The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Special One

Ibrahimovi­c seals Mourinho’s first United trophy and manager urges fans to campaign for striker to stay

- Jason Burt CHIEF FOOTBALL CORRESPOND­ENT at Wembley Stadium

“The legend can still deliver,” proclaimed Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c last summer. And the legend did deliver. In a thrilling EFL Cup final it was the 35-year-old striker who, of course, had the last word as he collected his first trophy at Manchester United and the first for manager Jose Mourinho.

This competitio­n is where it all began in England for Mourinho 12 years ago, when he won the League Cup in his first season as Chelsea manager, as part of a new era of success, and he will demand the same at United, although his overriding emotion appeared to be one of relief. After the trauma of being sacked by Chelsea, the ultimate trophy-hunter is back on the winning trail.

The fact that United were incredibly fortunate to win this final, as Southampto­n dominated the match and were denied a perfectly good goal by a terrible offside decision when the game was scoreless, will be almost airbrushed. History will show that United won, that Mourinho has now won four League Cups – to equal the record of Sir Alex Ferguson, who was in attendance, and Brian Clough – and became the first manager to win a trophy in his first season in charge of United.

But, above that, this will be Ibrahimovi­c’s final. Zlatan time. And it felt dramatical­ly predictabl­e that just as he was set to be upstaged by another striker, Southampto­n’s Manolo Gabbiadini, who scored two goals and would have had a hattrick but for that errant offside decision, he intervened.

His second goal broke Southampto­n’s hearts. There was almost an expectant hush as, with just three minutes to go, Ander Herrera stood the ball up inside the six-yard area for Ibrahimovi­c to rise and plant a close-range header past Fraser Forster.

He scored with a header in his last appearance at Wembley, winning the Community Shield against Leicester City back in August, and once again this was his playground. His platform. His stage. His show.

Ibrahimovi­c scored that opening day, and his two here made it 26 goals in 38 matches for United and provided further emphatic evidence that he is the best free signing ever made. For him it is now 30 trophies across Europe in his career, to add to Mourinho’s 24, and they make quite a pair: a pair who talk the talk and walk the walk and silence the doubters not just with their sharp tongues.

It was instructiv­e as United struggled in the second half, pegged back by Gabbiadini’s predatory strikes, hanging on at times, that three times Mourinho spoke to substitute Wayne Rooney and was, each time, close to bringing him on. But, instead, he waited and waited (it was Herrera who was going to come off) – and Ibrahimovi­c won it. If ever there was a neon-lit sign of the baton having been passed then here it was. Rooney lifted the trophy but Ibrahimovi­c had the Cheshire-cat grin of knowing this was his.

“He gave us the cup,” Mourinho, who has won 11 of the 12 cup finals he has contested, said and it said it all.

It was, he declared, a “beautiful final for the neutrals” and it was just that – but, as he also acknowledg­ed, cruel for Southampto­n who faced United in a final for the first time since their one and only major trophy triumph, the FA Cup final in 1976, but also profited from the 15 days they have had to prepare since their last game while their opponents have played four matches in 11 days.

United appeared leggy and strangely nervous and unsure and especially in defence, where Chris Smalling and Eric Bailly struggled. Juan Mata was hooked at half-time when any one of the midfield could have been replaced.

Against that, Southampto­n had energy and verve and purpose, with Gabbiadini outstandin­g, as were Nathan Redmond, Cedric Soares and Steven Davis.

Mourinho had a face like thunder, even when United were two goals up. He knew they were fortunate that assistant referee Stuart Burt flagged to deny Gabbiadini an opening goal as the Italian stole in behind Smalling to turn home Soares’s low cross. He was clearly onside, and that was obvious even without the aid of a replay.

There were also three smart saves from David De Gea – thwarting James Ward-Prowse, Dusan Tadic and Redmond – before United improbably took the lead. Ibrahimovi­c’s impressive­ly powerful and controlled 30-yard free-kick skimmed over the wall, Davis appeared to duck or miss with an attempted header, and Forster was beaten. Maybe the goalkeeper should have done better as Ibrahimovi­c became the second oldest goalscorer in a League Cup final (after Stoke City’s George Eastham, at 35 years and 161 days, in 1972).

When United doubled that advantage the game appeared over. It came as Mata, Anthony Martial and Marcos Rojo combined for the latter to turn the ball infield to Jesse Lingard.

On the edge of the area he had the time, with no defender reacting, but also the composure to pass it into the net, leaving Forster stranded. Having not conceded a goal in this competitio­n to reach the final, Southampto­n had given away two cheaply.

Again Mourinho did not celebrate, and with good reason. His team were playing poorly and paid the price just before half-time as Gabbiadini again stole in behind Smalling to reach Ward-Prowse’s clever cross to open the game up.

Three minutes into the second half Southampto­n were deservedly level with a wonderful strike from Gabbiadini as Davis headed a half-clearance into the area and the striker swivelled to fire low into the net.

It then became about two headers. One, from Oriol Romeu, from a corner, cannoned back off the post with De Gea beaten and then, as extra-time loomed, the other, from Ibrahimovi­c, won it. He gave United the cup.

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 ??  ?? Last-gasp: Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c rises to head home United’s winning goal
Last-gasp: Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c rises to head home United’s winning goal
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