Manchester United 1 - 0 Queens Park Rangers
Tevez sinks resilient Rangers

| Scoring Summary | |
| Manchester United | Queens Park Rangers |
| Carlos Tevez (pen 76) | |
| Match Stats | ||
| Manchester United | Queens Park Rangers | |
| Shots (on Goal) | 24(12) | 2(0) |
| Fouls | 7 | 9 |
| Corner Kicks | 15 | 3 |
| Offsides | 1 | 1 |
| Time of Possession | 60% | 40% |
| Yellow Cards | 0 | 0 |
| Red Cards | 0 | 0 |
| Saves | 2 | 15 |
| Match Information |
|
Stadium:
Old Trafford, England
Attendance: 62,539 Match Time: 20:00 UK Official(s): P Dowd (Referee) |
| Teams | |
| Manchester United | Queens Park Rangers |
| 29 Tomasz Kuszczak | 24 Radek Cerny |
| 22 John O'Shea | 5 Fitz Hall |
| 2 Gary Neville | 3 Damion Stewart |
| 21 Rafael | 15 Peter Ramage |
| 23 Jonathan Evans | 16 Matthew Connolly |
| 17 Nani | 17 Lee Cook |
| 28 Darron Gibson | 14 Martin Rowlands |
| 8 Anderson | 4 Gavin Mahon |
| 34 Rodrigo Possebon | 10 Akos Buzsaky |
| 13 Ji-Sung Park | 7 Daniel Parejo |
| 32 Carlos Tevez | 9 Dexter Blackstock |
| Substitutes | |
| 12 Ben Foster | Jake Cole 23 |
| 15 Nemanja Vidic | Damien Delaney 2 |
| 36 David Gray | Kaspars Gorkss 13 |
| 16 Michael Carrick | Hogan Ephraim 42 |
| 35 Tom Cleverley | Emanuele Ledesema 20 |
| 26 Alberto Mateus Contreir Goncalves Manucho | Patrick Agyemang 11 |
| 19 Danny Welbeck | Samuel Di Carmine 22 |
| Substitutions | |
| Danny Welbeck for Rodrigo Possebon (72) | Patrick Agyemang for Akos Buzsaky (33) |
| Nemanja Vidic for Gary Neville (89) | Emanuele Ledesema for Daniel Parejo (46) |
| Samuel Di Carmine for Lee Cook (78) | |
| · Club Squads: Manchester United | Queens Park Rangers | |
Updated: November 11, 2008, 10:22 PM UK
Carlos Tevez's late penalty saw off QPR 1-0 as Manchester United advanced to the Carling Cup quarter-finals at Old Trafford.Few would begrudge United their success but their Championship opponents would have taken the tie to extra-time had it not been for Peter Ramage's rash tackle on England Under-19 striker Daniel Welbeck.
Tevez was not about to pass up the opportunity and confidently beat an otherwise faultless Radek Cerny to steer United through.
With 10,000 empty seats, an unfamiliar side and teeming rain beginning to fall at kick-off, it was hard to escape the feeling a match was taking place United would have preferred did not exist.
Yet for some, it was a hugely important contest.
Darron Gibson cannot have too many more opportunities to impress, Rafael and Rodrigo Possebon needed to build on impressive starts to United careers, Gary Neville had to prove his dismal display at Arsenal on Saturday did not deserve obituaries being penned on his career, and for Tevez, it was an opportunity to prove he is capable of splitting Dimitar Berbatov's strike partnership with Wayne Rooney.
As every game goes by which Tevez does not start, more speculation surfaces over the likelihood of the South American completing a permanent £32million transfer once his two-year loan concludes at the end of the season.
Tevez's scurrying style at least ensured he was one man who looked as though he cared.
After collecting John O'Shea's square pass, he advanced towards the QPR penalty area before taking aim with a shot that dipped just in front of Cerny but the visiting keeper managed to stop anyway.
O'Shea could also claim the assist when he found himself alone on the by-line and delivered a low cross to Tevez which the striker just failed to turn into the net from close range.
As the second of those opportunities arrived in first-half stoppage time, it was a damning verdict on United's performance.
Only Anderson matched Tevez's industry as too many passes went astray and those brave enough to support their teams on a foul night were seeking refuge long before the interval whistle blew.
It is now 12 years since Rangers ventured north for a league game and 1992 that they enjoyed their most famous Old Trafford experience, netting four times on a New Year's Day hat-trick hero Dennis Bailey will never forget.
Not that QPR looked like emulating that feat. A bit like Manchester City, they have lots of money at their disposal but do not appear to know what to do with it.
Temporary boss Gareth Ainsworth was forced into two changes before the second-half started but there was little else to capture his attention as his side created little.
Although it appeared Ferguson had sent his team back out with a renewed sense of purpose judging by the blistering shot Nani sent fizzing wide just after the restart, a familiar pattern soon emerged.
After planting a corner and a 20-yard shot into Cerny's arms, Anderson then let fly with a free-kick that went so far wide it ended up going over the touchline roughly level with the edge of the area.
Nani was about as far away with another shot midway through the half that almost ended up in the second tier of the Stretford End.
Anderson and Tevez did threaten the QPR goal but Cerny did not have to perform heroics to keep United out as a sharp-eyed cameraman captured a rat racing across Old Trafford.
It was hardly Autumnwatch but at least Bill Oddie would have had something to talk about, unlike the spectators, at least until the 14 minutes from time when United finally broke the deadlock.
Ramage did not need to slide in as Welbeck's first touch would have taken the ball through to Cerny. But the defender's rash challenge left the England Under-19 forward in a heap and Tevez did the rest.
In what amounted to a frenzy of late chances, Samuel Di Camini had an equaliser correctly ruled out for offside, while Nani and Park Ji-sung produced fine saves from Cerny as United claimed their place in the last eight.
''I won't be changing,'' he said. ''I will definitely give players who need games a chance in the next round.''
No-one could deny United deserved their success even though they wasted a succession of half-chances and were not as clinical as they might have been given their dominance of possession.
''We deserved it,'' said Ferguson. ''We played with great energy and speed. It was always going to be tough to get that first goal because QPR's defensive record is good but overall I am pretty pleased.''
Tevez will be delighted to get his name on the scoresheet as he aims to prove he is worthy of ousting Dimitar Berbatov or Wayne Rooney from the front-line striking spots.
Welbeck is some way behind in the pecking order but Ferguson feels the youngster is showing real promise.
''Danny is an exceptionally talented young lad,'' he said. ''He has been troubled by a groin injury recently and only played his first game back at Celtic in a reserve game last week.
''He is probably a bit short in fitness terms but he made a difference when he came on.'' For QPR it was a case of what might have been.
Once they went behind they threw caution to the wind and it might have brought them an equaliser, although temporary boss Gareth Ainsworth insisted he had got his tactics right.
''We were a bit cavalier towards the end and might have got a breakthrough, which would have been a fairytale,'' he said. ''But we got the tactics right.
''Once we pushed three players up front, Manchester United started to create chances. We would not have survived if we had done that all night.''
Ainsworth must now get his side ready for Saturday's encounter with Burnley, although he must do so without Gavin Mahon and Lee Cook, who have both suffered knee problems and Daniel Parejo, who was forced off with a back injury.
''They are problems we could do without,'' said Ainsworth. ''I will be making changes that's for sure. We have given a good account of ourselves and this is a fairytale for me. But we are back down to earth at Burnley on Saturday. The Championship is important for us. We have massive ambition and we want to get out of it.''
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
| Arsenal | 3 | |
| Wigan Athletic | 0 | FT |
| Derby County | 2 | |
| Leeds United | 1 | FT |
| Stoke City | 2 | |
| Rotherham United | 0 | FT |
| Swansea City | 0 | |
| Watford | 1 | FT |
| Manchester United | 1 | |
| Queens Park Rangers | 0 | FT |