Daily Mail

LOUIS DENIED BY TOON TERRIERS

Dummett earns late point as McClaren’s men find some spirit

- MARTIN SAMUEL Chief Sports Writer at St James’ Park

The wisdom is that a point is no good for a team in Newcastle’s position. Not this one. This was an absolute gold- dust point, a great point, a superlativ­e point, a point well made, in fact.

And maybe a turning point, too. Newcastle were 2-0 down, then drew level; went 3-2 behind, and equalised. Paul Dummett’s mighty strike, in the 90th minute, could yet transform their season.

he is a local lad, Dummett, which makes his interventi­on all the sweeter. Newcastle should be a team of local lads, really, rather than this rag-bag of imported proteges, the north east of england a mere stopover halfway to the next destinatio­n. Through history, the calibre of players from this region has been remarkable, yet Dummett is a rarity. Maybe that will change, in time. Priority is to survive in the Premier League, and last night made that a more realistic prospect.

There is plenty to draw from, here. Newcastle dominated much of the second half, showed reserves of resilience and confidence that have been missing for so much of this season and at last demonstrat­ed a willingnes­s to play with energy but also character. It could be the result that gives them momentum to pull out of the swamp. And they needed to be good, too. This was a return to form, of sorts, for Manchester United as well — and at least two of their goals were a throwback to brighter days.

The second was arguably their best move of the season, the third an absolute beauty from Wayne Rooney. he’s still got it, you know. Not as much of it as he once had, and not all the time. But there are moments, fleeting moments, when Rooney closes his eyes and is a teenager again.

Naturally, in this most unpredicta­ble of seasons, it seems only fitting that a game billed as an encounter between two teams with a scoring allergy should end 3-3 and provide one of the thrill rides of the campaign. Yes, there were a couple of dubious penalties given — and a couple of more convincing ones not, particular­ly when Jesse Lingard appeared to fell Daryl Janmaat in the first half — but the scoreline would have been higher if not for some outstandin­g goalkeepin­g from David de Gea, and some pretty woeful finishing at either end. Lingard, certainly, should have done better when set up by Ander herrera in the 54th minute.

United went 2-0 up in 38 minutes. The first seemed a harsh call by referee Mike Dean. Yes, it was handball. Yet the proximity of Chancel Mbemba to Marouane Fellaini when the Belgian headed the ball would have earned him the benefit of the doubt with some officials. Not Dean. he pointed to the spot and up stepped Rooney. he had taken a penalty in the last minute to win Saturday’s FA Cup third-round tie against Sheffield United, but it didn’t faze him. Different corner, same outcome. Goalkeeper Rob elliot was given no chance.

United played with more swagger after that, Anthony Martial and Ashley Young combining particular­ly well on the right, and Rooney always involved. Yet, as is so often the case with United, possession did not convert to opportunit­y. It took until the 26th minute, when Dummett looked to have handled amid a goalmouth scramble, for United to threaten again. Dean was having none of it this time, but it hardly mattered. Soon after, United widened their lead.

The goal showcased the enormous potential in this United side, if only Louis van Gaal could release it. Mbemba once more made the fateful error, giving the ball away in midfield to Morgan Schneiderl­in, but the sheer speed of Manchester United’s counter-attack felt like a blast from their past. Schneiderl­in hit herrera, he played the ball through to Rooney and the captain was off like a shot, four Newcastle men in pursuit, turning Fabricio Coloccini inside out before hitting an exquisite reverse pass into the path of Lingard. his finish was a thing of beauty, too — the ball planted through elliot’s legs — in what appeared to bring a premature end to the contest.

Fortunatel­y, Newcastle begged to differ. Neutrals and Reds may have seen little chance of revival, given that Newcastle had not scored since December 19, but there has been a frailty in Manchester United’s back line of late and it was there again when a ball into the box from Coloccini caused unnecessar­y uncertaint­y.

Fellaini failed to make the distance with his clearing header, the speed of Georginio Wijnaldum’s arrival did not register with Chris Smalling, and the Dutchman’s shot was powerful and accurate. Newcastle’s dander was up and they could have levelled early in the second half with greater efficiency. Coloccini was the provider again, and Moussa Sissoko comfortabl­y outstrippe­d Young but could only force another save from De Gea. Suddenly, it was Manchester United in retreat.

The equaliser was a second controvers­ial award by Dean. It came after a familiar bout of penalty area wrestling — Smalling and Aleksandar Mitrovic coiled together, grappling — but Dean had the Manchester United man pegged as the transgress­or. hard to tell, really, but Dean was certain. Mitrovic took the penalty perfectly.

And then, the goal that Rooney and Manchester United felt had won the game. It came in the 79th minute, set up by Memphis Depay, introduced once again as an impact substitute. Just as he won the penalty that knocked Sheffield United out of the Cup, it was his run and blocked shot that sent the ball into Rooney’s path. Credit Rooney though, who saw not an attack thwarted but a scoring opportunit­y, the ball sitting up for him 25 yards out. he put his right foot through it and, wow. It was a goal from the old days, so retro it could have come from a time when he didn’t have hair. At once, Rooney looked again like a striker of unlimited potential, Manchester United a team that could turn a game on its head with one magical vignette.

We could only feel pity for Newcastle, yet they fancied a revival, too. The goal was simple enough. Smalling made the defensive header, Dummett came roaring in and belted it past De Gea from range. It needed something special to beat him, as ever.

Rooney and Van Gaal agreed it was a draw that felt like defeat, while Steve McClaren said it felt like three points, not one. ‘People said we lacked character but we kept fighting to the end,’ he said. Indeed, they did. They must build on this against West ham on Saturday, if the point is not to be moot.

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