Edinson Cavani’s first-half volley was the highlight as Manchester United eased past La Liga side Granada at Old Trafford to book a Europa League semi-final with Roma.
GET IN!
See you in the #UEL semi-finals 😎
🔴 #MUFC
— Manchester United (@ManUtd) April 15, 2021
Leading 2-0 from the first leg of their quarter-final in Spain last week, Cavani took away any lingering doubt over United reaching the last four when he provided a smart finish to Paul Pogba’s sixth-minute flicked header.
United scored a second in stoppage time when Jesus Vallejo turned Alex Telles’ cross into his own net.
As Roma came through a nervy night at the Stadio Olimpico against Ajax, it means a reunion for United old boys Henrikh Mkhitaryan and Chris Smalling, who has been sidelined in recent weeks with a knee injury.
It was a notable night for Cavani, whose his first European goal for United was his 50th in total in continental competition.
It was the 34-year-old’s ninth of the season overall and will intensify talk about whether he will sign an extension to his contract, which expires at the end of June.
Earlier this season, in a crucial Champions League group encounter with PSG, United manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer was caught out when he failed to replace Fred, who was on a booking and looking dangerously close to being sent off.
The United boss was criticised when the Brazilian was then shown a red card, leading to a defeat that was part of the reason his side ended up in the Europa League.
There were echoes of that night in the way Pogba needlessly got himself booked midway through the opening period.
Made captain for the night in the absence of Harry Maguire, one of three United players suspended for this game, Pogba was yellow carded for shoving his arm into the face of German Sanchez.
Within minutes, Pogba had caught Yangel Herrera with a late tackle, bringing screams for a dismissal from the Granada players. The protests of former Tottenham striker Roberto Soldado were so fierce he was booked by Romanian referee Istvan Kovacs.
Solskjaer resisted an immediate change but, with the tie won, he took the sensible option of replacing Pogba with Donny van de Beek at half-time.
United will now play in their 18th European semi-final. It will also be their fifth semi-final during Solskjaer’s time in charge.
The Norwegian will not need to be reminded that his side have lost the other four, nor that, if United fail to secure silverware this season, it will be four seasons without a trophy,
That would match the four barren seasons between United’s FA Cup wins in 1985 and 1990, that latter marking the start of Sir Alex Ferguson’s era of glory.
Mkhitaryan was a goalscorer when United won their last trophy, this competition, in 2017. Pogba was the other.
Together with Marcus Rashford, Pogba will be the only starter from that victory against Ajax in Stockholm likely to be in Solskjaer’s team for the semi-final first-leg on 29 April.
United’s victory was only their second in 11 home games against Spanish opposition, which says a lot about Granada’s status compared to the European heavyweights Old Trafford is used to hosting.
They should really have won by more but Bruno Fernandes was off target with a first-time volley from Nemanja Matic’s lofted pass and a low shot from Cavani’s lay-off, and Mason Greenwood also fired wide as United coasted through the remainder of the contest.
Substitute Jorge Molina’s header straight at David de Gea was the highlight for a Granada outfit more notable for the noise they made rather than anything they did on the pitch and who ended the night with an unfortunate own goal.
United are next in action against Burnley in the Premier League on Sunday, 18 April (16:00 BST).