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Sir Alex Ferguson admitted his Manchester United team were
fortunate not to have had a man sent off in the Carling Cup final
on Sunday.
Wayne Rooney came off the bench to score the winning header,
his 28th goal of the season, as United beat Aston Villa 2-1 at
Wembley.
But controversy surrounded a penalty awarded to Villa in the
fourth minute when United defender Nemanja Vidic brought down
Gabriel Agbonlahor.
James Milner scored from the spot but referee Phil Dowd
failed to give Vidic even a yellow card, even though he was the
last defender and Agbonlahor was through on goal.
Villa manager Martin O'Neill was left fuming by the incident
while Ferguson conceded Vidic "was probably lucky," to avoid a red
card.
United were level after 13 minutes, Michael Owen sweeping
home the equaliser after Dimitar Berbatov and Richard Dunne had
tangled in the area.
Unfortunately, Owen's final was shortlived, however, after he
suffered a hamstring injury and was replaced by Rooney after 41
minutes.
Ferguson said: "He (Owen) did really well for us and it was a
good performance from him. It's maybe our fault too. He's not had a
lot of minutes recently and that soft pitch didn't help him. It's a
bad blow for us."
Owen's misfortune only gave Rooney the chance to write
another chapter in what is becoming a stupendous season.
His 74th-minute header from Antonio Valencia's cross was his
fifth consecutive headed goal. In fact, seven out of his last eight
goals have been headers. Quite a statistic considering he had
scored only four headed goals in his career before this season.
Ferguson said: "The header wasn't a brilliant header, not
great pace on it but it was well placed just under the bar. The
goalkeeper had work to do to get to it. He's in that sort of form.
He's scoring so many vital goals for us. We should have put it
beyond doubt the opportunities we had.
"In the main we were the better team but credit to Aston
Villa's performance. In the last 10 minutes when they started
shoving up that big brigade of theirs it was like the Alamo. They
had a go. Dunne had a back post header and missed altogether. You
need a bit of luck in these situations."
Ferguson was more interested in looking forward to the next
trophy, whether it be a 12th Premier League title or his third
Champions League trophy.
He said: "We show time and time again this club has got the
determination. They don't give in. It's a good quality to have and
you'll see that in the last part of the season.
"It was a good result for us on Saturday with Chelsea losing.
Arsenal are back in the frame with the easiest programme on paper.
It will be an interesting run-in."
And on winning his fifth league cup he added: "You've got to
enjoy it, that's why we are in it. You have to accept what you can
get in this life. Winning this trophy is special to us. Any trophy
is good.
"You're in this game to win and I appreciate everything we
have achieved as a club and I appreciate the luck I've carried.
That's important.
"I've lost finals and it's not easy when you lose a final.
The only way you can enjoy Wembley is winning."
And on the trophy tally he added, tongue in cheek: "Hopefully
it will be 33 this season. Might be too old to wait for next
season."