We've crunched the numbers from the 2012-13 Premier League season and tasted statistical goldWith Fergie Time finally over for good, it feels appropriate that Manchester United's powers of recovery have never been as strong as they were ...
We've crunched the numbers from the 2012-13 Premier League season and tasted statistical goldWith Fergie Time finally over for good, it feels appropriate that Manchester United's powers of recovery have never been as strong as they were this season. As Sir Alex Ferguson was fond of saying, they never make it easy for themselves, and United conceded the first goal 11 times before the turn of the year and 15 times overall. They have arguably not sailed this close to the wind since winning the Treble in 1999 but their bouncebackability meant that the champions won 29 points from losing positions, which is a new Premier League record, beating the 24 points set by Sir Bobby Robson's Newcastle side in the 2001-02 season.Surprisingly, though, United do not lead the way when it comes to goals scored in the 90th minute. Along with Arsenal, Reading and Wigan, they made life difficult for match reporters five times, while Newcastle scored six goals in the 90th minute. Alan Pardew mainly has Papiss Cissé to thank for the late drama, the Senegalese forward snatching last-minute winners against Fulham, Stoke and West Bromwich Albion. Robin van Persie also left it late three times this season although only two of his goals – the ones that earned United victories at Manchester City and Southampton – were as vital as Cissé's. The other was the second in a 2-0 win over West Brom.With the minimum amount of fuss, Van Persie got it done and his effectiveness is emphasised by the 65 shots he hit on target, although that was not quite as many as Gareth Bale (73) or Luis Suárez (72). Suárez also hit the most shots off target (71), while Michu (54), Olivier Giroud (50), Cissé (45), Nikica Jelavic (41) and Andy Carroll (41) all troubled the fans behind the goal more than they worked the opposition goalkeeper. Of course, it is possible to read too much into that stat – after all, Michu scored 18 goals in the league for Swansea.Michael Laudrup had less success with Itay Shechter, though. The Israeli striker managed four shots in his 621 minutes on the pitch, a shot every 155.3 minutes. Cameron Jerome, meanwhile, had the worst shooting accuracy (21.7%), while the sadly departed Mario Balotelli had the worst shot conversion rate with one goal from 26 efforts (3.9%). As for Reading's Jason Roberts, he holds the dubious honour of being the striker to have played the most minutes (709) without scoring. At least Adam Le Fondre set a new record by scoring eight times as a substitute for the Royals.Perhaps (this could be a pipe dream) Reading would have stayed up if they had Christian Benteke (it's a pipe dream). Who knows where Aston Villa might have ended up without the Belgian striker? He scored or assisted 49% of their goals, more than any other player for a single side – by contrast, United had 20 different scorers, a record in a Premier League season.Arsenal's Lukas Podolski was the league's most substituted player, being taken off 23 times, while Everton's Leighton Baines was the only player to feature in every minute. His output was prodigious, too; Baines created 116 chances this season, 12 more than any other player. Mind you, what constitutes an assist is a grey area. West Ham's Matt Jarvis was the player who created the most chances (46) without actually making one that resulted in a goal. Yet is this a failing on his part or because of his team-mate's shortcomings? And is it really fair that Steven Gerrard heading a Jarvis cross into his own net doesn't count? Or that a Jarvis cross that was headed in by Carlton Cole should be ignored because of a slight deflection off César Azpilicueta?However, as Opta explain here, an assist is only awarded for a final pass or cross that leads to a goal, so deflected passes, own goals and winning penalties or free-kicks are unfortunately out. It does mean, though, that Andy Carroll was awarded an assist for inadvertently blocking a clearance by Reading's goalkeeper Alex McCarthy into the path of Kevin Nolan on Sun