Manchester United won the Champions League by beating Chelsea 6-5 on penalties after a breathless all-English final had finished 1-1 after extra time on Wednesday. Cristiano Ronaldo, who had put United in front with a 26th-minute header, missed in the shootout but Chelsea's John Terry hit the outside of the post with his spot kick when the title was at his mercy. United's 37-year-old goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar, appearing in his third final 13 years after his first with Ajax Amsterdam, then saved from substitute Nicolas Anelka to give United Europe's top prize for the third time. That was the 14th shot in the shootout. Chelsea will feel aggrieved at the painful defeat after having the best of the final. It equalized through Frank Lampard and twice hit the woodwork, but it will also rue a moment of madness from striker Didier Drogba, who was sent off near the end of extra time and missed the shootout. There was little indication of what was to come during a flat opening 25 minutes. But the game exploded into life when fullback Wes Brown curled in a cross that Ronaldo, inexplicably left unmarked, headed home for the 42nd goal of his all-conquering season. Van der Sar kept United's lead intact nine minutes later with a terrific instinctive save after Rio Ferdinand almost headed into his own net. It was then Petr Cech's turn to show his class when he did well to keep out Carlos Tevez's stooping header and then tipped over Michael Carrick's follow-up drive. Chelsea had shown little but leveled at the end of the first half when Essien's long-range shot was deflected into the path of Lampard, who duly dispatched it from six meters. Chelsea looked much more energized in the second half as Essien and Michael Ballack fired shots just over. The patient, European-style approach of the opening quarter had been replaced by football with a Premier League trademark – high-paced and physical, with a sprinkling of errors and battered bodies littering the temporary turf. Drogba was among them 12 minutes from time, but as he has so often before, made a miraculous recovery to spring up and curl a 20-meter shot against a post. Ryan Giggs, the only survivor from United's 1999 Champions League winning-team, came off the bench in the 87th minute for his 759th appearance, breaking Bobby Charlton's club record. But he could not fashion a repeat of the storied last-gasp victory of that year and the game went into extra time. Chelsea maintained its momentum and Lampard scooped a shot against the bar within four minutes of the restart but it need a captain's intervention from Terry to deny Giggs a fairytale goal by heading the winger's shot over the bar with Cech beaten. As the clock ticked down - toward 2 A.M. local time - tempers boiled over and after a mass melee Drogba was sent off after slapping Vidic's face. The shootout took place in front of United's fans but it seemed to be going Chelsea's way as Ronaldo, who missed a penalty early in the semifinal against Barcelona, saw his effort saved. Ballack, Juliano Belletti, Lampard and Ashley Cole all scored for Chelsea but captain Terry's chance to carve his name forever among the club's immortals disappeared when he slipped on contact and clipped a post. Anderson and Giggs scored for United and, although Salomon Kalou was on target for Chelsea, Van der Sar blocked Anelka's effort to secure the giant silver trophy. – Reuters __