Robin van Persie
ended his goal drought as Manchester United restored their 15-point
lead at the top of the Barclays Premier League table and deepened
Stoke's relegation worries. Van Persie had gone ten domestic matches
without scoring but won and then converted a penalty in the 66th minute
to make the points safe.
Michael Carrick
had opened the scoring inside four minutes and United now need only
seven points from their remaining six games to ensure they cannot be
caught by Manchester City. Stoke dropped to 16th before kick-off after
Sunderland's win over Newcastle and, having taken only one point from
their last seven games, are looking below them with ever increasing
concern.
Captain Nemanja Vidic was back
from a calf injury in one of four United changes from Monday's derby
defeat while Stoke boss Tony Pulis had Glenn Whelan fit but Matthew
Etherington and Marc Wilson were out so Charlie Adam
and Andy Wilkinson started. Last season Stoke picked up their first
Premier League point against United and went unbeaten against the big
six at the Britannia Stadium.
Their home
fortress has been anything but in recent weeks, though, with West Ham
and Aston Villa both taking away maximum points, and what the Potters
really could not afford was a bad start. But they made exactly that,
conceding a fourth-minute corner that they failed to clear, allowing
Carrick to prod beyond the despairing dive of Asmir Begovic.
With Wayne Rooney
dictating play from a deep-lying midfield role, United were completely
in control. Rooney was given space and time to take aim from 25 yards
with a shot pushed away by Begovic as Stoke struggled even to touch the
ball.
Discontent among the Stoke fans has
been growing but they were fully behind their team and had cause for
optimism in the 19th minute when Adam won a free-kick wide on the right
and Whelan's cross was headed just wide by Robert Huth. The difference
in confidence was all too clear, though, with United zipping the ball
around while Stoke touches were heavy and passes misplaced.
Begovic
was forced into another save just past the half-hour mark, scooping a
Van Persie shot from a narrow angle behind. Stoke at least finished the
half well as Wilkinson - sporting a bandage on his head after being
caught by a high Javier Hernandez boot - barrelled down the right and
into the area before seeing his shot blocked by Vidic.
Stoke with wind behind them
Stoke had the strong wind behind them in the second half but it was United who began the brighter and Van Persie had the chance to end his drought when he was played in by Hernandez but shot into the side-netting.
Stoke had the strong wind behind them in the second half but it was United who began the brighter and Van Persie had the chance to end his drought when he was played in by Hernandez but shot into the side-netting.
At the other end, Jon Walters
had a decent opening when Ryan Shotton headed a deep cross into the
centre but the striker could not keep his shot down. An encouraging sign
for Stoke was the increasing influence of Adam, and the midfielder
tested David de Gea for the first time in the 59th minute with a well-struck shot from long range.
But
the Potters' hopes were dealt a crushing blow when they gave away a
penalty. A flowing move that began with Phil Jones holding off Walters
in United's right-back spot progressed through Antonio Valencia and Rooney, who picked out Van Persie in the area.
The
Dutchman cut inside Wilkinson, who tripped him, and Van Persie stepped
up to tuck his spot-kick smartly into the bottom corner before running
to the touchline to celebrate with Sir Alex Ferguson.Stoke's hopes of
taking anything from the game were all but over but they kept pressing
and Ryan Shotton forced a decent save from De Gea, who then reacted very
well to push Adam's clever free-kick behind when it was heading for the
bottom corner.
Pulis threw on Cameron Jerome, former United man Michael Owen
and Peter Crouch but there was little threat and Stoke remain only
three points clear of 18th-placed Wigan, who have two games in hand.
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