoke 2-1 at Old Trafford yesterday.
Mata
was credited with the decisive strike at Old Trafford after his 59th-minute
cross from a free-kick appeared to bounce straight in, although Rojo celebrated
as if he had got a faint touch.
There
was great drama in injury time as David de Gea produced two brilliant saves to
deny Mame Biram Diouf and Marko Arnautovic, before Ashley Young then
sensationally cleared off the line from Diouf.
It
secured a fourth successive Barclays Premier League win for United - who had
been without captain Wayne Rooney - but only by the skin of their teeth.
Marouane
Fellaini headed the hosts ahead midway through the first half but Steven Nzonzi
equalised before the break with a superb strike.
Fellaini
was also involved in a moment of controversy in the build-up to the 39th-minute
Stoke leveller when he appeared to claim he was kicked in the neck by Oussama
Assaidi.
The
Belgian, who also spurned a good chance soon after, was still holding his neck
at half-time but replays suggested Assaidi had made no contact in that area.
Rooney
was still feeling the effects of banging his knee on an advertising hoarding at
the weekend and United were also without record signing Angel Di Maria.
That
gave youngster James Wilson a chance to play up front alongside Robin van
Persie while Ander Herrera also started, but the hosts were subdued in the
early stages.
It
was not until they were gifted an opportunity after 17 minutes that they came
to life, as Stoke goalkeeper Begovic passed to Van Persie.
The
Dutchman powered into the box and pulled back to Herrera but the Spaniard was
too hasty and shot over.
Herrera
quickly made amends for that miss as four minutes later he collected a pass
from Mata and lofted a dangerous cross for Fellaini at the back post.
Erik
Pieters failed to pick up the Belgian, who timed his leap superbly to head past
a helpless Begovic.
United
also had a good appeal for a penalty turned down as Wilson appeared to be
kicked by Geoff Cameron but referee Jon Moss gave nothing.
Stoke
tried to respond and Pieters whipped in a good ball from the left looking for
Stephen Ireland or Bojan Krkic, but Rojo intervened.
It
was clear Stoke were not prepared to surrender in the manner Hull did at the
same ground on Saturday and they pulled back level before the break.
Controversy
arose as Fellaini went down clutching his neck as Assaidi won a 50-50 ball.
Assaidi may have caught the United midfielder on the hand or top of the thigh
in the challenge but not his neck, as the Belgian appeared to claim.
Whatever
occurred, Moss saw nothing untoward and both sides played on.
Bojan
ran at the heart of the United defence and was crowded out as he reached the
edge of the area. United failed to clear, however, and the ball ran into the
path of Nzonzi, who lashed home a fierce shot from just inside the 'D'.
Fellaini
continued to hold his neck but it did not seem to be affecting him just before
half-time as he went close to restoring United's lead.
United
won a free-kick outside the box on the right and a shot from Van Persie took a
deflection and found its way to the Belgian in front of goal. This time he
scuffed a shot and Begovic saved at the second attempt.
Stoke,
who lost Steve Sidwell and Glenn Whelan to injury at the weekend, had another
scare early in the second half when Pieters needed lengthy treatment after a
clash with Van Persie.
That
incident occurred during a scrappy spell but United reclaimed the lead just
before hour as Mata floated in a free-kick from the right. The ball appeared to
dip over everyone in the area and bounce in at the far post, although Rojo
claimed to have got a touch.
Wilson,
the 19-year-old who scored twice on debut last season, almost scored a third
for United after a good run from just inside the Stoke half but he clipped his
shot just wide.
Wilson
made another charge but was crudely hacked down by Ireland, who was booked.
Another good break led to a chance for Fellaini but he blasted wide.
United
were almost made to pay for those misses in a breathless four minutes of injury
time.
But
De Gea, who had had a quiet game, remained alert to the last as he kept out a
Diouf header and a powerful Arnautovic strike. The latter seemed to no avail as
the ball rolled along the line to Diouf, but Young dramatically hacked clear
from under the crossbar.
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