Manchester City 2 - 3 Manchester United: Injury-time winner sparks ugly scenes at Etihad

ROBIN van Persie scored an injury-time winner to give Manchester United victory amid ugly scenes at the end of today’s Manchester derby at the Etihad Stadium.

Manchester City 2 - 3 Manchester United

Scorers: Man City - Y Toure (60), Zabaleta (86); Man Utd - Rooney (16, 29), Van Persie (90)

Referee: M Atkinson

Attendance: 47,166

Two goals down to a first-half Wayne Rooney double, City thought they had snatched a point when Pablo Zabaleta followed up Yaya Toure’s strike by

driving home five minutes from time.

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However, after Rafael had been fouled on the edge of the area, Van Persie’s

free-kick flicked off Samir Nasri before cannoning in off the far post.

As United celebrated, Rio Ferdinand was struck by an object which drew blood from a cut close to his eye.

A supporter then ran onto the pitch and had to be restrained by City goalkeeper Joe Hart before being carted away by stewards.

Sir Alex Ferguson then seemed to exchange words with former United striker Carlos Tevez before referee Martin Atkinson finally brought an end to a breathless afternoon.

Rooney’s brace saw him jump to the top of United’s scoring charts in Manchester derbies, his ten goals taking him one clear of Sir Bobby Charlton.

United’s defensive frailties have been obvious to everyone this term, so it came as something of a shock that City’s rearguard was the topic of conversation at half-time.

Dominant during the opening 15 minutes, the Blues were caught cold by the visitors’ first attack, started deep in their own half by Patrice Evra.

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Van Persie cushioned a delightful return pass from Ashley Young’s flicked header, allowing the winger to drive over halfway and drill a low cross to the edge of the area for Rooney.

Surrounded by three City defenders, Rooney took the ball to his left before cutting a shot back to the near post that Hart had no chance of keeping out.

City’s concerns grew when Vincent Kompany was replaced by Kolo Toure, bringing additional uncertainty to a defence which conceded a second a short time later.

This time the surge came from the right wing as Antonio Valencia found an overlapping Rafael with a perfectly-weighted pass which the Brazilian crossed into the danger zone.

Rooney, who had been allowed to gallop unopposed from his initial pass, could not believe the space on offer which allowed him to tuck his first-time shot beyond Hart, allowing him to become the sixth player – and the youngest – to score 150 Premier League goals.

There was a conviction about United’s play that was missing from City’s.

Mario Balotelli, preferred up front to Carlos Tevez, was the subject of his manager’s ire, yet Sergio Aguero was the one who had failed to control the Italian’s through-ball when the scores were still level. Aguero was also the player who took on the entire Red Devils defence single handedly and squeezed a shot towards the corner which David de Gea did well to keep out.

After wasting possession once too often, Balotelli was replaced by Tevez, the Italian heading straight down the tunnel, although not before fixing Mancini with an icy stare.

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Ashley Young then had a goal incorrectly ruled out for offside when he tucked home the rebound from a Van Persie shot that had cannoned back off a post, and United were still digesting their disappointment as City countered to pull a goal back.

De Gea produced brilliant saves to deny Tevez and David Silva, but he was unable to keep out a third strike on goal from Yaya Toure, who calmly rolled Tevez’s cut-back into the bottom corner.

It was the goal that lit the touchpaper for a thrilling finale, with tackles flying in from both sides as referee Atkinson desperately tried to keep control.

Van Persie headed Cleverley’s cross over before De Gea somehow kept Silva’s shot out at the other end when it flicked off his shoulder and onto the crossbar.

City had the momentum though and when Tevez’s corner was half-cleared into Zabaleta’s path, the Argentinian thrashed home a ferocious shot through a crowded penalty area. There was one final twist to come, though, as Van Persie stepped up to end City’s 37-match unbeaten run on home soil to send United six points clear at the top.

• Manchester United were quoted at 11-1 with Ladbrokes to win the game before Robin Van Persie’s last-minute winner.

The game saw a betting in-play roller coaster take place and the visitors had drifted out as big as 11-1 to take home all three points, having been as short as 1-7 after taking a two-goal lead in the first half.

Before kick off it was 33-1 that the Red Devils would win 3-2 and the last-minute winner saw a £200,000 swing in the punters’ favour.

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United are now the clear odds-on favourites to win the Premier League title this year at 1-2, with City out to 7-4.

Jessica Bridge of Ladbrokes said: “Punters were quick to back Mancini for the sack after Rooney’s second, and along with City’s Europa League disaster the writing could be on the wall for Mancini sooner than we think. The draw would have been a fantastic result for us but we underestimated Fergie Time and those that took the generous 11/1 on United will be laughing all the way to the bank.”

Manchester City: Hart, Kompany (K Toure 21), Zabaleta, Clichy, Nastasic, Nasri, Barry, Silva, Y Toure (Dzeko 84), Aguero, Balotelli (Tevez 52). Subs not used: Pantilimon, Maicon, Lescott, Garcia.

Manchester United: De Gea, Rafael, Evra, Ferdinand, Evans (Smalling 48), Valencia (Jones 84), Carrick, Young, Cleverley (Wellbeck 87), Rooney, Van Persie. Subs not used: Johnstone, Giggs, Scholes, Hernandez.