Man Utd 0-2 Man City: 'Something simply has to change at OId Trafford - but will Solskjaer be there to do it?'
Ole Gunnar Solskjaer set himself up for a fall before this
derby meeting with Manchester City by boldly claiming Manchester United were
the biggest club in the city and probably the world.
Solskjaer may be right in his calculations by some measure
but certainly not when it comes to the not insignificant matter of actual
football.
And how United's hapless manager hit the ground with an
almighty thud as he and his team were outclassed and embarrassed by a far
greater margin than this relatively slim 2-0 scoreline suggests.
Given United's current form, while recalling how they were
humiliated 5-0 by Liverpool in their last Old Trafford league game, it might be
suggested Solskjaer is guilty of lobbing bricks at his rivals from the Premier
League's largest greenhouse.
It was a judgement that borders on delusion given United's
reduced circumstances and, to put it bluntly, neither Solskjaer nor Manchester
United are in any position to be making ambitious proclamations of this kind in
the direction of Manchester City.
This may not have been a repeat scoreline of that Liverpool
humbling but when judged on the gulf between the sides, the managerial and
coaching qualities of the two managers and the current status of Manchester
United when set alongside those clubs they aspire to rival, this was every bit
as bad and chastening.
Liverpool declared at 5-0 against Manchester United and
spared them further punishment. Manchester City were able to do something
similar at 2-0 and it was only down to keeper David De Gea that the result did not
end up in the realms of an even bigger thrashing.
This was one-sided in the extreme. Manchester United
actually had more shots at David de Gea than they did at Ederson. It was that
bad from Solskjaer's perspective.
It makes the 3-0 win at Tottenham last week, amid the dying
embers of Nuno Espirito Santo's tenure, look very much like an exception to the
rule as United head into the international break with one win from six league
games and four points from a possible 18.
United have stood firmly alongside Solskjaer through this
turbulent spell, although his management is clearly under question, but now
they have a two-week international break to ponder some more - although one
potential candidate (who it should be said United were not interested in) has already
gone west with Antonio Conte in at Spurs.
This performance was another betrayal of United's
traditions. Solskjaer is fond of talking about "the United Way" and
how they must be a constant source of entertainment and excitement. They were
certainly exciting and entertaining here, but only for the joyous City fan who
revelled in their omination while taunting the Norwegian with chants of
"Ole's at the wheel", "five more tears" and "Ole, Ole,
give us a wave".
United were actually more like a lower league team setting
themselves up in an FA Cup tie against a Premier League team as they sat back
and took the punishment - a ploy undermined by wretched defending and an
unhappy knack of presenting the ball straight back to Manchester City on the
rare occasions they were allowed to have it.
No aggression. No ambition. Too passive. Outclassed.
This was Liverpool episode two in everything but the
scoreline and the greater unrest and jeering that came down from the stands.
There was some flimsy defiance but it was all done with an air of resignation
in these painful times for United's support.
Old Trafford has shown great patience towards Solskjaer as
befits his status as a club legend but the supply is not limitless and it would
be a major surprise if the same did not apply to the club's hierarchy.
The biggest cheer of the afternoon came when Donny van de
Beek, the Netherlands midfield man so spectacularly marginalised by Solskjaer,
replaced Fred with 10 minutes left. Quite what he was meant to achieve in that
time with United on damage limitation is a mystery but at least he got to
stretch his legs while wearing a Manchester United shirt.
Much has been made, perfectly understandably, of Manchester
City's spending but there is no escaping the brutal reality that Solskjaer has
also spent more than £400m and is left with a side that is currently on a
different, inferior plane to their one-time "noisy neighbours" - and
that is before we even get to Liverpool and Chelsea.
Once again, England duo Luke Shaw and Harry Maguire were
awful in defence, exemplified by their mysterious watching brief on Joao
Cancelo's cross for Bernardo Silva's second goal for City. Bruno Fernandes
looked exhausted by the final whistle but this was more likely the result of
his constant complaining to team-mates and the officials than any actual
footballing impact on this game. Aaron Wan-Bissaka looked lost.
The grim statistics are piling up like rubble around the
feet of Solskjaer, adding to the pressure he is now under.
United are now without a clean sheet in their past 14 home
games in all competitions. The only longer run in their history came in a
21-game run between April 1958 and March 1959. They have lost eight home games
in all competitions in 2021, their most in a calendar year since losing eight
in 1989.
It was also the first time United have lost consecutive home
league games without scoring since March 2014. The opponents? Liverpool and
Manchester City. The manager? David Moyes. We know how that ended.
Manchester United had just four touches in the opposition
box in this match, their fewest in a Premier League match since 2008-09 - when
Opta began recording data - and the fewest by a home team since Fulham's three
against Arsenal in September 2020.
Damning stuff but evidence that this Manchester United team
is currently going nowhere under Solskjaer, although some very experienced
players are doing their manager no favours whatsoever when he needs them most.
Those of us who have witnessed United's defeats at Leicester
City and at home to Liverpool and Manchester City in recent weeks have been
subjected to a style and results that are quite simply unsustainable for a club
of this stature.
Something simply has to change. The biggest question is
whether Ole Gunnar Solskjaer will be the manager given the chance to do it?
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