Failure makes fergie more determined

Failure makes fergie more determined


Play all audios:


United's 2-0 defeat by Barcelona in the Champions League final in Rome on Wednesday has merely strengthened manager Alex Ferguson's resolve to take his club back to the heights of


the European game and achieve the success he craves. PHOTOS: Barcelona 2-0 Manchester United Ferguson had spoken in the weeks leading up to the game how he wanted to secure United's


place in the pantheon of Europe's great clubs like Real Madrid, Ajax Amsterdam and Bayern Munich by retaining the European Cup and starting his own cycle of European success. You may


like Asked afterwards whether he still had the hunger to do that, the 67-year-old Scot turned on the questioner with a tirade few can equal and demanded an apology for the impertinence of


the enquiry, which he duly got. Ferguson went off into the Roman night devastated by the nature of United's defeat -- but also thinking of how to improve things. The loss was especially


painful because for the first 10 minutes, until Barcelona scored, Ferguson could glimpse the mountain top. United started the match far better than Barcelona and if they had carried on the


same vein could have dominated the game and become the first team to retain the title in the Champions League era. Instead Barcelona scored first and took control. The best features, fun and


footballing quizzes, straight to your inbox every week. Ferguson's attempts to change the outcome in the second half by bringing on Carlos Tevez, Dimitar Berbatov and Paul Scholes


failed and before departing he admitted United were beaten by the better team. "I think we've done well to get to final. We had to win it to change the pattern of the teams


defending the trophy. Losing the first goal was decisive for us, we couldn't recover from that," he told reporters. "It could be it was an off night, it could be it was too


big a mountain to climb after going behind." ABSENT FRIENDS The absence of holding midfielder Darren Fletcher, who was suspended, also proved pivotal to the outcome because without him


United failed to take a grip on the midfield. More important than that though was the absence, in spirit if not in body, of some of United's usual match-winners like Wayne Rooney, Ryan


Giggs, Michael Carrick and even Cristiano Ronaldo, who failed to dominate Barcelona. Ferguson spoke at length about his team have matured and developed this season after winning the


Champions League last year, but on this evidence, new blood might be needed sooner rather than later. There is little fuel left in the 35-year-olds Giggs's engine while Scholes, who


replaced his fellow veteran after 75 minutes, also failed to make any impact. Wednesday was a step too far for United this season, which has not exactly been a failure after winning the Club


World Cup, Premier League and League Cup. But that is not enough for Ferguson, which is why everyone else should be even more on their guard next season.