| Man Utd held by Burton, Fulham and Spurs out(Reuters)
 Updated: 2006-01-09 09:03
 
 LONDON, Jan 8 (Reuters) - Manchester United were held to a humiliating 
goalless draw by minor league Burton Albion in the FA Cup third round on Sunday 
as Alex Ferguson's policy of playing a weakened team backfired for the second 
year running. 
 
 
 
 United, Cup winners 
on a record 11 occasions and runners-up last season, fielded only a handful of 
first team regulars and looked distinctly ordinary on a sandy, bumpy pitch 
against a spirited Conference side of part-timers.
 |  Burton Albion's 
 Tinson tackles manchester United's Saha during FA cup third round match in 
 Burton-on-Trent. [Reuters]
 |  Elsewhere, Tottenham Hotspur, fourth in the Premier League, blew a 2-0 lead 
to lose 3-2 at second division strugglers Leicester City while fourth division 
Leyton Orient pulled off the shock of the round when they overcame Premier 
League Fulham 2-1 at Craven Cottage.
 Sunderland, bottom of the top flight, beat minor league Northwich Victoria 
3-0.
 A year ago a weakened Manchester United were held 0-0 at home by minor league 
Exeter City and had to recall the big names to secure a 2-0 victory in the 
replay.
 This season, despite being out of Europe and with little hope of catching 
Chelsea in the league, Ferguson repeated his tactic with only Wes Brown, Mikael 
Silvestre and John O'Shea from his usual first-choice side starting the match.
 UNFAMILIAR LINEUP
 The unfamiliar lineup, with striker Ole Gunnar Solskjaer making his first 
start for 19 months, struggled to impose themselves on a hard-working Burton 
side, managed by Nigel Clough, son of the late former Nottingham Forest manager 
Brian.
 United did not really look dangerous until the introduction of Wayne Rooney 
and Cristiano Ronaldo for the last 30 minutes but their best chance came in 
injury time when goalkeeper Saul Deeney saved with his feet from Ritchie Jones.
 "I had nothing to do really all game which was a bit of a surprise against 
one of the best teams in the world," Deeney told Sky Sports.
 Clough said: "It was a staggering performance really. In the first half it 
was pretty even but in the second it seemed like we were under the cosh for 
about three hours.
 "Now the lads have got a couple of days off to get ready for Stourbridge on 
Tuesday night. But I'm thrilled for them that they will get the chance to run 
out at Old Trafford."
 Ferguson said: "Everybody in the country would expect us to beat them but 
that's cup football.
 
 
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