Manchester United Go Second After Late Marcus Rashford Winner Sinks Wolves

Marcus Rashford celebrates his late winner against Wolves that put Manchester United on Liverpool’s tail. Photograph: Ash Donelon/Manchester United/Getty Images
Marcus Rashford celebrates his late winner against Wolves that put Manchester United on Liverpool’s tail. Photograph: Ash Donelon/Manchester United/Getty Images
TT

Manchester United Go Second After Late Marcus Rashford Winner Sinks Wolves

Marcus Rashford celebrates his late winner against Wolves that put Manchester United on Liverpool’s tail. Photograph: Ash Donelon/Manchester United/Getty Images
Marcus Rashford celebrates his late winner against Wolves that put Manchester United on Liverpool’s tail. Photograph: Ash Donelon/Manchester United/Getty Images

Marcus Rashford’s deflected stoppage-time shot gave Manchester United an edgy victory over Wolves and ensured Ole Gunnar Solskjær’s side start 2021 second in the Premier League.

The encounter was the sides’ fourth meeting of 2020 and appeared destined to end in a third goalless draw. But United showed a spirit that is beginning to characterize Solskjær’s team, Rashford capping a memorable personal year by sealing the win after the indefatigable Bruno Fernandes played him in with a sublime pass.

Afterwards the delighted manager played down the idea of United being title challengers despite being only two points behind Liverpool.

“There’s no title race after 15 games – you can lose the chance of being in the race in the first 10 games of course,” Solskjær said.

“Get to 30 games, maybe then we can start talking about it. But the belief is there – the players think we can win against anyone, anywhere. This result is massive for the attitude.”

Solskjær pointed to Fernandes’s arrival at the end of the last winter transfer window as the catalyst for United’s upturn. “We go back to Bruno’s debut – also against Wolves – we are a different outfit now, better mentally and physically. Belief has come through performances and results.

“Tonight there was a fantastic attitude, a desire to keep creating something, create that little bit of luck, we earned the goal by the desire to keep going. It is a good way of ending the year. There have been so many of these type of games against Wolves so to have that edge mentally is great.”

While Solskjær pointed to how his second-half replacements – Anthony Martial and Luke Shaw – helped turn the match, United started with bright interplay between Paul Pogba, Fernandes, Mason Greenwood and Alex Telles.

Wolves then had a turn taking the contest to their opponents. Adama Traoré, operating in attack alongside Pedro Neto, burned through midfield and turned a pass to the latter, who forced a save from David de Gea. Next Vitinha got the better of Pogba and again tested the keeper.

The Wolves pressure increased when a mix-up between De Gea and Eric Bailly allowed Traoré to pull the ball back from the left to Rúben Neves, whose fierce shot was beaten away with both fists.

Solskjær urged his team to get on the ball, and they responded for a while. The problem, though, was a lackadaisical air to attacks that had no potency. One aimless Greenwood pass from the right failed to find Edinson Cavani while a Rashford backheel went wide of Telles on the opposite flank.

Better from United was a Rashford dart to the byline that presaged Telles’s cross skimming off Cavani’s head with Rui Patrício’s goal gaping. That attack offered a flash of the pace missing from too much of United’s buildup play.

By the break Wolves had been reduced to the odd counterattack. Neto won a free-kick on one such foray and took it himself. De Gea’s quicksilver reflexes enabled him to push out Roman Saïss’s volley from the cross.

For the second half Shaw replaced Telles at left-back –“tactical”, said Solskjær. Had the manager also informed his players to sharpen their act, the sight of Pogba’s clumsy touch near halfway will have dismayed him. And if there was a noticeable increase in vocal intensity – both teams contributing with shouts of encouragement – the quality remained below par.

In the hope of improving Wolves’ quality, Nuno Espírito Santo brought on Daniel Podence for Vitinha but it remained United who did the majority of huffing and puffing. When Fernandes fails to spark United often suffer and so it was proving.

The Portuguese was having a rare match in which the flicks, spins, passes and runs were foundering and so Solskjær called for Martial. Greenwood was taken off for the Frenchman but because United had created a paucity of chances Rashford and Cavani might just as easily been the ones to make way.

Yet the game continued in a pattern of United domination and little else. Then there was a penalty claim denied by VAR. It came after a Cavani finish from a corner was ruled out for offside. Bailly’s header had hit Conor Coady’s hand before Cavani put the ball in the net but the video assistant referee decided it was not a clear error and the Wolves captain escaped.

Nuno said: “The game teaches you have to be focused until the end.”

The Guardian Sport



Olympics in India a ‘Dream’ Facing Many Hurdles

A laborer fixes the Olympic signage at the entrance of a venue ahead of the upcoming 141st International Olympic Committee (IOC) session in Mumbai on October 11, 2023. (AFP)
A laborer fixes the Olympic signage at the entrance of a venue ahead of the upcoming 141st International Olympic Committee (IOC) session in Mumbai on October 11, 2023. (AFP)
TT

Olympics in India a ‘Dream’ Facing Many Hurdles

A laborer fixes the Olympic signage at the entrance of a venue ahead of the upcoming 141st International Olympic Committee (IOC) session in Mumbai on October 11, 2023. (AFP)
A laborer fixes the Olympic signage at the entrance of a venue ahead of the upcoming 141st International Olympic Committee (IOC) session in Mumbai on October 11, 2023. (AFP)

India says it wants the 2036 Olympics in what is seen as an attempt by Narendra Modi to cement his legacy, but the country faces numerous challenges to host the biggest show on earth.

The prime minister says staging the Games in a nation where cricket is the only sport that really matters is the "dream and aspiration" of 1.4 billion people.

Experts say it is more about Modi's personal ambitions and leaving his mark on the world stage, while also sending a message about India's political and economic rise.

Modi, who is also pushing for a permanent seat on the UN Security Council, will be 86 in 2036.

"Hosting the Olympics will, in a way, burnish India's credentials as a global power," said academic Ronojoy Sen, author of "Nation at Play", a history of sport in India.

"The current government wants to showcase India's rise and its place on the global high table, and hosting the Olympic Games is one way to do it."

Already the most populous nation, India is on track to become the world's third-biggest economy long before the planned Olympics.

- Olympics in 50-degree heat? -

India submitted a formal letter of intent to the International Olympic Committee in October, but has not said where it wants to hold the Games.

Local media are tipping Ahmedabad in Modi's home state of Gujarat, a semi-arid region where temperatures surge above 50 degrees Celsius (122F) in summer.

Gujarat state has already floated a company, the Gujarat Olympic Planning and Infrastructure Corporation, with a $710 million budget.

Ahmedabad has about six million people, its heart boasting a UNESCO-listed 15th-century wall which sprawls out into a rapidly growing metropolis.

The city is home to a 130,000-seater arena, the world's biggest cricket stadium, named after Modi. It staged the 2023 Cricket World Cup final.

The city is also the headquarters of the Adani Group conglomerate, headed by billionaire tycoon and Modi's close friend Gautam Adani.

Adani was the principal sponsor for the Indian team at this summer's Paris Olympics, where the country's athletes won one silver and five bronze medals.

- 'Window of opportunity' -

Despite its vast population India's record at the Olympics is poor for a country of its size, winning only 10 gold medals in its history.

Sports lawyer Nandan Kamath said hosting an Olympics was an "unprecedented window of opportunity" to strengthen Indian sport.

"I'd like to see the Olympics as a two-week-long wedding event," he said.

"A wedding is a gateway to a marriage. The work you do before the event, and all that follows, solidifies the relationship."

Outside cricket, which will be played at the Los Angeles Games in 2028, Indian strengths traditionally include hockey and wrestling.

New Delhi is reported to be pushing for the inclusion at the Olympics of Indian sports including kabaddi and kho kho -- tag team sports -- and yoga.

Retired tennis pro Manisha Malhotra, a former Olympian and now talent scout, agreed that global sporting events can boost grassroots sports but worries India might deploy a "top-down" approach.

"Big money will come in for the elite athletes, the 2036 medal hopefuls, but it will probably end at that," said Malhotra, president of the privately funded training center, the Inspire Institute of Sport.

Veteran sports journalist Sharda Ugra said India's underwhelming sports record -- apart from cricket -- was "because of its governance structure, sporting administrations and paucity of events".

"So then, is it viable for us to be building large stadiums just because we are going to be holding the Olympics?

"The answer is definitely no."

The Indian Olympic Association is split between two rival factions, with its president P.T. Usha admitting to "internal challenges" to any bid.

- 'Poor reputation' -

After Los Angeles, Brisbane will stage the 2032 Games.

The United States and Australia both have deep experience of hosting major sporting events, including previous Olympics.

India has staged World Cups for cricket and the Asian Games twice, the last time in 1982, but it has never had an event the size of an Olympics.

Many are skeptical it can successfully pull it off.

The 2010 Commonwealth Games in New Delhi were marked by construction delays, substandard infrastructure and accusations of corruption.

Many venues today are in a poor state.

"India will need serious repairing of its poor reputation on punctuality and cleanliness," The Indian Express daily wrote in an editorial.

"While stadium aesthetics look pretty in PowerPoint presentations and 3D printing, leaking roofs or sub-par sustainability goals in construction won't help in India making the cut."