Manchester United clinched their 17th English championship on Sunday by beating Wigan 2-0 in a nail-biting finale to the most thrilling Premier League title battle in years. Pushed to the wire by Chelsea, United claimed the 10th title of Sir Alex Ferguson's reign by two points after their rivals were held to a 1-1 draw by Bolton in their final match.
"It was a tough one but it is fantastic," said a delighted Ferguson. "I'm very proud but I have a great club. It's much easier for me than anyone else." Typically, the Scot's thoughts immediately turned to the next challenge -- next week's Champions League final against Chelsea.
"The great thing is we are bouncing into the final. We can look forward to it. If we lost to Chelsea today that is a big job."
Chelsea boss Avram Grant paid tribute to Ferguson's extension of an extraordinary record of success. "I want to congratulate Manchester United and Alex Ferguson," Grant said. "He is a great manager and a great person, I like him personally. It is amazing what he did." Cristiano Ronaldo, with a first-half penalty, and Ryan Giggs, on the day he equalled Sir Bobby Charlton's record of 758 Manchester United appearances, were United's match winners.
The Red Devils had been given a huge pre-match boost by the return from injury of Wayne Rooney and the England forward's influence was to prove decisive.
After winning the first-half penalty that enabled Ronaldo to claim his 41st goal of the season, Rooney played in Giggs for the 80th-minute strike that ended any doubt about how the afternoon would end.
Equally influential however was the fact that all the key decisions made by referee Steve Bennett went United's way. The official denied Wigan an early penalty when Rio Ferdinand blocked a shot with his upper arm, awarded a debatable one to United and failed to issue a second yellow card to Paul Scholes for what was a blatant body check by the United midfielder on Wilson Palacios.
Even if they had beaten Bolton, Chelsea would have lost out to United on goal difference. As it turned out, Kevin Davies's last-minute equaliser earned Bolton a draw at Stamford Bridge after Andriy Shevchenko had kept their hopes alive with his first goal since December 26.
At the other end of the table, Danny Murphy's 75th-minute strike gave Fulham a 1-0 win at FA Cup finalists Portsmouth that secured the west London club's top-flight status.
Fulham's survival came at the expense of Birmingham and Reading, who will both be playing Championship football next season, along with already-relegated Derby. Birmingham and Reading went down fighting, winning their final matches in convincing fashion. Birmingham beat Blackburn 4-1 while Reading were 4-0 winners at Derby.
Reading finished level with Fulham on points but were condemned by an inferior goal difference while Birmingham finished a point further back. Arsenal, who won 1-0 at Sunderland thanks to a Theo Walcott strike, and Liverpool, 2-0 winners at Tottenham, finished third and fourth respectively. They will enter the final qualifying round for next season's Champions League. Liverpool's scorers were Andriy Voronin and Fernando Torres, whose 24th league goal of the season took him past Ruud van Nistelrooy's record as the most prolific foreigner in his first season in English football.
Everton beat Newcastle 3-1 in their final match to clinch fifth place in the table. An Aiyegbeni Yakubu double and a Joleon Lescott strike ensured David Moyes side qualify automatically for the UEFA Cup with Michael Owen finding the net for Newcastle. What was almost certainly Sven-Goran Eriksson's last competitive match in charge of Manchester City ended in an ignominious 8-1 thrashing at Middlesbrough. A hat-trick for Brazilian Afonso Alves, two Stewart Downing goals and strikes from Adam Johnson, Fabio Rochemback and Jeremie Aliadiere enabled Boro to finish their season on a high.
City's fate was sealed after captain Richard Dunne was sent off for a foul on Tuncay Sanli that enabled Downing to open the scoring with a 16th-minute penalty.
Gareth Barry, playing what may have been his final match for the club before an expected summer move to Liverpool, was on the scoresheet in Aston Villa's 2-2 draw at West Ham. Barry scored after Ashley Young had cancelled out Nolberto Solana's early freekick but Dean Ashton claimed a late equaliser for the Hammers.
English Premier League table:
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P W D L GF GA PT
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Man Utd 38 27 6 5 80 22 87
Chelsea 38 25 10 3 65 26 85
Arsenal 38 24 11 3 74 31 83
Liverpool 38 21 13 4 67 28 76
Everton 38 19 8 11 55 33 65
Aston Villa 38 16 12 10 71 51 60
Blackburn 38 15 13 10 50 48 58
Portsmouth 38 16 9 13 48 40 57
Man City 38 15 10 13 45 53 55
West Ham 38 13 10 15 42 50 49
Tottenham 38 11 13 14 66 61 46
Newcastle 38 11 10 17 45 65 43
Middlesbrough 38 10 12 16 43 53 42
Wigan 38 10 10 18 34 51 40
Sunderland 38 11 6 21 36 59 39
Bolton 38 9 10 19 36 54 37
Fulham 38 8 12 18 38 60 36
Reading 38 10 6 22 41 66 36
Birmingham 38 8 11 19 46 62 35
Derby 38 1 8 29 20 89 11
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