James Milner leads players’ condemnation of Wembley pitch

• ‘It’s not good enough,’ says England midfielder
• England team face same surface against Egypt

Manchester United and Aston Villa players have condemned the state of the Wembley surface during the Carling Cup final, with James Milner, who will feature with England back at the national stadium tomorrow, insisting the pitch was not up to the required standard.

Players on both sides united in their disappointment at the quality of the turf in the wake of Sunday’s showpiece event, from which Michael Owen had departed before the interval having damaged a hamstring. The Football Association had been confident the sand and soil composite surface would impress having relaid the pitch eight times since the £757m stadium opened in March 2007, only for north-west London to suffer a deluge in the build-up to the game that saw 120ml of rain fall on the turf last week.

“It’s not [good enough],” said Milner when asked to reflect on the quality of the pitch. “It is the home of England. For us, as a team, you want the best surface possible and, hopefully, it can improve because at the moment it is not quite there. There had been a lot of rain and, maybe, it was poorer on Sunday. But, to be honest, whenever I have been there before I’ve never thought: ‘This is a great surface.’

“It was very difficult, actually. It was slippery and was cutting up. Not good. You work as hard as you can to get to a cup final at Wembley and it was probably one of the worst pitches you will play on all season. At a final you want to play in a great stadium – which it is – and on a great pitch, but I knew what to expect as I have been there before.”

The surface, which is now under the care of the Sports Turf Institute – employed as pitch consultants by Wembley National Stadium Limited – since the departure of the previous head groundsman, Steve Welch, last April, had been put under covers prior to kick-off on Sunday, with hot air dryers employed in an attempt to dry out the pitch after the heavy rainfall. The current turf was laid last September, following a Coldplay concert at the stadium, but, according to the players, the organisers’ efforts in the build-up to United’s 2-1 win failed to rectify the problems.

The Villa defender Carlos Cuéllar described the pitch as “very bad”. “People kept falling over,” he said. “For a big final like this, it was disappointing. You come to Wembley and expect the pitch to be very good.”

Owen, who will learn today the extent of the hamstring injury he sustained during a cameo appearance in which he scored United’s equalising goal, said: “I hadn’t played 90 minutes for a while and the manager said to me that not having played for so long was a contributory factor in me being injured on that pitch. The pitch was really heavy, so it was never going to be easy on there.”

Milner, who should feature for England against Egypt in tomorrow’s friendly at the stadium, added: “Michael knows whether it has affected his body. I have spoken to a few of the lads here who played in the game on Sunday and they feel pretty sapped from the pitch because it was heavy. You have got to take the rain into account.

“I’m not a groundsman, so I don’t know what goes into it. But if you’re comparing it to Arsenal, for example, that’s one of the best grounds you can play on. It is a top, top surface. That’s obviously a new ground and if you could get it the same as that, I would be very happy. Hopefully it can be changed.”

Wembley stadiumEnglandCarling CupManchester UnitedAston VillaDominic Fifieldguardian.co.uk

Antonio Valencia spreads his wings to stir memories of Stanley Matthews | Richard Williams

The Manchester United winger is not as flashy as Cristiano Ronaldo but possesses a style redolent of classic wingmen

A right-winger starring in a Wembley showdown will always carry a special resonance, and in the week when Stanley Matthews’s boots from the 1953 FA Cup final were auctioned for £38,400, more than five times their estimate, it was particularly fitting that Luis Antonio Valencia Mosquera should shape the outcome of yesterday’s match.

Aston Villa had been giving their supporters no shortage of encouragement as the 50th League Cup final went into its last quarter. But with a strong run and a precise cross, Valencia gave Wayne Rooney the opportunity to put the finishing touch to the goalscoring combination that has given Manchester United a new impetus as the season enters its decisive phase.

Bought by Sir Alex Ferguson from Wigan Athletic for £16m last summer, Valencia had a relatively quiet start to his United career. In the past fortnight, however, the 24-year-old Ecuadorian has produced performances evoking the club’s list of specialist wingmen over the past half-century, from John Aston to David Beckham.

In the first leg of United’s European Cup tie against Milan at San Siro two weeks ago Valencia came on to replace the erratic Nani midway through the second half, with the match tied at a goal apiece. Within a minute he had provided the cross from which Rooney headed the ball back across Dida to give the English club the lead. And at Old Trafford against West Ham last Tuesday there were two more Valencia crosses and two more Rooney headers to provide the first two goals in a 3-0 win.

Wingers are nowadays generally expected to do more than lurk on their favoured flank, waiting for the ball that will give them the opportunity to run at the full-back. Such behaviour is usually dismissed as self-indulgent and wasteful; players who would once have hugged the touchline are encouraged to follow the example of Cristiano Ronaldo, Valencia’s predecessor at Old Trafford, roaming across the width of the field and resisting classification as well as marking.

Who started the fashion of switching wide players to the opposite flank? Perhaps it was Arsène Wenger, first with Robert Pires and then, even more successfully, with Thierry Henry, who brought the art of using right-footed skills on the left flank – think of all those sidefooted shots curling around the goalkeeper and inside the far post – to a high level. At Barcelona, Frank Rijkaard used the left-footed Lionel Messi on the right side and Ronaldinho, who favours his right, on the left, the idea being that when the forward cuts inside, the opposing full-back is always being challenged on his weaker side.

As we saw yesterday, Martin O’Neill has been mixing and matching both approaches with his Aston Villa wingers. Stewart Downing and Ashley Young, who favour their left and right feet respectively, started the match in the conventional stations but had switched flanks within a couple of minutes, and kept switching in an effort to keep United’s full-backs permanently off balance. Both forwards are exciting players and at times the tactic looked like working, particularly with the neat James Milner and the sage Emile Heskey calmly organising the distribution.

Sometimes, however, there is no substitute for letting a specialist do what he does, without trying to complicate things. Valencia is not being asked to do much more than destroy defences on his natural side of the pitch, and when he sent over the cross that hung in the air to await the application of Rooney’s forehead, it could have been Matthews supplying Stan Mortensen in that classic encounter between Blackpool and Bolton.

A gifted winger who goes about his business with a sense of focus and economy can be a priceless asset. Alert English fans have known about Valencia since 2006, when he played against Sven-Goran Eriksson’s team in the first knockout stage of the World Cup, a match in which England laboured to a 1-0 victory. His three seasons with Wigan, two of them on loan from Villarreal, created a good impression, not least on Ferguson. And if he was bought to replace Ronaldo, it was not to keep up the quota of stepovers and pouts.

The Ecuadorian may not possess the technical originality of his Portuguese predecessor, and his goalscoring contribution – he has six this season – is unlikely to match that of Ronaldo. But he has genuine pace and a cool head, and if he can keep getting behind his marker and directing his crosses to make the most of Rooney’s timing, positioning and aerial power, then he will have given his side a weapon that is both reliable, thanks to its essential simplicity, and, as we saw when Rooney hit the Villa woodwork from a second Valencia cross four minutes after the goal, extremely difficult to counter.

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Manchester United find their Carling Cup edge in Wayne Rooney | Daniel Taylor

Aston Villa matched United all over the pitch, but were undone by the human force of nature known as Wayne

One day last week Martin O’Neill summoned his players to a meeting at Aston Villa’s training ground. This was their moment, he told them. They had an opportunity to make it a season they would never forget, and it would begin by them playing the match of their lives. The door was locked and, for an hour and a half, he went round his players, telling them what he liked about each of them, why he trusted them and why they should line up against Manchester United and know they could outdo them man for man.

As inspirational speeches go, it was an epic demonstration of the man’s powers of motivation. O’Neill has always had that knack of knowing what to say to get under his players’ skin.

Villa played with width and penetration. They were quick to the ball, strong in the tackle and they did something that not many teams have done over the past few seasons: they made Nemanja Vidic look ordinary. Even though Sir Alex Ferguson’s men had marginally more chances, the only difference really was that United had the human force of nature otherwise known as Wayne Mark Rooney.

It used to be said of Rooney that his only flaw was his heading ability, and probably with some justification given the fact he had scored only four times this way in his first 316 games as a Premier League footballer. He now has nine this season, and seven of his last eight goals have come from that freckled forehead, which is the kind of record to remind United’s older supporters of Tommy Taylor, the club’s equivalent of Nat Lofthouse and one of the Busby Babes to lose his life in the Munich air tragedy.

It was difficult, though, not to sympathise with Villa as the 27th cup final of Ferguson’s career ended with Patrice Evra hoisting that funny three-handled trophy and the fireworks and ticker tape adding to the kaleidoscope of colour at an end of the stadium where the green and gold mingled with red, black and white. O’Neill was a picture of misery but at least he will not be tormented by the sense that his players let themselves down.

Just because they lost, it does not automatically follow that they played badly. Richard Dunne, that serial scapegoat, may find himself waking in a cold sweat after his mistake for Michael Owen’s equaliser, the sort that epitomised his last season at Manchester City but that he seemed to have eradicated this campaign. That apart, however, there was plenty to admire about O’Neill’s side, from the way James Milner distinguished himself in front of the watching England manager, Fabio Capello, to the wing play of Stewart Downing and Ashley Young and the latest demonstration of how the largely unsung James Collins has developed into a centre-half of distinction.

United just had that little bit extra. Michael Carrick and Darren Fletcher gradually emerged as the more authoritative midfield pairing. Dimitar Berbatov will always do something to exasperate his audience but there were some lovely moments from the Bulgarian, too, and he played a significant part in both United goals.

Antonio Valencia’s penetrative right-wing runs and accurate deliveries won him the man-of-the-match champagne. As for the man of the moment, when Rooney came on for the injured Owen he set about winning the match as though he had been affronted to have been left out of the starting line-up.

As Ferguson remarked last week: “The hallmark of a truly great player is the ability to grab a game by the scruff of the neck.” Rooney did just that, making sure his impact was the most important on a day when virtually everyone on the pitch contributed to one of the more enjoyable finals since the opening of the new stadium.

Or, rather, everyone but the referee. Phil Dowd made so many erratic decisions, booking players for one offence but then letting off others for almost identical infringements, he was fortunate that the players conjured up a spectacle that was engrossing enough to divert the attention from his shortcomings. For that, Villa can take their share of credit, but Rooney has something special when he can be rested from the team but still inflict all the damage.

Carling CupWayne RooneyManchester UnitedAston VillaDaniel Taylorguardian.co.uk