Martin Samuel, Chief Football Correspondent
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Cristiano Ronaldo has the goalscoring record of a striker and, last night, he scored goals in the manner of one, too. This was no magician’s show, no masterclass of quick feet and dizzying technique. It did not have to be, such was Manchester United’s superiority. Even so, as Carlos Tévez experienced 90 minutes that were frustration personified and Wayne Rooney missed a sitter on his return from injury, Ronaldo gave his forward partners a lesson in the fine art of the clinical finish.
With his first, a shot from close range into the roof of the net, and his second, a powerful header, Ronaldo took his total for the season to 13, making him the most prolific scorer in the country, one ahead of Robbie Keane, the Tottenham Hotspur captain. The Ireland player is a striker by trade, however, while Ronaldo is a midfield player who scores, although there could soon be a demarcation dispute if he carries on like this. Last season he found the net 23 times, against Fulham he passed beyond the halfway stage for that total with three weeks to go before Christmas. Even in a team who create as many chances as United, it is a stunning achievement.
Ronaldo missed out on the European Footballer of the Year crown at the weekend, beaten by Kaká, of AC Milan, and the same result is expected at the world event, but in the domestic game his supremacy is unsurpassed. Cesc Fàbregas was in brilliant form for Arsenal until his hamstring injury, but if Ronaldo scores 30 goals from midfield for his club — and that is his trajectory at present — who would bet against him retaining the title of domestic Footballer of the Year?
Ignore his booking for diving. The referee, Rob Styles, made an embarrassing error and will no doubt realise his foolishness the moment he watches a replay. Ronaldo was caught by Antti Niemi, the Fulham goalkeeper, as he ran through one-on-one and the correct decision would have been to give a penalty. Even if there had been no contact, the nature of Niemi’s challenge meant that Ronaldo had to jump high to avoid a collision and he should have been indulged for that, at least. To place an accusation of fakery against a man, the referee should be absolutely sure. Styles appeared to be acting on no more than a hunch, and a rotten one at that, and it was no surprise that Sir Alex Ferguson was deeply unimpressed.
“It was the result of the referee having a perceived idea that Ronaldo dives,” the United manager said. “He is not like that any more, he is a mature, magnificent footballer, but he is paying for this reputation.
“In fairness to the referee, though, the goalkeeper conned him. He claimed straight away that Ronaldo dived; they all do it. It was a ridiculous decision. He was going on goal full pelt — why would he dive anyway?”
Styles sent Ronaldo off in May 2004 at Villa Park for kicking the ball away, a point that was not lost on the player, although he was dignified in accepting the decision. “I was trying to do my job, he was trying to do his job and I respect that,” he said. “My feeling was that it was a penalty, but it was not the important thing tonight. The important thing was three points.”
These were secured by Ronaldo, naturally. Such was United’s control of the game, he had it won from the tenth minute, when Fulham made a dreadful mess of clearing a corner from Ryan Giggs, Steven Davis heading the ball back into the penalty area after Dejan Stefanovic had cleared it. Nemanja Vidic headed it on, at which point Ronaldo grew tired of the whole haphazard process and lashed the ball past Niemi, almost impatiently.
The clincher came after 58 minutes when John O’Shea, the United substitute, crossed from the left and Ronaldo rose above a less-than-alert Stefanovic to head the ball into the corner of the net. It would have been a routine goal coming from a striker; that it was the work of a player whose gift is at its greatest when the ball is on the ground demonstrated what sets Ronaldo apart from his peers. Well, all but one of them, anyway, according to the football writers of Europe.
Ferguson complained that United missed an uncommon number of chances and, on that front, it was hard to disagree. Tévez, alone, could have added six goals to the scoreline, even before half-time. Time and again, he carved Fulham open, only to be frustrated by a storming turn from Niemi or a failing in the execution. It would be harsh to be too tough on the Argentina striker, though. For long periods, he was the most exciting player on the field.
It would be too time-consuming to recount his misses in full, so here is the potted version: heads wide at full stretch from a cross by Anderson (three minutes); low shot saved after a one-two with Wes Brown (5); shot blocked by Stefanovic after good work by Giggs and Rooney (7); brilliant stop by Niemi after a cross by Giggs, Tévez’s near-post header striking him in the face (22); header wide after Fulham failed to clear another corner by Giggs (32); curling, inswinging shot from an acute angle, forcing an athletic save from Niemi (45).
Tévez was not at fault for the two second-half errors in front of goal, however, which fell to Rooney and Louis Saha, the substitute, left one-on-one with the goalkeeper without success. “It was a reasonable performance, but too many chances were missed,” Ferguson said. “We’re usually better than that because we were left with the goalkeeper quite a few times and did nothing with it.”
Perhaps as surprising as United’s failure was the short spell when Fulham could have equalised. Danny Murphy twice came close with shots and Shefki Kuqi headed a good chance over.
Not a night for strikers, then. Not much of a night for the referee. If only everything was as reliable as Ronaldo.
Manchester United (4-4-2): E van der Sar – W Brown, R Ferdinand (sub: M Carrick, 74min), N Vidic, P Evra (sub: J O’Shea, 46) – C Ronaldo, O Hargreaves, Anderson, R Giggs – W Rooney (sub: L Saha, 71), C Tévez. Substitutes not used: T Kuszczak, D Fletcher. Booked: Vidic, Ronaldo.
Fulham (4-4-2): A Niemi – E Omozusi, A Hughes, D Stefanovic, P Konchesky – S Davies, D Murphy, S Davis, C Dempsey (sub: D Healy, 64) – S Kuqi, H Bouazza (sub: Seol Ki Hyeon, 71). Substitutes not used: A Warner, C Bocanegra, C Baird. Booked: Davies.
Referee: R Styles.
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the issue of contact is irrelevant. niemi came out and missed the ball and impeded ronaldo's progress. if ronaldo had to hurdle him to avoid contact, it's a foul. there is no way ronaldo could have avoided niemi and stayed on his feet. not to mention niemi deliberately tried to grab at ronaldo as he went over him. it was a blatant penalty.
kaka got to rest most of last season, along with the rest of the underachieving milan team, and played against a united missing their first choice back four. even liverpool have managed to win the european cup when they were hopeless in the league. united have to put in a performance every week. well, if you don't count against bolton. because united go for the treble every season. do you know what a treble is, rory?
if karma has any kind of memory, it will remember john aldridge diving for penalties every other week at anfield. and united will beat liverpool 4-0.
jem, london, uk
Ronaldo wasn't a non-entity against Milan. It was very much a two-man show, albeit that Kaka's show was noticeably better.
Neel, London,
Ronaldo seems to be paying for his early career diving misdemeanors in England in much the same way as he pays for his humiliation of opposition players by being kicked on a weekly basis. His growing maturity suggests that he will cope with these additional obstacles easily.
Mark, Matlock,
Does Martin Samuel really agree it was not a dive? I find that unbelievable. Why did Ronaldo flick his leg after he had not been touched? If he was touched it was slight. Ronaldo is a 6 foot 2 athlete who would take a bit more than a brush on his foot to fall over. Incredible
Sam , London,
Ronaldo is WORLD CLASS.No disrespect to Kaka but he helped his team winning only the Champions league whereas nobody can deny the fact that Ron was most inflential in United winning the Premier league,getting to the FA Cup final and getting to the Champions leage semi final to be ironically beaten by Kaka and his team. Furthermore he has been fantastic for his country. I think the reputation Ronaldo forged in the World cup and being called a diver costed him the well deserved award.
He will definitely win in next year.
Romeo, London,
Another fantastic performance by Ronaldo yesterday, unlike Rob Styles' refereeing!
Anj Chelvaraj, Egham, UK
Very good player, but certainly not second in the world.
JonO, Canaries, Spain
The hyenas laughing at Ronaldo for the booking last night, claiming 'karma', would do well to read again his response to the ref's decision: "I was trying to do my job, he was trying to do his job and I respect that.â
In a game where refereeing errors are commonplace and costly, and where managers relentlessly blame officials for their own faults, it is a refreshing attitude and one I'm sure many people would not expect. Sadly, I think they're too busy laughing too have any respect.
chris, Worthing, England
the only reason ronaldo did not shine against ac milan last year (and the year before that too) is tactical. ferguson is happy enough to encourage his players to attack lesser teams but everytime they come up against anyone half decent he tends to become cautious and adopt a 451. this leaves an isolated man upfront, disciplined midfield and less movement allowing for teams to double and sometimes even triple mark the threat of ronaldo. as a united fan i expect to see something like that at anfield next week. unfortunatley.
jez, shoreditch,
If there is any criticism to be levelled at Ronaldo it is that he goes down too easily under a challenge. This is hardly unusual in the modern game though. In terms of actual diving ie. Falling down when no contact has been made, you'll find very few, if any, incidents involving Ronaldo.
Mike Farren, Manchester, England
Rory Collins
What a load of tosh, Ronaldo does do well against the top teams - recently scoring against Arsenal - not many players have achieved that this season.
Please note that Kaka was rested before the semi finals while Ronaldo was hardly rested at all, all season.
Plus Utd had a make shift defense against Milan while they could depend upon their strongest back four!
And on the diving issue, he hasn't dived for over 3 seasons!!!
Let me guess - a Liverpool supporter???
Ryan, London,
it is the mark of maturity that Ronaldo continue to
produce magical performances despite pettiness
of referees like Styles
Eugene
eugene, burnham, england
There's no doubt about the fact that Ronaldo is a highly gifted player.
It's worth noting, however, that he tends to shine against inferior opposition, such as the Fulhams of this world.
I seem to remember him being woeful last year aginst AC Milan when they needed him the most. He was a non entity, whereas Kaka tore United apart at Old Trafford, proving his world class status.
As for the penalty incident, well I can only assume some karma is coming back his way for his history of diving.
Another 15 such incidents and he's all square with the karma gods.
Let's see how much he shines agains Liverpool (who have the best defence in the league) at Anfield in a few weeks.
Rory Collins, Sydney via Cork, Australia
Hello ,
Just a few words to reenforce my admiration to a player that , is
growing in every game , incredible the way he flyes over de defenders , made me recall a certain Michael Jordan ; He clearly deserves the biggest award in World's football because I cannot see another player so complete and at same time so generouse with is collegues ( just count how many assistances he does per season ) ; I think the only thing missing is , RONALDO ( yes, that was the player i was refering to!!! ) will be the future Keeper of ManUtd before he retires , and if necessary could be better referee then "Sir Robber" Styles .
Luis Normal One, Portimão, Portugal
Ronaldo the best
Slavko, kumanovo, Macedonia