Manchester United endured a nightmare penalty shoot-out as Sunderland claimed a place in the Capital One Cup final at Old Trafford.

United scored just once from their five kicks, with only skipper Darren Fletcher converting, as Sunderland's two successes proved enough to book a Wembley date with Manchester City on March 2.

In a season of utter misery for United boss David Moyes, it was yet another hammer blow.

His side had seemed to be on the verge of victory thanks to Jonny Evans' first-half goal as the tie ticked towards the final minute of extra time.

But when Phil Bardsley let fly from 20 yards, David de Gea inexplicably allowed the former United man's shot to slip through his grasp.

Amazingly, United earned themselves a reprieve in stoppage time as his players summoned up the spirit for which they are so famed and with virtually their last attack, Adnan Januzaj crossed for Javier Hernandez to bundle home.

Moyes might have hoped fortune was to smile on him.

Even in a ridiculously bad shoot-out, De Gea's save from Adam Johnson meant Sunderland had only scored twice.

United could not match it though. And whilst it is anticipated Juan Mata will be having a medical today ahead of a club-record £40million transfer from Chelsea, he will do so against a backdrop of even more gloom.

Sunderland boss Gus Poyet dedicated his side's victory to the club's long-suffering fans.

"The feelings are for them," he said, pointing to the visiting fans at Old Trafford

"A difficult season, nothing to enjoy, look at them, they deserve that. Let's see if we can go one more and win it."

Sunderland will be rank underdogs in the final against Manchester City but, having knocked out Chelsea and now United, that is a status Poyet is happy with.

And asked if his side could win, the Uruguayan added: "No doubt, for sure."

Sunderland goalkeeper Vito Mannone, who saved the decisive penalty from Rafael, said: "Unbelievable, just unbelievable. I just want to celebrate with my team-mates.

"We deserved to get to the final."

The gloom at Old Trafford deepened even further last night after the club dropped out of the top three of Europe's top-earning clubs for the first time.

United are now fourth in the Deloitte Football Money League behind leaders Real Madrid, Barcelona and Bayern Munich based on income from the 2012/13 season. Paris St Germain are fifth, while Manchester City are sixth.