Man Utd 1 Tottenham 0
Manchester United's latest Portuguese teen sensation rescued their Premier League title defence from the brink of oblivion at Old Trafford.
With United looking set for a point at best from their pulsating tussle with crisis club Tottenham, Nani repaid the first portion of his £17million transfer fee, belting a sensational winner past Paul Robinson from 30 yards.
It allowed Sir Alex Ferguson's men to register their first win of the season, and prevented them making their worst start since the year Ron Atkinson was sacked.
But it was tough luck on Spurs who put a week of off-field problems behind them to battle manfully throughout, producing a stirring display for their under-fire manager Martin Jol.
And they also had what they thought was a stonewall penalty claim turned down shortly before Nani's decisive strike.
How Jol must hate Old Trafford. Two years ago Jorge Mendes had a perfectly legitimate goal disallowed because none of the officials spotted his long-range shot had dropped over the line.
Tonight, the Dutchman is probably nursing an equal sense of injustice, although this time it would be misplaced, as Wes Brown blocked Dimitar Berbatov's bullet strike with his chest rather than his arm as everyone of a Tottenham persuasion seemed to think.
Nevertheless, with Robbie Keane hitting the bar inside 20 seconds and Berbatov denied only by Rio Ferdinand's desperate goal-line clearance before the penalty claim, Jol could legitimately argue his side deserved much more than a third loss, which makes his stated aim of a Champions League place all the more harder to attain.
Not that Jol's troubles will concern Ferguson too much after United finally got their title defence up and running after a nightmare start.
The opening three games of their title defence has yielded the sum total of one goal and two points and when kick off arrived, only Derby were below them table.
Despite Ferguson's bold pre-match declaration that his side would win, confidence inside the United camp must be fragile just now and Robbie Keane had the perfect opportunity to inflict yet more damage inside the opening 20 seconds.
After Nani gifted Steed Malbranque possession deep inside his own half, he fed Berbatov, whose overall performance was exactly what United are lacking at present.
The Bulgarian's precise flick offered Keane his sight of goal. But, from 20 yards, the Spurs skipper could only clip the top of Edwin van der Sar's crossbar.
It was the nearest either side came to breaking the deadlock during an opening period memorable for the frequent songs of the Tottenham faithful offering their backing to Jol and for the number of times United got to within 40 yards of the visitors goal and created precisely nothing.
On his home debut, Owen Hargreaves was off target with two long-range efforts, Paul Scholes flicked a shot wide and Michael Carrick was shaved the post with a 25-yard effort.
However, up front on his own, Carlos Tevez was ineffective. The need for support was clear for all to see. But, with Cristiano Ronaldo suspended, Wayne Rooney nursing a broken foot and both Louis Saha and Anderson still injured despite Ferguson's optimism both would play, the Argentina star was forced to forage alone.
If Ferguson thought things would improve after the break he was sadly mistaken.
Yet again, Spurs had the best chance as Ricardo Rocha climbed above Rio Ferdinand but, from barely six yards, could only head Gareth Bale's free-kick wide.
There was not even an hour on the clock when Michael Carrick was taken off after a truly terrible performance against his former club.
It proved the spark for a 10-minute period in which Tottenham came agonisingly close to scoring, the had what they felt was a certain penalty claim turned down before Nani finally broke the deadlock.
When the Spurs side view the incident again on TV, they will see Berbatov's shot blasted against Wes Brown's chest after the striker had received a fortunate bounce of the ball in a challenge with Edwin van der Sar.
At the time though, the striker felt the spot-kick award was certain and he led a posse of visiting players around referee Howard Webb.
Just prior to that, Berbatov must have thought he had opened the scoring when he rose first after a tangle with Nemanja Vidic, then prodded a shot through Van der Sar's legs, only for Rio Ferdinand to boot clear from virtually on his own line.The full scale of those incidents going against Tottenham became apparent on United's next attack as Nani collected a loose ball 30 yards out, turned towards the visitors goal, then unleashed a magnificent shot which appeared to flick off Tevez before it flew in.
Jol: 'I'm not under pressure'
Martin Jol believed Tottenham were hard done by after they went down to a 1-0 defeat in their Barclays Premier League clash with Manchester United at Old Trafford.
The Spurs boss, whose future at White Hart Lane has been under question this week, claimed the north London team should have been awarded a penalty when Wes Brown blocked Dimitar Berbatov's shot.
Asked if he felt Spurs were unfortunate to come away with nothing to show for their efforts, Jol said: 'Certainly I do. I felt very comfortable and the second half could have gone either way.
'We had has as many opportunities and I thought it was was a penalty. He (Brown) used everything like a keeper - and he is a defender - to keep the ball out of the net.
'It's the same all the time. Sometimes especially at these grounds you need a bit of luck and I felt we could then have come away with a win.
'In the first half we had a couple of opportunities and in the second I thought we played better and I felt Manchester United - even though they were at home - weren't the better team.'
The Dutchman denied he was feeling the heat at White Hart Lane, adding: 'I'm not under pressure and if the chairman says he is backing me then there is no problem.'
United counterpart Sir Alex Ferguson denied Spurs' claims for a penalty although he admitted the hosts had to dig in for victory.
Ferguson said: 'At the time they protested so much I thought it was a penalty, but when I've seen it (it was not) and Wes has said it has hit him on the chest. It does hit him on the chest, I'm sure of that.'
Asked for his thoughts on the game, he added: 'Narrow margin, touch and go, nothing to choose between two sides.
'I knew it was going to be almost a war of attrition in the second half.
'They dug in and got forward a bit. There was really nothing in it in the second half.
'(With the goal) I think Carlos Tevez touching the ball decided it.'
Ferguson admitted his relief at finally claiming the first victory of the season.
'I thought we lacked a little bit of confidence. Players are anxious, there is a lot of expectation here, there are new players here,' he said.
'It was a reasonable performance from us. What was required was to dig in, show great commitment.
'Tottenham are in the wrong position just as ourselves. The expectation level for both sides is very high.'
With United looking set for a point at best from their pulsating tussle with crisis club Tottenham, Nani repaid the first portion of his £17million transfer fee, belting a sensational winner past Paul Robinson from 30 yards.
It allowed Sir Alex Ferguson's men to register their first win of the season, and prevented them making their worst start since the year Ron Atkinson was sacked.
But it was tough luck on Spurs who put a week of off-field problems behind them to battle manfully throughout, producing a stirring display for their under-fire manager Martin Jol.
And they also had what they thought was a stonewall penalty claim turned down shortly before Nani's decisive strike.
How Jol must hate Old Trafford. Two years ago Jorge Mendes had a perfectly legitimate goal disallowed because none of the officials spotted his long-range shot had dropped over the line.
Tonight, the Dutchman is probably nursing an equal sense of injustice, although this time it would be misplaced, as Wes Brown blocked Dimitar Berbatov's bullet strike with his chest rather than his arm as everyone of a Tottenham persuasion seemed to think.
Nevertheless, with Robbie Keane hitting the bar inside 20 seconds and Berbatov denied only by Rio Ferdinand's desperate goal-line clearance before the penalty claim, Jol could legitimately argue his side deserved much more than a third loss, which makes his stated aim of a Champions League place all the more harder to attain.
Not that Jol's troubles will concern Ferguson too much after United finally got their title defence up and running after a nightmare start.
The opening three games of their title defence has yielded the sum total of one goal and two points and when kick off arrived, only Derby were below them table.
Despite Ferguson's bold pre-match declaration that his side would win, confidence inside the United camp must be fragile just now and Robbie Keane had the perfect opportunity to inflict yet more damage inside the opening 20 seconds.
After Nani gifted Steed Malbranque possession deep inside his own half, he fed Berbatov, whose overall performance was exactly what United are lacking at present.
The Bulgarian's precise flick offered Keane his sight of goal. But, from 20 yards, the Spurs skipper could only clip the top of Edwin van der Sar's crossbar.
It was the nearest either side came to breaking the deadlock during an opening period memorable for the frequent songs of the Tottenham faithful offering their backing to Jol and for the number of times United got to within 40 yards of the visitors goal and created precisely nothing.
On his home debut, Owen Hargreaves was off target with two long-range efforts, Paul Scholes flicked a shot wide and Michael Carrick was shaved the post with a 25-yard effort.
However, up front on his own, Carlos Tevez was ineffective. The need for support was clear for all to see. But, with Cristiano Ronaldo suspended, Wayne Rooney nursing a broken foot and both Louis Saha and Anderson still injured despite Ferguson's optimism both would play, the Argentina star was forced to forage alone.
If Ferguson thought things would improve after the break he was sadly mistaken.
Yet again, Spurs had the best chance as Ricardo Rocha climbed above Rio Ferdinand but, from barely six yards, could only head Gareth Bale's free-kick wide.
There was not even an hour on the clock when Michael Carrick was taken off after a truly terrible performance against his former club.
It proved the spark for a 10-minute period in which Tottenham came agonisingly close to scoring, the had what they felt was a certain penalty claim turned down before Nani finally broke the deadlock.
When the Spurs side view the incident again on TV, they will see Berbatov's shot blasted against Wes Brown's chest after the striker had received a fortunate bounce of the ball in a challenge with Edwin van der Sar.
At the time though, the striker felt the spot-kick award was certain and he led a posse of visiting players around referee Howard Webb.
Just prior to that, Berbatov must have thought he had opened the scoring when he rose first after a tangle with Nemanja Vidic, then prodded a shot through Van der Sar's legs, only for Rio Ferdinand to boot clear from virtually on his own line.The full scale of those incidents going against Tottenham became apparent on United's next attack as Nani collected a loose ball 30 yards out, turned towards the visitors goal, then unleashed a magnificent shot which appeared to flick off Tevez before it flew in.
Jol: 'I'm not under pressure'
Martin Jol believed Tottenham were hard done by after they went down to a 1-0 defeat in their Barclays Premier League clash with Manchester United at Old Trafford.
The Spurs boss, whose future at White Hart Lane has been under question this week, claimed the north London team should have been awarded a penalty when Wes Brown blocked Dimitar Berbatov's shot.
Asked if he felt Spurs were unfortunate to come away with nothing to show for their efforts, Jol said: 'Certainly I do. I felt very comfortable and the second half could have gone either way.
'We had has as many opportunities and I thought it was was a penalty. He (Brown) used everything like a keeper - and he is a defender - to keep the ball out of the net.
'It's the same all the time. Sometimes especially at these grounds you need a bit of luck and I felt we could then have come away with a win.
'In the first half we had a couple of opportunities and in the second I thought we played better and I felt Manchester United - even though they were at home - weren't the better team.'
The Dutchman denied he was feeling the heat at White Hart Lane, adding: 'I'm not under pressure and if the chairman says he is backing me then there is no problem.'
United counterpart Sir Alex Ferguson denied Spurs' claims for a penalty although he admitted the hosts had to dig in for victory.
Ferguson said: 'At the time they protested so much I thought it was a penalty, but when I've seen it (it was not) and Wes has said it has hit him on the chest. It does hit him on the chest, I'm sure of that.'
Asked for his thoughts on the game, he added: 'Narrow margin, touch and go, nothing to choose between two sides.
'I knew it was going to be almost a war of attrition in the second half.
'They dug in and got forward a bit. There was really nothing in it in the second half.
'(With the goal) I think Carlos Tevez touching the ball decided it.'
Ferguson admitted his relief at finally claiming the first victory of the season.
'I thought we lacked a little bit of confidence. Players are anxious, there is a lot of expectation here, there are new players here,' he said.
'It was a reasonable performance from us. What was required was to dig in, show great commitment.
'Tottenham are in the wrong position just as ourselves. The expectation level for both sides is very high.'
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