Blackburn Rovers 0-0 Manchester United | Premier League match report

Manchester United’s chances of retaining their Premier League title were diminished at Ewood Park when, in the absence of Wayne Rooney, they were unable to unlock a stubborn Blackburn Rovers defence and missed out on the opportunity to overtake Chelsea at the top of the table.

Without Rooney, Sir Alex Ferguson recalled Dimitar Berbatov to the starting line-up but the Bulgarian was found wanting, and his sulky manner will have done him no good with the manager who dropped him for the Champions League decider against Bayern Munich in midweek.

Ferguson may well have given up on the striker who cost him £30m from Tottenham, but with Rooney and Michael Owen both hors de combat he has no effective alternatives. The manager turned here to Federico Macheda, only to find the Italian unequal to the task on his debut.

United were collectively ordinary at the end of a week that has seen them lose to Chelsea, eliminated from Europe and now unable to claim the three points that would have restored them to pole position in the title race.

Ferguson fielded an attacking formation, with two strikers supported by two wingers and Ryan Giggs in midfield, but the Rovers back four were impressively resilient, and when United did manage to find a way through, Berbatov was horribly inaccurate in front of goal. United hope to have Rooney back for the Manchester derby next Saturday, and how they need him.

Premier LeagueBlackburn RoversManchester UnitedJoe Lovejoyguardian.co.uk

Blackburn Rovers 1-1 Chelsea | Premier League match report

Do Chelsea have the best players in the country, or merely the best paid? The question with which Roman Abramovich is said to have confronted his team after their elimination from the Champions League is manna from heaven for media studies classes and pub knowalls everywhere and their verdicts will be even more damning after this latest disappointment.

Arsenal won on Saturday to take over pole position in the title race and Manchester United displaced them at lunchtime today, and it was up to Chelsea to respond. But for the second time in six days they were found wanting.

They threw away a winning position at a rain-swept Ewood Park and are left third, four points adrift of United and two behind Arsène Wenger’s resurgent Gunners. They should get back on track at Portsmouth on Wednesday, but their destiny is no longer in their own hands.

Before this, they took comfort in the fact that if they won all their remaining games they would be champions, regardless of what the others could accomplish. That no longer applies, and Carlo Ancelotti’s expression was more hangdog than ever tonight when, pointedly, the Italian did not gainsay the suggestion that United were now favourites to retain their Premier League crown.

If the result against Internazionale was job-threatening, this one will not have improved the Chelsea manager’s standing with Abramovich and company. The statistics are beginning to look ominous. Of their last 11 matches in all competitions, starting with an unimpressive 1-1 draw at Hull City, Chelsea have won five and lost four, and of their last eight away games in the Premier League they have won just two. By Ancelotti’s own admission, they have lost their confidence. “It’s not an easy moment for us and we have to maintain our confidence and our composure,” he said.

The Italian eschewed wholesale changes after Internazionale, dropping only his left‑back, Yury Zhirkov, in favour of Paolo Ferreira. If the Russian suspected he had been made a scapegoat, he did not have long to let the feeling fester. Branislav Ivanovic, injured in a collision with El‑Hadji Diouf, had to go off just before half-time and Zhirkov came on, with Ferreira switching to the right.

The other absentee from last Tuesday, Michael Ballack, was said to be “not 100% fit” and gave way to Salomon Kalou. Neither Petr Cech nor Hilario were deemed ready to return, so Ross Turnbull, the third‑choice keeper, was in goal for his third game in succession.

Blackburn were well below optimum strength, injuries depriving them of their England goalkeeper, Paul Robinson, the captain, Ryan Nelsen, and another centre-back, Gaël Givet, among others. There was a Premier League debut in central defence for the 18‑year‑old Phil Jones, who could be well satisfied with a steady, no-frills introduction to the big time which brought him the man of the match award and ridiculously premature comparisons with John Terry.

Chelsea were glad to see the back of Robinson, whose shoot-out heroics put them out of the Carling Cup in the quarter-finals in December. His understudy, Jason Brown, was picking the ball out of the back of his net after only six minutes.

Nicolas Anelka motored down the right before delivering a left-footed cutback which Didier Drogba coolly passed low inside the near post, also with his left foot, from 13 yards for his 28th goal of the season.

Slicing through Rovers almost at will, Chelsea should have had the issue settled by half-time, but Kalou met Frank Lampard’s right-wing cross with a feeble header and Florent Malouda shot straight at Brown when a yard to either side would surely have produced a goal.

The possibility that Chelsea might rue such opportunities spurned was underlined at the start of the second half, when it took a goal-line clearance by Zhirkov to prevent Christopher Samba from equalising with a close-range header. It proved to be the case after 70 minutes, with another header. The finish was applied from six yards by Diouf, who climbed above Ferreira at the far post to nod home Michel Salgado’s inviting cross from the right for only his third goal of the season.

So comfortable and assured before the interval, Chelsea had lost their shape and composure. Drogba, attacking a Deco corner, brought a noteworthy save from Brown near the end, but Rovers had the better of the second half and deserved a result which keeps them ahead of the relegation pack.

Premier LeagueBlackburn RoversChelseaJoe Lovejoyguardian.co.uk

Premier League: Blackburn Rovers 0-0 Liverpool

The return of Big Sam following heart surgery to oversee a Blackburn team whose previous outing was the Carling Cup penalty shoot-out elimination of Chelsea produced a performance that adhered to Allardyce’s managerial stereotype.

Unfortunately for Liverpool they were also a little dour, functional, lacking in zip, and, by the close of the goalless draw, it was Rovers who were worrying the visitors.

Liverpool had arrived at Ewood minus Fernando Torres. And while their other stellar name, Steven Gerrard, insisted throughout he might turn the game he appeared surrounded by too many team-mates who are just not in his class.

A drag of Gerrard’s right boot took him clear of traffic inside the area after 13 minutes, but Blackburn’s rearguard cleared. However, they had been warned. Before the break it was the Liverpool captain again, this time wandering from his central berth in Rafael Benítez’s midfield over to the left. He collected and, from a difficult angle, opened his body but could only manage a corner with a deflected shot.

Overall the half had been deficient in action, with Blackburn sporadically threatening, and Torres illustrating the effervescence he drains from Liverpool when absent.

Alberto Aquilani is rumoured to have bucket loads of that stuff, too. But with nearly a month now passing since his sole glimpse (seven minutes) of the Premier League what the £20m Italian midfielder might offer is fast becoming a myth.

When first Alberto Riera, then Yossi Benayon were replaced during the second half, Benítez continued to blank Aquilani. It cannot be long, surely, before questions are asked about a possible bust-up with the manager, or it emerges that he has contracted some mysterious injury which allows only bench-warming action.

David Ngog – on for Riera –came closest to grabbing victory for Liverpool, but the ball appeared to bobble as the striker connected and he could only bend Paul Robinson’s bar.

Minutes later Benni McCarthy, who had an excellent game, had a clearer chance, but he failed to finish. It was that kind of afternoon.

Premier LeagueBlackburn RoversLiverpoolJamie Jacksonguardian.co.uk