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10-man United hold City in Manchester derby

Marouane Fellaini was sent off for a late headbutt on Sergio Aguero but Manchester United held on for a 0-0 draw against local rivals Manchester City at the Etihad Stadium on Thursday.

Just 19 seconds after being booked for a foul on Aguero, Fellaini pushed his head into the City striker following another clash and was shown a straight red card by referee Martin Atkinson in the 84th minute.

United – without injured top scorer Zlatan Ibrahimovic – had produced the sort of defensive, pragmatic performance that is manager Jose Mourinho's specialty, and they stayed solid for the closing minutes to extend their unbeaten run to 24 matches – their longest such streak in a single top-flight season.

Yet it is a result that does little to boost either side's hopes of finishing in the top four and securing a place in next season's Champions League, with City remaining one point and one position clear of fifth-placed United.

Pep Guardiola's team were the dominant force throughout and should have taken the lead as early as the ninth minute, but the clinical instinct that has seen Sergio Aguero net in each of his last six outings deserted him as he struck the upright from close range.

Ander Herrera - joined in midfield by Michael Carrick due to Paul Pogba's injury-enforced absence - spurned United's best opportunity of the match when he evaded his marker to meet a free-kick at the back post but somehow failed to steer his header on target.

Mourinho's side failed to maintain their counter-attacking threat in the second half and City were unable to unlock the stoic United defence - the loss of David Silva to injury in Sunday's FA Cup semi-final defeat proving influential.

Claudio Bravo, who endured a horror debut at Old Trafford last September, was a spectator for much of the second half and went off on a stretcher with a left calf injury in the 79th minute - the first of a series of dramatic closing events.

After Fellaini's dismissal, substitute Gabriel Jesus thought he had marked his first appearance since February 13 with a stoppage-time winner, only to turn and see the offside flag correctly raised.

Fellaini was given a straight red card late in the match.Pic: Getty
Fellaini was given a straight red card late in the match.Pic: Getty

Mourinho opted for Marcus Rashford to lead the line and left captain Wayne Rooney – the highest-scoring player in the history of this fixture – on the bench, with the young striker stretching the City defence and setting up Herrera for a teasing cross inside just two minutes, Pablo Zabaleta turning to clear.

City had a chance to move ahead seven minutes later but Aguero could only divert Kevin De Bruyne's low cross onto the outside of the upright from inside the six-yard box.

Bravo almost gifted United a goal when he needlessly palmed Anthony Martial's deflected, looping cross towards the penalty spot, before recovering to block Henrikh Mkhitaryan's subsequent driven effort.

While Bravo looked fallible at one end, David de Gea proved impeccable at the other with a brilliant diving save to deny Aguero's curling 25-yard strike before getting down to his right to keep out a low drive from Aleksandar Kolarov.

Fernandinho's impetuous tackle on Herrera provided the main flashpoint of the first half, but the Spain international will have gone into half-time wondering how he failed to find the target with a free header at the back post from Rashford's left-wing free-kick.

City remained on top in the second half but De Bruyne and Aguero were unable to hit the target with efforts from outside the box before the hour mark, United struggling to get out of their own half.

Guardiola's men continued to push and had to replace the injured Bravo with Willy Caballero 11 minutes from time when he was forced into a rare moment of second-half action.

Fellaini's moment of madness handed City a boost in their quest for a late equaliser, but Jesus' tap-in from a cross by Aguero – who volleyed wide at the death – was correctly ruled out as the spoils were shared.

Despite failing to open up a four-point gap on their fifth-placed opponents, City will feel more confident of securing a return to European football's top table next season due to a comparatively easier run-in.