Sir Alex Ferguson was denied victory in his 1,500th and final game in charge of
Manchester United as
Romelu Lukaku's hat-trick earned
West Brom a 5-5 draw.
The champions went 3-0 up through
Shinji Kagawa,
Jonas Olsson's own goal and
Alexander Buttner's fine finish.
James Morrison reduced the deficit and Baggies' substitute Lukaku made it 3-2, before
Robin van Persie and
Javier Hernandez put
United 5-2 ahead.
But Lukaku's late double and
Youssouf Mulumbu denied
Ferguson a winning end.
Watching his side concede three goals in the space of five minutes late in the game was hardly the finish Ferguson wanted at the end of a magnificent managerial career.
But the retiring
Scot still managed a smile and a wave before disappearing down the tunnel for the last time.
Despite the crazy finish at
The Hawthorns, United ended the season 11 points clear of
Premier League runners-up
Manchester City, the most comfortable winning margin since
Chelsea beat
Arsenal by 12 points in 2004-05.
If Ferguson's official retirement party was at
Old Trafford seven days earlier, this was the final goodbye.
Nearly 10,000 days since his first match in charge of United, an inauspicious 2-0 defeat against
Oxford United, Ferguson took his place in the dugout for the final time after players from both sides had formed a guard of honour.
Dressed in blazer and tie, Ferguson acknowledged all four sides of the ground as a sell-out crowd rose in appreciation of the
Scottish mastermind who had accumulated 13 league titles, five FA
Cups, four
League Cups, two
European Cups and one
Club World Cup during 26 years in charge at Old Trafford.
Ferguson then sat back and watched his much-changed side dismantle West Brom in the opening
30 minutes before the home side roared back to snatch a thrilling
point which sees them finish a creditable eighth in the Premier League table.
Though the occasion revolved around the 71-year-old, there was a match to be won and records to be broken.
Lukaku's second-half efforts ultimately denied United a Premier League record 29th win of the season, which would also have seen Ferguson's men equal their best points haul of 91 in the competition.
West Brom's chances of raining on Ferguson's
parade seemed slim in the sixth minute when
Japan international Kagawa punished some poor defending to nod home
Hernandez's cross from close range.
Three minutes later it was 2-0, Olsson steering
Antonio Valencia's low cross from the right past
Ben Foster.
Such was United's dominance in the first half that there were times when the match had the feel of a pre-season friendly.
Ferguson did not even bother getting out of his seat to celebrate Buttner's 30th-minute goal, a powerful finish from a tight angle by the
Dutch full-back after neat work by
Tom Cleverley and the impressive Hernandez.
The Baggies reduced the deficit before half-time through James Morrison after he had got ahead of
Phil Jones to steer home a cross from the right.
The introduction of Lukaku, on loan from Chelsea, at the start of the second half ultimately proved to be the turning point.
The Belgian found the net with a quality low finish from 20 yards before Robin van Persie's 26th league goal of the campaign, from a cross by
Valencia, made it 4-2.
It looked all over when the tireless Hernandez added a fifth by steering home a
Ryan Giggs cross.
But after Lukaku converted a neat pass in the 81st minute to bring the hosts back within two goals,
Mulumbu made it 5-4 moments later following a cross from the right.
The comeback was completed in the 86th minute when Lukaku bundled the ball over the line from close range at the second attempt after United's defence had failed to clear.
The final whistle was greeted with relief on the United bench, Ferguson just about managing a smile as he made his way from the dugout.
With one final wave, he vanished down the tunnel for the last time.
Truly the end of an era.
- published: 03 Mar 2016
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