Scholes keeps hope alive

Man City 0 Man United 1: Predictions were abound ahead of the Manchester derby that a win for the blue half could herald the…

Man City 0 Man United 1:Predictions were abound ahead of the Manchester derby that a win for the blue half could herald the demise of their illustrious neighbours. After 90 minutes it looked like the hosts had at least thwarted their guests' pursuit of a record-breaking 19th title, but then up popped a man who has epitomised United's winning mentality for nearly 20 years.

The 35-year-old Paul Scholes signed a one-year extension at Old Trafford yesterday and marked it with his 149th goal for the club, a most timely intervention when glancing home Patrice Evra's 93rd minute cross.

City will believe they didn't deserve to lose on the strength of a second half performance that saw them stretch United to the limit, but goals win games and late goals quite often win titles. United are now one point behind Chelsea who face Tottenham later today, but they're still in the race for an unprecedented four-in-a-row.

Yet again after a meeting with the team they are so desperate to usurp, City must lift themselves off the floor after suffering the most shattering of blows, still believing a Champions League place can be theirs.

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After his appearance against Bayern Munich 10 days ago, it was hardly a surprise that Wayne Rooney should declare himself fit after just a single day’s training.

But the prospective PFA player-of-the-year looked ill at ease, repeated rants at referee Martin Atkinson and a petulant kick at Nigel de Jong belied his mood.

Rooney appeared tentative, he declined to set up Ryan Giggs when he had the chance to do so, and there was no real conviction behind his only decent opportunity of the opening period, when Antonio Valencia forced the ball into the area.

Having beaten Kolo Toure with a deft piece of skill, the goal opened up for striker, who had scored 34 times before his unfortunate ankle injury.

He dragged the effort wide though, which only increased his frustration, his contribution eventually brought to an end 15 minutes from time when he was replaced by Dimitar Berbatov.

Rooney’s attack on De Jong might have been revenge for a thunderous challenge from the Dutchman on Patrice Evra, which set the tone for an opening period high on energy but low on goalmouth incident.

A bulldog of a midfielder, De Jong gave United little time to settle on the ball, and though the visitors had plenty of possession, much of their passing was of a sideways variety.

Only Valencia looked as though he could cause the Blues significant problems.

Having escaped a penalty-box handball that went unseen by Atkinson and, apparently, the entire United team, returning full-back Wayne Bridge was undone by the Ecuador man just before the break.

Valencia squeezed a cross through to the near post where Giggs was alert enough to make contact, but lacked the power to beat Shay Given with a low flick.

For their part, City seemed to have more movement but invariably ran into a defensive brick wall.

Against his old club, Carlos Tevez curled an early free-kick towards the top corner only for Edwin van der Sar to make an excellent save.

It turned out to be the sum total of first-half efforts on goal from Roberto Mancini’s men, a fizzing low cross from Craig Bellamy not much to enthuse about considering his team had scored 11 times in their last two outings.

The was no discernable improvement — either in the overall quality or Rooney’s temper — in the opening minutes of the second-half.

It did Rooney no credit at all that when he was kicked by Vincent Kompany, he rolled around in apparent agony then jumped to his feet and ran off without a problem once the yellow card had been brandished.

The problem for United was that with their bulwark at less than full throttle and Valencia their only source of pace, they were reliant on guile alone to open City up.

City had more speed and a flowing move, started by Emmanuel Adebayor and inevitably involving Tevez, ended when Craig Bellamy crashed a shot into the side-netting.

Shortly afterwards, the Blues had a penalty appeal turned down.

Gareth Barry could be accused of making too much of minimal contact by Gary Neville. There was certainly contact though, and not with the ball on Neville’s part.

The crowd were still digesting that incident when Giggs got on the end of a long ball beyond the City defence and would have been clean through if he had not been confronted immediately by Given, whose goal was threatened by Berbatov with a deft header shortly afterwards.

It then took the interventions of Nemanja Vidic and Darren Fletcher to ensure a goalmouth scramble caused by Van der Sar’s ill-advised charge to meet a cross did not ended in disaster for the visitors.

This flurry of activity gave the impression of a game finally heading somewhere. It took Scholes to find the map.