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  -   REPORTS   -   Premiership
Saturday, September 14, 2002
Full-time: Leeds v Man Utd
Soccernet.com

Rio Ferdinand's hotly-anticipated return to Elland Road ended with the bitter taste of defeat as Harry Kewell temporarily sent Leeds back to the top of the Premiership.

  • Match reaction

    Leeds v Man Urd, September 14 2002
    Harry Kewell nods in the winner
    (ShaunBotterill/GettyImages)
    Leeds fans will dine out on this victory for many a day as they not only beat their hated rivals for the first time in five years, but they had the last laugh on a player they regarded as a hero up until two months ago.

    Ferdinand had expected the backlash from Leeds fans to be severe following his record-breaking £30million in the summer, yet for the most part pleas for calm from boss Terry Venables and chairman Peter Ridsdale were heeded.

    There were the expected terrace taunts of 'Judas' while his every touch was greeted with a chorus of boos and jeers.

    There were also a few supporters wearing t-shirts with slogans such as 'Traitors - Jordan, McQueen, Cantona, Rio' - listing Ferdinand with other players who infamously left Leeds for United.

    When those three other players all returned to Leeds for the first time, however, they ended up on the winning side, yet for Ferdinand the scenario was different as Kewell settled the issue in the 66th minute.

    A superbly worked move involving half-time substitute Eirik Bakke, Kewell and Lee Bowyer, resulted in Ian Harte curling in fine cross for the Australia international.

    Kewell had continued with an unmarked run into the area, and with Ferdinand and centre-back partner Laurent Blanc nowhere, he nodded a downward header past Fabien Barthez from six yards for his second goal of the season.

    It inevitably prompted chants of 'Rio, Rio, what's the score?', with Leeds holding on to inflict upon Manchester United a second successive defeat following their shock 1-0 Old Trafford loss to Bolton in midweek.

    It was a typical game between these two sides in which passions ran high, although the opening exchanges were primarily dominated by a litany of poor first touches by many of the country's most highly-paid players.

    It was with a different touch of irony during the opening 45 minutes that two of Leeds' best chances came via a lack of communication between Ferdinand and Barthez.

    The imposing centre-back first cleared a Harte free-kick out of the hands of the approaching Frenchman, with the ball looping over the bar.

    Shortly afterwards, as Ferdinand attempted to shield a back pass to Barthez, an alert Mark Viduka almost stole in before the France international hacked clear the danger.

    That was as much work as Barthez was forced into for the clear-cut opportunities fell the way of United, despite lacking the midfield punch of injured trio Roy Keane, Paul Scholes and Juan Sebastian Veron.

    It was the legs of Paul Robinson which prevented United from making a 15th-minute breakthrough as fine approach play between Ryan Giggs and Ruud van Nistelrooy ended with the latter skipping between Danny Mills and captain Dominic Matteo.

    The Dutchman's right-footed, flicked shot from six yards looked destined for the bottom corner, only for an in-form Robinson to kick the ball clear as he dived the wrong way.

    After Beckham, who had earlier been lucky not to be booked after elbowing Bowyer, was shoulder-barged off the ball by Alan Smith, it gave the England skipper the perfect free-kick chance, one he bent low round the wall from 24 yards, only for the well-placed Harte to chest clear.

    With the visitors on top, Jonathan Woodgate then superbly toe-ended a Giggs header off the line just before the break after the Wales international had flicked on a Beckham free-kick from the left wing.

    Injuries to Nick Barmby and Matteo forced Venables into a double substitution at the break, with Bakke and Lucas Radebe the replacements, but it was still Sir Alex Ferguson's side who should have broken the deadlock in the 53rd minute.

    Van Nistelrooy first robbed Bowyer and then powered his way past the challenge of Woodgate before driving in a low, angled shot which Robinson brilliantly tipped away before Radebe mopped up.

    When Nicky Butt departed following a lunge from Bowyer, Leeds then took control and ultimately capitalised prior to a frantic finish which culminated in more than four minutes of injury-time, and a scuffle involving a number of the players following Ole Gunnar Solskjaer's late challenge on Kewell.

    When the final whistle sounded the cheers were loud and raucous as those five years of pent-up frustration were finally dispelled, while Ferdinand merely trudged off wearily.

  • After the game man-of-the-match Smith 'In the first half we were under pressure. They had world-class players all over the park. We knew we could play better in the second and the manager just told us not to be scared and to play football.

    'We were a bit nervous in the first half. Maybe it was the atmosphere but we came out in the second half and rolled our sleeves up and battled.'

    Asked about Ferdinand's performance, Smith said: 'A lot of stuff has been said but we concentrated on our performances.

    'I had a few battles with him and I'll wish him all the best. The fans are different - now he has gone to our main rivals,' he told Sky Sports.

    Leeds boss Terry Venables singled out Woodgate for praise. 'I thought Woodgate was magnificent,' said Venables. 'In the first half he held us together.'

    It was Leeds' first win against their bitter rivals in 10 attempts and Venables said: 'I thought at half-time that we'd be looking for our first win against them in 11 in the next match because they played well and had us on the rack.

    'But we turned it around in the second half. The boys were absolutely outstanding. I thought in the end we had them on the run and we deserved it.

    'They were much better than us in the first half and we were the better side in the second half.

    'After we took the lead we played the ball better and we played it earlier. In the first half we wanted too many touches of the ball and that allowed them to get at us.'

    Venables took off Nick Barmby at half-time and Mark Viduka in the second half in a bid to freshen his side up and the move paid off.

    'We had a game on Wednesday (the 2-0 win at Newcastle) that was flat out and I thought our front players looked tired today.

    'It was giving us a bit of a problem because we weren't keeping the ball up front and in the second half we made changes that helped us and we were top class.'

    United boss Sir Alex Ferguson said after the defeat: 'We just have to dig in. It's not easy - that is where character comes in and we have character.'

    Asked if he felt United should have won the match, Ferguson said: 'Absolutely. It was very disappointing.

    'The team that scored first was going to win it. It was difficult to get back [after Kewell's goal].

    'We lacked a bit of luck at times, but we played some fantastic football. We outplayed them for 45 minutes I knew they would try to stop us and they improved in the second half without really threatening us.

    'Our midfield was a bit light after Nick Butt went off [with a hip injury]. Hopefully he'll be OK for Wednesday [Champions League]. We will wait and see.'

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