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Ajax vs Manchester United. UEFA Europa League Round of 32.

Amsterdam ArenaAttendance51,000.

Ajax 0

    Manchester United 2

    • A Young (59th minute)
    • J Hernández (85th minute)

    Dutch delight for classy United

    Manchester United made a winning start to their Europa League debut after a 2-0 victory against Ajax at the Amsterdam ArenA.

    Young and Hernandez on target for Red Devils in Amsterdam

    Manchester United made a winning start to their Europa League debut after goals from Ashley Young and Javier Hernandez handed them a 2-0 last-32, first leg victory against Ajax at the Amsterdam ArenA. In a classy second half showing Young broke the deadlock just before the hour mark as the winger showed quick feet to step inside Vurnon Anita before firing his low shot through the legs of Kenneth Vermeer for his first goal since September. And the visitors took a giant stride towards the last 16 with five minutes remaining as Hernandez combined beautifully with Wayne Rooney before finishing off the flowing move from close-range despite Vermeer's best efforts to surely make next Thursday's second leg at Old Trafford a formality.

    Poor start

    Tom Cleverley was handed his European debut after playing just twice since the beginning of September and not at all for over three months, Nani and Phil Jones back after four match absences and Ashley Young only just returned from a pre-Christmas injury, it was perhaps no surprise United were so far off the pace. Too many first touches and passes went astray. Crossing was a particularly bad area. Nani sent one corner straight out for a goal kick, failed to pick out a team-mate with one obvious cross and then smashed a shot into the side-netting from an impossible angle as Wayne Rooney and Javier Hernandez screamed for a pass. On the other flank, Young fared only marginally better and though Cleverley flickered, he could not sustain his impact for any length of time. As usual then, Rooney was the visitors' main threat, although his 25-yard effort lacked the venom to beat Kenneth Vermeer with the best chance of that tepid opening period. Ajax played the kind of free-flowing passing football for which Holland is renowned. Christian Eriksen may be a Dane but it was easy to see why he chose Holland to learn his trade rather than expose himself to the physicality of the Premier League. Eriksen prodded and probed and tested David de Gea with a couple of pot shots. Siem de Jong came closest to breaking the deadlock though, also from long-range. The wide-man's shot was on target though and De Gea needed to stretch to keep it out. When United last appeared in a European game outside the Champions League, goalkeeper Peter Schmeichel was amongst the scorers. De Gea never contemplated emulating the great Dane. His stock is starting to rise though and Ajax refused to reduce themselves to pumping their opponents' box with crosses in an effort to expose the Spain star's weakeness under a high ball. That there was no injury-time reflected a general lack of first-half excitement. There as a talking point in the final minute though when Miralem Sulejmani went down under Rio Ferdinand's challenge. Ajax were convinced it was a penalty. Italian referee Gianluca Rocchi decided otherwise, leaving Ferdinand to hobble down the tunnel for his break.
    Pressure
    Stand-in skipper for the night in place of an emotionally drained Patrice Evra, Ferdinand was able to return for a second-half United began with far more zip than they had shown previously. Jan Vertonghen was at full stretch to prevent Young's cross reaching Jones at the far post and Vermeer and Vurnon Anita combined to snuff out an opening that seemed to be presenting itself to Hernandez. United were definitely turning the screw though and it was no surprise they broke the deadlock just before the hour. So frustrating so often, Nani for once managed to find a team-mate with a cross that flicked off an Ajax defender. Young steadied himself after beating Anita, eventually drilling a low shot through a crowd of bodies. It was the former Aston Villa man's fourth goal since his £18million summer move to United and was followed immediately by Cleverley's departure for Paul Scholes, in the absence of Ryan Giggs the only remaining member of that 1995 UEFA Cup team. Antonio Valencia's introduction for Young provided the South American with enough time to begin a move that ended with Hernandez exchanging passes with Rooney before slotting home his third goal in as many games and ninth of the season. Valencia was instantly replaced after taking a knock in the build-up, although it only appeared to be a precaution.
    Ajax Team Statistics Manchester United
    0 Goals 2
    0 1st Half Goals 0
    5 Shots on Target 3
    8 Shots off Target 6
    1 Blocked Shots 3
    5 Corners 8
    11 Fouls 6
    0 Offsides 2
    2 Yellow Cards 1
    0 Red Cards 0
    85.7 Passing Success 87
    21 Tackles 16
    66.7 Tackles Success 62.5
    44 Possession 56
    55.3 Territorial Advantage 44.7
    505 Total Passes 637
    22 Total Crosses 26
    133 Lost Balls 142
    61 Recoveries 67
    42.5 1st Half Poss. 57.5
    46.1 2nd Half Poss. 53.9

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