Van Persie struck early in each half to allow United to repel the
threat of an enterprising Wigan outfit and claim the Community Shield
for the 20th time....
More importantly, it was silverware at
the first available opportunity for Moyes, who has such a massive job on
his hands after succeeding Sir Alex Ferguson in May.
Such
is the length of time Ferguson has dominated life at Old Trafford that
six of Moyes' starting line-up were not even born the last time United
played in this annual curtain-raiser without the Scot as manager, back
in 1985, when Alan Brazil was among the substitutes.
Moyes
will be grateful for the squad he has inherited though, particularly Van
Persie, who did more than anyone to ensure Ferguson left centre stage
as a championship winner.
He took only six minutes to get
started, superbly directing a header into the bottom corner from Patrice
Evra's left-wing cross. It needed a deflection off James Perch to bring
United their second on the hour, although Van Persie will rightly be
credited with the goal after cutting inside off a Danny Welbeck pass to
drive an effort towards the target.
There was an injury
scare for United though, with Rafael limping off in the opening stages,
although the Brazilian is suspended anyway for next Saturday's Barclays
Premier League opener at Swansea.
With only two wins in
pre-season prior to this afternoon, no new signings of any significance
and Wayne Rooney's situation uncertain to the extent he is considered
fit enough to face Scotland on Wednesday, but not to even make the
journey south for this fixture, Moyes' transition period has been
anything but smooth.
Yet, with the exception of Paul
Scholes, he retains the entire squad which won their 20th league
championship by 11 points last May, plus Wilfried Zaha, who has finally
switched clubs after spending the second half of last season on loan at
Crystal Palace.
Zaha was included, such has been the impact
he has made on a journey that has seen United play seven matches in six
countries prior to this afternoon's contest. The England winger flitted in and out, rather like United as a whole in a largely mundane affair.
They
did at least play though, which was more than Manchester City managed
in May, explaining why Wigan were here in the first place.
And
the goal Moyes must have craved arrived pretty quickly too. Evra
crossed from the left and Van Persie was left alone to direct his header
into the far corner.
After scoring 30 times in his debut
campaign for the Red Devils, it had taken the Dutchman just six minutes
to open his account this time around.
For a while, with Zaha sparking and Ryan Giggs cajoling from the other flank, it seemed United would run away with the contest.
Welbeck came close to turning home a near-post chance and Van Persie threatened once more.
Slowly,
Wigan began to grow into the game. The battle between Grant Holt and
Nemanja Vidic proved the Latics were willing to match United physically -
a sharp change of emphasis from the Roberto Martinez era - and new boy
James McClean was a valuable presence out wide.
McClean
should have profited from Chris Smalling's error when the defender - on
as an early substitute for Rafael - overran Stephen Crainey's long ball,
gifting the Irishman possession deep inside the United box.
Instead of picking out a team-mate, McClean drilled the ball across goal looking for a ricochet, which did not come.
Emmerson
Boyce also chose the wrong option when he leapt to meet Ben Watson's
curling free-kick to the far post, heading it back across goal as David
de Gea scrambled, expecting to come under direct threat.
Welbeck
brought a good save out of Scott Carson before the break but Wigan
remained largely on the offensive after it, which would have made
United's second on the hour that much harder to take.
Evra, Tom Cleverley and Welbeck were all involved in the Red Devils moving the ball across the field.
Van
Persie instinctively cut inside and although it took a deflection off
Perch to beat Carson, as the shot was on target, it meant last season's
Golden Boot winner claimed a second, and Moyes claimed the trophy.
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