Welbeck inspires Man United young guns

Wayne Rooney

MANCHESTER, England, (Reuters) – Striker Danny  Welbeck scored one goal and created another to inspire a  youthful Manchester United team to a 3-0 win over Tottenham  Hotspur in an entertaining Premier League match at Old Trafford yesterday.  
 
Any doubts about manager Alex Ferguson’s decision to field a  starting lineup with an average age of just 23 were dispelled  just after an hour when 20-year-old striker Welbeck headed in a  pinpoint cross from 22-year-old midfielder Tom Cleverley.   

Wayne Rooney

Welbeck’s superb backheel set up Anderson’s sweet strike in  the 76th minute and Wayne Rooney added the third with a late  header as the champions continued the fantastic home form that  propelled them to the title last season.   

“The second half we just took off,” Ferguson told Sky  Sports. “It tells you we still believe in young players … more  so when you see the ability they’ve got.   
“The second half performance was absolutely fantastic, I  thought it was a really fast game in the first half — end to  end.”    

United, who dropped only two points at Old Trafford on the  way to a record 19th league title, maintained their perfect  start after last week’s win at West Bromwich Albion. Manchester  City lead them on goal difference at the top of the fledgling  table.   

Ferguson kept faith with the youngsters who served notice in  the Community Shield season curtain-raiser that they would be  keeping the more established players on their toes.   

They did not let him down as they game set off at a fast  tempo with Cleverley sending Spurs keeper Brad Friedel, almost  twice the age of some United players, diving at full stretch to  keep out his eighth-minute strike.   

Winger Ashley Young headed just wide after a great pass from  Rooney as United tested a well-organised Spurs defence.
   NEW GENERATION
  
Tottenham had their own chances but lacked the spark of Luka  Modric who had been left out of the team with manager Harry  Redknapp saying the Croat’s head was “not in the right place”  amid speculation he could be leaving the club.  
 
The deadlock was broken in the 61st minute when defender  Chris Smalling, another of the new generation at the age of 21,  laid the ball back for Cleverley who whipped in a cross that  Welbeck sent powering into the bottom left corner.  
 
Bursting with confidence, Welbeck then attempted an overhead  kick that landed in the hands of Friedel, while indefatigable  Rooney — something of an old hand at 25 — went close with a  free kick that Friedel did well to tip round the post.  

Welbeck, back at United after a loan spell at Sunderland  last season, set up the second goal with a cheeky backheel to an  unmarked Anderson, who sent the ball flying into the net after a  move that started at the other end of the pitch.   

The third goal owed everything to United’s old timers with  substitute Ryan Giggs unleashing a right-footed cross that  Rooney headed goalwards off the top of his new hair transplant  three minutes from time.   

“We received a few wise words at halftime and came out from  there and fired on all cylinders,” man-of-the-match Welbeck  said. “Every single point is vital so we need to get as many  wins as possible and keep the ball rolling.”   
 
Young United keeper David De Gea will have been relieved to  have kept a clean sheet after a shaky start to life in England  and made good saves off Rafael van der Vaart and Tom  Huddlestone. Jermain Defoe also struck a late effort against the  post.   

Spurs, playing their first game of the season after their  scheduled opener at home to Everton was postponed following  rioting in London, headed home still awaiting a first Premier  League win at Old Trafford. Their last league victory at  United’s home ground was in 1989.  

“There was nothing in the game until they scored the first  goal,” Redknapp told Sky Sports. “The goal just turned the  game.”