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Sourced from Daily Echo article

Manchester United 3-2 Southampton: Saints suffer Wembley heartbreak after thrilling comeback

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SAINTS were cruelly denied their first major trophy for 41 years after coming back from 2-0 down – only to concede an 87th-minute winner to Zlatan Ibrahimovic.

Manchester United were 2-0 up through a sumptuous Ibrahimovic free-kick and a clinical 38th minute strike from Jesse Lingard.

But sensational Saints came back to make it 2-2 thanks to a brace of goals from new fans’ favourite Manolo Gabbiadini either side of half-time.

Gabbiadini had been unfortunate to have a goal disallowed for offside early on.

But with the momentum behind them after the Italian’s two-goal salvo, Saints midfielder Oriol Romeu headed against the post after Nathan Redmond’s volley was tipped over the bar.

Saints looked the most likely to win what would have been their first major trophy since the 1976 FA Cup.

But they and their magnificent 32,000 fans were left heartbroken when the unmarked Ibrahimovic headed in the late winner.

Saints had thrived after Claude Puel named an unchanged team for the first time since taking over as Saints manager, keeping faith with the team that beat Sunderland 4-0.

Backed by a 32,000-strong wall of sound from behind their goal, Saints soon made their presence felt against a United line-up included six changes from the team that beat St Etienne - their fifth successive win - on Wednesday night.

United had the first shot on target, Forster beating away Paul Pogba’s vicious fourth-minute strike after a measured one-two with Zlatan Ibrahimovic.

But Saints were not cowed by the occasion. Far from it. From Romeu’s pass, Redmond went on one of his jinking runs before winning a corner.

A patient Saints move ended with a fantastic run from Bertrand, who followed his skip past Antonio Valencia with a dangerous low cross.

It came out to Cedric, who played it back into the six-yard box with an outside-of-the-boot pass that Gabbiadini tapped in from the edge of the six-yard box, only to be flagged offside.

To the frustration of the underdogs, replays showed the Italian to be level with United captain Chris Smalling.

It got worse for Saints.

Romeu, who has been a colossus at the heart of Saints’ midfield this season, went into referee Andre Marriner’s notebook for an 18th-minute foul on Herrera.

Ibrahimovic responded by scoring the opening goal from the resulting free-kick, a fabulous dead ball over the wall and into Fraser Forster’s bottom right corner.

The brilliant Swede took the opportunity with aplomb, getting it up and over the Saints wall for his 25th goal of the season from 25 yards.

Saints rallied. After Yoshida’s well-timed tackle on Ibrahimovic, a good run by Tadic was snuffed out before Ward-Prowse’s first-time drive from Gabbiadini’s lay-off was saved by a diving De Gea, who also did well to keep out Tadic’s left- footer from the edge of the area.

Despite trailing, Saints continued to knock it around nicely and from a corner gave United a scare at the near post.

But the lead was doubled in the 38th minute when Lingard controlled a pass from the left with his right foot before letting it roll across him and sidefooting it into the bottom right corner.

Jack Stephens was booked soon after the restart for a foul on Martial and Lingard went into the book for dissent.

Then Saints scored on the stroke of half-time. Redmond fed Ward-Prowse and his cross from the right was converted at the near post by Gabbiadini.

Michael Carrick came on for Juan Mata at half-time, but Saints were electric at the start of the second half.

Redmond’s terrific volley was tipped over the bar and from the resulting flag kick, Yoshida won a second corner at the far post.

It was headed back into the area and Gabbiadini, with his back to goal and Smalling immediately behind him, turned on the penalty spot before clinically hooking a volleyed equaliser into the bottom corner.

Forster saved well at the feet of Ibrahimovic from Martial’s pass but Saints soon threatened again.

Valenica conceded a corner under pressure from Bertrand following Cedric’s whipped cross.

From Ward-Prowse’s flag kick, Romeu climbed above Pogba to head against the far post.

Saints were in the ascendancy and still had half an hour to make it count.

A great tackle from Yoshida on Lingard kept United at bay and from Martial’s cross, Lingard fired over at the back post.

It was Lingard’s last action of the half as Marcus Rashford was introduced.

For Saints Sofiane Boufal came on for Tadic and Gabbiadini came off to a standing ovation to be replaced by semi-final hero Shane Long.

Forster denied Rashford at his near post and with five minutes left of normal time another Bertrand cross fizzed across the six-yard box.

Then it happened. United countered before Herrera chipped in a cross to the unmarked Ibrahimovic, who made no mistake from the edge of the six-yard box.

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Sourced from Mirror.co.uk article

Who is Manolo Gabbiadini? Southampton star’s career so far

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Manolo Gabbiadini has taken England by storm since arriving in January… but the Italian was hardly the first name on Premier League fans’ wish list before his emergence.

The new Southampton front man has scored five goals in his first three games, including a double in the EFL Cup final at Wembley, and looks like a first-rate goalscorer.

The 25-year-old was somewhat of a journeyman in Italy before arriving on the south coast, but he must have done something to justify his £14.6million price tag.

Here’s the story of Gabbiadini’s career so far:

Gabbiadini made his Serie A debut aged 18 for Atalanta in March 2010, making one more start that season.

He spent the next season at Serie B side Cittadella in a co-ownership deal, where he scored five goals in 27 appearances, before returning to Atalanta in 2011 but only scored one goal in his first full season despite 25 Serie A appearances.

Despite an unimpressive season at Atalanta Gabbiadini was again involved in a co-ownership deal to Juventus for £5m.

He had made his Italy debut just a week before signing to Juve in a 2-1 friendly defeat by England in Bern.

The 21-year-old was then loaned out to Bologna, where he netted seven goals in 31 games in his second season in Serie A.

But that wasn’t enough to convince Juventus, as he never got to step out on the turf for the famous club.

Sampdoria bought Atalanta’s half of Gabbiadini for £5million and he rewarded them with his best ever season, reaching double figures in Serie A with 10 in 35 appearances.

That attracted the attention of Napoli in January 2015 who paid Juventus and Sampdoria £13million for the striker, just two months after scoring his first and only international goal against Romania.

In his first two seasons in Naples Gabbiadini netted 20 goals in all competitions in 60 games.

Not a first choice at Napoli, the striker netted just twice before December, but then scored either side of the winter break in a 3-3 win at Fiorentina and a 2-1 win at home to Sampdoria and then scored three days later in he Coppa Italia.

That was enough to convince Claude Puel to bring him to the Premier League.

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Sourced from Daily Mail article

Southampton boss Puel rues disallowed goal in EFL Cup final defeat

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Claude Puel claimed that Southampton were unlucky to miss out on their first major trophy for 41 years as they left Wembley heartbroken and empty-handed.

Striker Manolo Gabbiadini had a legitimate early goal incorrectly ruled out for offside before Manchester United surged into a two-goal lead before half-time.

Gabbiadini struck twice either side of half-time to bring Saints level and Puel’s side hit the post as they went in search of a winner, but Zlatan Ibrahimovic struck for United three minutes from the end.

‘It was all the game unlucky because the first goal of Gabbiadini is a good goal,’ said Puel. ‘He scored three good goals this afternoon. But the decision did not go for us.

‘I’m disappointed for the players and the fans. Just before the third goal we had the best situation and opportunities. It’s a big disappointment with the quality of this game.’

Asked if he would like to see video technology introduced in future, Puel replied: ‘I would of course like the video for the future for these situations. But for the moment football is without video. Sometimes there is a bad decision against us and it is important to accept this.’

It cost Southampton the chance to lift their first major trophy since they beat United in the 1976 FA Cup final, but Puel was still proud of the way his players performed.

‘At 2-0 we came back with quality,’ he said. ‘When you come back a second time it was good football with many chances. Perhaps we deserved better but it’s football and congratulations to Manchester United.

‘For them to have two shots and score two goals was very hard. We showed very good spirit to come back.

‘We were underdogs but now I think we can say it was a good thing to say it was possible to win.’

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Sourced from Optimus trousers summary article summary

Summary of non-mainstream articles: 26/02/2017 23:37:21

| | Best result for Everton? Ronald Koeman reacts on Twitter to Southampton’s EFL Cup final defeatHEREISTHECITY |
| | Everton news: Fans react on Twitter to Gabbiadini display for SouthamptonFOOTBALLINSIDER |

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Sourced from Sky Sports article

Puel proud despite defeat

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Claude Puel was proud of his players performance despite losing 3-2 to Manchester United in the EFL Cup final and felt his team deserved more from the game.

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Sourced from Sky Sports article

Le Tissier rages at ‘offside’ goal

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Matt Le Tissier was not happy that Manolo Gabbiadini’s goal was ruled out after the Saints striker was wrongly adjudged to be offside in the build up.

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Sourced from London Evening Standard article

‘Gabbiadini scored three good goals’ - Puel rues offside controversy

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Southampton manager Claude Puel was left to rue a controversial decision as Manolo Gabbiadini was denied a potential EFL Cup final hat-trick in the 3-2 defeat to Manchester United.

The Saints signed Gabbiadini for £14million in January, and the Italian striker has already started repaying that fee with five goals in three appearances since his arrival from Serie A Napoli.

Two of those goals came in Sunday’s final against United to draw Southampton level at 2-2 after Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Jesse Lingard had scored for Jose Mourinho’s Red Devils.

But Gabbiadini should arguably have been the first name on the scoresheet as referee Andre Marriner ruled out his early strike for offside, despite replays showing the the 25-year-old was clearly onside - a decision Saints legend Matt Le Tissier described as “disgusting” during Sky Sports’ half-time coverage.

Gabbiadini was substituted off in the second half as Ibrahimovic went on to head the late winner for United, and Puel was frustrated by the early call against his side in a tight Wembley final.

“The first goal of Gabbiadini, It was a good goal and he scored three good goals this afternoon,” Puel said. “I think it should have stood.”

The Frenchman added: "It’s a lot of disappointment of course. We played a very good game and I hope we can continue on this level.

"I’m proud of my players because we played very well, with many chances.

"I think perhaps we deserved better - it’s football and congratulations for Manchester, for Mourinho, for his players.

“The memories are always for the winner.”

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Sourced from The Telegraph article

League Cup final offside error will haunt Stuart Burt – and possibly Southampton – for eternity

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Every official looks forward to cup finals and you are awarded a medal afterwards that you treasure forever. I fear that whenever Stuart Burt looks at that medal in years to come it will simply serve as a reminder of the atrocious decision he made that denied Southampton an opening goal at Wembley and – perhaps – their first major trophy in 41 years.

Burt’s decision to disallow Manolo Gabbiadini’s effort for offside was clearly incorrect, and it was also obvious very quickly that it was the wrong call. I wonder if he thought the goal was actually scored by Ryan Bertrand, who was beyond Gabbiadini and would have been offside. If that is the case it is an even worse error than it initially appeared, as officials are told to wait before making crucial decisions to give themselves some time to think.

Either way it should have been an easy decision and it is one that officials at this level simply must get right.

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Sourced from Sky Sports article

Jose Mourinho says Southampton deserved to take Man Utd to extra-time in EFL Cup final

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Jose Mourinho says Southampton deserved to take Man Utd to extra-time in EFL Cup final

Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho admitted he was feeling the pressure in the EFL Cup final and thought Southampton deserved to take the game to extra-time.

Having led 2-0 through goals from Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Jesse Lingard, United were pegged back by Manolo Gabbiadini’s double either side of half-time.

But Ibrahimovic headed home the winner in the 87th minute to give Mourinho his first trophy at Manchester United.

“It’s not easy to win titles, and so many times,” Mourinho told Sky Sports. "It’s not easy to cope with that pressure that I put myself under in my career. It was a game in which I was feeling the difficulty.

“I want to give Southampton the credit they deserve. We have the cup but we should be now playing extra-time.”

Having played three games in the last fortnight while Saints have not been in action at all, Mourinho admitted his side might have struggled if there was an extra 30 minutes.

“I could feel the difference of freshness between one team and another,” he said. "I think if it went to extra-time we would have been in trouble. So I had to compact the team and try to give some stability because the fuel was in their [Southampton] legs, not in ours.

"Zlatan won the game for us. He was outstanding. I can see a couple of performances at a similar level, for example [Paul] Pogba. But he was outstanding.

“In a match where our opponent was better than us for long periods of the game and they deserved extra-time, not to lose over 90 minutes, he made the difference and gave us the cup.”

While the trophy is the first for Mourinho at Old Trafford, there could be the chance to win more this season as United are still competing on three fronts.

And Mourinho said: "For the development of the team there is nothing better than the feeling of trophies.

“Now we have Bournemouth in the Premier League, Rostov in the Europa League and Chelsea in the FA Cup, so we have so much to play.”

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Sourced from Optimus trousers summary article summary

Summary of non-mainstream articles: 27/02/2017 00:37:30

| | Southampton fans react on Twitter as Manolo Gabbiadini shines in EFL Cup final; Puel slammed for late decisionHEREISTHECITY |

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Sourced from talkSPORT article

Jose Mourinho concedes Manchester United were fortunate to beat Southampton in EFL Cup final

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Jose Mourinho conceded Manchester United had been fortunate to beat Southampton in the EFL Cup final but that he was relieved to have won his first trophy at the club.

The United manager also again praised the contribution of their matchwinner Zlatan Ibrahimovic, before insisting he had no plans to “beg” the striker to sign a new contract.

Their 3-2 victory at Wembley Stadium not only brought Mourinho level on four League Cup victories with Sir Alex Ferguson and Brian Clough, but it made him the club’s first ever manager to win a major trophy in his first season there.

Success looked in doubt throughout much of a second half dominated by Southampton after Manolo Gabbiadini’s second goal had made the score 2-2 after Ibrahimovic’s free-kick and Jesse Lingard’s finish had given United the lead.

Against the run of play Ibrahimovic’s second, in the 87th minute, restored their advantage, before also ensuring a continuation of Mourinho’s fine record in English football.

“First of all, the man that just left table (Southampton manager Claude Puel) has a reason to be really sad and disappointed,” said the Portuguese, 54.

"His team did fantastic work, deserved extra time, and to lose in the 87th minute gives very little time to try to react.

"It’s a bit unfair for them. They gave us a beautiful final, a beautiful match.

"I’m obviously very happy with the victory, with the fact that I did it four times, the same as Mr Clough, and with a chance to win for a fifth time.

“The game was broken at 2-2. We were lucky to be 2-0 (up). Then 2-1 changed completely the direction of the game. Obviously the 2-2: a phenomenal goal. Technically it’s such a difficult shot. Then the game is broken.”

Despite looking glum, Mourinho reiterated: "I am very happy. I always try to put myself in the secondary position - it’s important for the fans, the club, the players - but it’s also important for me.

"I put a lot of pressure on myself; you put a lot of pressure on myself. I wanted very much to win a major trophy at every club; by doing that with Manchester United it’s quite the sense of relief because it was a big target for me.

“The reality is that we want more: my contract is long, I have two more years with this one, so hopefully I can win more. This season I know it’s difficult, but the reality is we have to try to fight for more.”

Mourinho was then asked why he had had such faith in Ibrahimovic, then aged 34 and considered in decline, when he recruited him last summer.

He has made the striker so central to United’s plans that he has also marginalised club captain Wayne Rooney, and in a country in which he was previously thought to not be a big-game player.

“I was his manager, I know his potential,” he responded. "Only a silly player comes to England at 35 years old, and with the successful career that Zlatan has, if he doesn’t feel he can do it.

“Who better to know? Him. Not me, not you. Him. To take the challenge to come to a country like England, to a club like Manchester United. It’s his credit, not my credit. I don’t take him here if he doesn’t want to come, if he’s not ready.”

Ibrahimovic’s future remains the subject of speculation given his contract expires at the season’s end, and Mourinho said: "I never beg for a player to sign a contract. I never beg for a player to play for me.

"One day Zlatan decided to (leave me and Inter Milan to join) Barcelona, I was very sad, but I did nothing to try to stop him to go, so I don’t beg for players.

"But, if needed, maybe United fans can go to the door of his house, and stay there all night, if needed. We all want, and believe, that he is going to stay another season.

"It’s one of these finals that I don’t like. I like the finals like before, Chelsea-Manchester United, Chelsea-Arsenal, Chelsea-Liverpool, Chelsea-Tottenham.

“These are the finals I like, because you are not the favourite; you don’t have more responsibility on your shoulder. This game is tricky, it’s a tricky final.”

Southampton had been unfortunate when, at 0-0, Gabbiadini had an early finish wrongly disallowed for offside.

Their attacking threat meant they also deserved to take the lead at 2-2, and their manager Claude Puel became the latest to call for the introduction of video technology.

“I would like of course the video for the future, for this situation for example,” said the Frenchman, 55.

"For the moment in football without video, and just sometimes a bad decision and against us for the team.

"It’s important to accept this but I am disappointed for the players and for the fans.

"It’s very hard when we see this game to lose this game but it’s football.

"Before the third goal we had the best situation, the best opportunities (to win).

“It is a big disappointment with the quality of this game. (And a) frustration of course for all my players.”

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Sourced from Sky Sports article

Matt Le Tissier rages at Manolo Gabbiadini’s disallowed EFL Cup final goal

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Matt Le Tissier has branded the decision to rule out Manolo Gabbiadini’s opening goal in the EFL Cup final as “disgusting”.

The Italian striker looked to have secured an 11th-minute lead for Southampton in their first major final appearance since 2003, turning Cedric Soares’ cross beyond Manchester United goalkeeper David de Gea from six yards.

But, with Ryan Bertrand having stayed beyond the last United defender, the linesman chalked Gabbiadini’s effort off for offside, despite the left-back not making contact with the ball.

The decision prompted fiery criticism from Sky Sports pundit and former Saints midfielder Le Tissier, who took offence with the decision he felt distorted the the complexion of the final.

“If Southampton had scored the first goal it would have put a whole new complexion on this game,” he said.

"At this level, the assistant has to get the decision right. The linesman cannot even see Gabbiadini (because he’s behind Chris Smalling, onside) so how can he flag him offside?

"What is he thinking? How can he think Bertrand tapped the ball in?

“This is a cup final, he has to get these decisions right and that decision was disgusting.”

Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Jesse Lingard would both go on to score before the Saints finally found the back of the net through Gabbiadini’s strike in first-half stoppage time.

The January signing then hauled his side level three minutes after the interval, but it proved to be fruitless as Ibrahimovic’s 87th-minute winner saw United win the trophy.

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Sourced from Mirror.co.uk article

Southampton boss Claude Puel calls for introduction of video technology

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Claude Puel called for video technology to be introduced for offside decisions after his Southampton side were denied a legitimate goal.

Saints took the lead with a goal from striker Manolo Gabbiadini, but had the effort ruled out for offside by referee Andre Marrier.

Replays showed Gabbiadini had timed his run perfectly and was onside, the decision costing Puel’s side the chance to strike first and take the lead.

Puel called for video technology to be brought in to deal with such decisions in the future, to ensure no other teams are victims of such high-profile injustices.

“I would like, of course, the video [technology] for the future,” said Puel.

"We scored first, but the decision was not for us. We had a very good start, and it’s always better to be 1-0 up.

"Sometimes you get a bad decision and it’s important to accept this.

"We came back with quality. Perhaps we deserved better, but it’s football and congratulations to Manchester United.

“There’s a lot of disappointment of course. We had a fantastic game without the reward. I hope we can continue on this level.”

Puel paid tribute to his players, who were better than United for much of the game and came back from 2-0 down to draw level, only to lose to Zlatan Ibrahimovic’s 87th-minute winner.

“I’m proud of my players,” said Puel. "They played a fantastic game.

"We had many chances, we stayed in the game and came back just before half-time. After that we came back with good attitude, good spirit and continued our good work.

“Now we must come back in the Premier League with strength and quality.”

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Summary of non-mainstream articles: 27/02/2017 01:37:44

| | Manchester United 3-2 Southampton: 16 ConclusionsFOOTBALL365 |
| | Talking points: Manchester United 3 Southampton 2 in EFL Cup final - Official Manchester United WebsiteOFFMANUTD |
| | Man United’s Jose Mourinho’s magnanimous post-EFL Cup Final Presser101GREATGOALS |
| | Manolo Gabbiadini had a perfectly good goal disallowed in the EFL Cup final, so fans celebrated his ‘hat-trick’ anywayIRISHEXAMINER |

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Sourced from Daily Echo article

Davis urges Saints to be proud in defeat

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CAPTAIN Steven Davis has urged Saints to be proud of their performance in the League Cup final defeat to Manchester United at Wembley.

After suffering the injustice of a disallowed goal that should have stood and going 2-0 down, Saints battled back through a Manolo Gabbiadini brace to equalise.

The Italian striker had hit home from close range on 11 minutes, but it was chalked off after Ryan Bertrand was adjudged to be inferring with play and therefore offside.

Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Jesse Lingard then gave United a two-goal advantage before Saints staged a stirring comeback.

Yet, with Saints in the ascendancy, Ibrahimovic struck late to break Saints hearts.

“Everyone’s feeling down, but we can feel proud of the spirit and character we’ve shown, especially after going 2-0 down,” he said.

“When we got ourselves back in the game, we thought we might go on and win in it.

“United were clinical and that’s hard. It will take a couple of days to mull it over.

“We wanted to come here and win.”

Skipper Davis admitted Saints were unsurprisingly feeling very down after missing the opportunity to win a first major trophy in 41 years.

“It’s obviously a quiet dressing room in there as you’d expect,” he said. “It’s a difficult one to take because we deserved a lot more.

“We showed great character to get back in the game, but luck wasn’t on our side today – the disallowed goal that would have put us in front and then the second half we hit the post and De Gea had a couple of good saves.

“United were clinical and you can’t really enjoy a final unless you win it, so it’s a quiet dressing room.”

Saints were certainly the better team, dominating United for long periods.

“It’s no conciliation at the minute to be honest, but if we play like that between now and the end of the season we’ll certainly win more games,” Davis added.

“We deserved more today, but fair play to United.”

“Whenever you’re in a final it can make all the difference if you make a good start and it was a massive point in the game. If we’d got ourselves in front it might of taken us onto win,” he said.

“But the unfortunately the decision didn’t go for us. We didn’t get the rub of the green today.”

He continued: “Some decision you get and some you don’t, but in a major final you want those decisions to go for you, especially when you’re playing against a team like Manchester United.

“The first goal is always important and it would have been massive had we got that.”

“They were great. They were right behind us and they got behind us to get back into the game. It’s just disappointing we couldn’t send them home with a winners’ medal.”

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Sourced from Daily Echo article

Manchester United 3-2 Southampton: Mourinho praise for Saints

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Jose Mourinho confessed his sympathy for Saints and insisted that Claude Puel’s team deserved at least extra-time in the EFL Cup final.

The Manchester United manager was understandably happy to get his hands on the first trophy of his time in charge at Old Trafford following the 3-2 victory at Wembley.

But he struck a humble tone in front of the media after the match, starting his press conference by paying tribute to Claude Puel, the Saints team and the club’s fans.

He said: “First of all, the man that left the table (Puel) has a reason to be really sad and disappointed.

“His team did fantastic work, deserved extra time, and to lose in the 87th minute gives very little time to try to react. It’s a bit unfair for them. They gave us a beautiful final, a beautiful match.

“I’m obviously very happy with the victory, very happy with the fact that I did it four times, the same as the biggest one, the same as Mr Clough, and with a chance to win for a fifth time.

“The game was broken at 2-2. We were lucky to be 2-0. Then 2-1, changed completely the direction of the game. Obviously the 2-2: a phenomenal goal. Technically it’s such a difficult shot, and (Manolo) Gabbiadini’s execution is phenomenal.

“Then the game is broken, and when the game is broken, but we coped because we were humble.”

It was Mourinho’s main man, Zlatan Ibrahimovic, who, perhaps somewhat predictably, proved to be the match winner.

His double, including the decisive goal three minutes from time, made it an incredible ten goals in 14 games against teams managed by Puel, including four against Saints this season alone.

Mourinho admitted he was more concerned about facing Saints in a major final than he would have been had Liverpool or Chelsea made it through to Wembley.

“It’s one of these finals that I don’t like,” he insisted.

“I like the finals like before, Chelsea-Manchester United, Chelsea-Arsenal, Chelsea-Liverpool, Chelsea-Tottenham.

“These are the finals I like, because you are not the favourite, you are playing against another big team, you don’t have more responsibility on your shoulder.

“You can play the game, and think the game, as power against power.

“They are Southampton, a club that is growing up, but they are not Manchester United.

“Their players are good players, their coach is a good coach, their fans were exactly the same number as our fans, so it’s a tricky final.

“I was a favourite for this one more than the other ones. This one was tricky.”

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Sourced from ESPN FC article

Southampton gave Manchester United a ‘beautiful final’ - Jose Mourinho

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Jose Mourinho admitted that Manchester United’s 3-2 win in the EFL Cup final was “unfair” on Southampton on Sunday.

Zlatan Ibrahimovic headed home an 87th-minute winner for United, adding to a brilliant free kick that opened the scoring in the first half, but Southampton were arguably the better team over the 90 minutes, something that Mourinho seemed to acknowledge after the match.

“I feel Claude Puel has a reason to be sad and disappointed,” Mourinho said. “He did fantastic work. His team deserved extra-time, and to lose in minute 87 with very little time to react I think is a bit unfair for them. I have to give this word to Claude, to Southampton’s players and fans, because they gave us a beautiful final.”

Mourinho claimed that he was more nervous about this final than others against bigger teams, on the basis that Southampton were underdogs and there was thus more pressure on his side.

“I like the big ones – against Arsenal, or Chelsea, or Tottenham, because you are not favourites,” he said. "You’re playing against another big team and you don’t have more responsibility on your shoulders. It’s power against power.

“These finals are tricky. They are Southampton, a club that is growing up, but they are not Manchester United. I was afraid of this one more than the other ones, when you know another giant is on the other side.”

Mourinho has now won the League Cup four times, and he acknowledged the achievement that puts him level with “the biggest one [Sir Alex Ferguson] and Mr [Brian] Clough.” He didn’t appear to be particularly delighted after the game, but insisted he was happy.

“It’s good for the club, and for the fans,” he said. “I always try to put myself in the secondary position, but the reality is that it’s also important for me I put a lot of pressure on myself. I wanted to win a major trophy at every club…I want more. I have two more years plus this one, so hopefully I can win more.”

Nick Miller is a writer for ESPN FC, covering Premier League and European football. Follow him on Twitter @NickMiller79.

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Southampton manager Claude Puel calls for video technology after Manolo Gabbiadini goal wrongly chalked off at Wembley

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To appreciate the magnitude of what Manolo Gabbiadini should have achieved – if football had not been so backward in its approach to video technology – you simply had to look at the rarefied list of hat-tricks in a major Wembley cup final. It has happened just once in the FA Cup – Stan Mortenson in 1953 – and never previously in the League Cup. The only other was Sir Geoff Hurst in the 1966 World Cup final.

Yet it was not Gabbiadini’s own personal frustration that fuelled Southampton’s burning sense of injustice; just the belief that a 41-year wait for silverware might well have ended had referee Andre Marriner – and his assistant Stuart Burt – not ruled out Gabbiadini’s clearly onside ‘goal’ in the 11th minute.

“At this level, that assistant has to get that right; he can’t even see Gabbiadini,” said Matthew Le Tissier, a pundit on Sky Sports. “The referee should go over and speak to him. That changes the complexion of the game. It is disgusting.”

Even Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho graciously used the word “unfair” in reference to Southampton’s defeat and it was left to Claude Puel to outline a desire for video technology to be introduced for decisions beyond just goal-line incidents.

“I would like, of course, video in the future for these situations,” said the Southampton manager. “It’s very hard when we see this game to lose. It was cruel.”

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