Manchester United 2 Chelsea 1: Sir Alex laps it up after Hernandez and Vidic hand boss the glory
Take a bow, Manchester United. Sir Alex Ferguson did so before the Stretford End moments after the final whistle and rightly so given how impressive his side were on Sunday.Not for the first time this season, they have proved themselves players who rise to the occasion. A team who now sit within touching distance of the 19th league title they so desperately crave because they possess a spirit that has too often been missing in their main rivals.

Game over: United are now certain to win a record 19th title thanks to their victory over Chelsea
Ferguson will obviously take enormous satisfaction from knocking Liverpool off their perch but he will also derive great pleasure from the way they have taken the title off Chelsea, too. The margin of victory might have been bigger had Howard Webb awarded a penalty, possibly even two.
Are United inferior to some of the teams Ferguson has created in the past? Quite possibly, but it is time to move on from such comparisons and instead recognise the qualities this group possess.
Qualities that have not only allowed them to all but land Ferguson’s 12th championship but gain a place in their third Champions League final in four years, too. Never mind a 17th win in 18 home league games.

Easy Peasy: Javier Hernandez scored with little over half a minute on the clock
While Park Ji-sung and Antonio Valencia were marvellous on the flanks, Ryan Giggs and Michael Carrick were superb in the centre. Carrick was the model of class and composure, so calm and assured in the midfield battle zone.
In Giggs he had the ideal partner — a player whose passing was bordering on perfection, as impressive as players like Frank Lampard and Michael Essien were disappointing.
Giggs received Sky Sports’ man-of-the-match champagne afterwards and it was far from an injustice but, for this observer, he was actually pipped by Park for such an accolade.
The South Korean started with the pass that enabled Javier Hernandez to score his 20th goal of the season after just 36 seconds and he was outstanding from the first minute to the last, offensively and defensively.
At the back, United were again so much better than their opponents. Where Rio Ferdinand and Nemanja Vidic were so formidable — Vidic even grabbing what proved to be the decisive second goal — David Luiz and John Terry were surprisingly disappointing. Luiz still looks like an excellent January signing but he was very much at fault for the first goal and looked so nervous that Carlo Ancelotti decided to hook him at half-time.

Pure delight: Hernandez's goal was the 20th of his stunning debut campaign
Ferguson’s position is obviously much more secure and as a manager he looks like a genius this week. He took the decision to rest so many players in a European semi-final and the gamble has paid off beautifully. A place alongside Barcelona at Wembley and a team playing with fresh legs here at Old Trafford four days later. ‘That has won us the title,’ declared Ferguson.

Head boy: Nemanja Vidic added a second before the break from a corner
United were so much more alert. Wayne Rooney forced a fine save from Cech with a beautifully hit strike and Hernandez was then inches away from meeting a Park cross with a close-range effort.
Other opportunities would follow before Chelsea eventually responded with a corner that very nearly enabled Didier Drogba, then Salomon Kalou, to strike. But when Giggs followed a short-corner routine with Park in the 23rd minute by beating Kalou and then delivering a perfect cross, Vidic surged ahead of a static Branislav Ivanovic to send a bouncing header beyond Cech for United’s second goal.

Mere consolation: Lampard kept the game alive but Chelsea rarely threatened afterwards
Ancelotti took off John Mikel Obi as well as Luiz at half-time, sending on Ramires and Alex, but United remained dominant, even if Lampard managed to reduce the deficit in the 68th minute when he pounced on Ivanovic’s header — from a deflected Ramires cross — with a close-range volley.
By then, United had been denied two possible penalties. First when Lampard blocked a Valencia cross with a raised hand, then when Valencia and Terry collided.
But Rooney and Hernandez should have scored after that — Rooney seeing one effort cleared off the line by Alex — and it would have felt hugely unfair had Chelsea snatched an equaliser during a tense, if still one-sided, final 20 minutes.
Will this be Ferguson’s greatest achievement? That is open to debate but he has not enjoyed many moments more than this one.

End of the road: Chelsea will now likely rebuild in the summer
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