China Daily

Jose urges fans to pump up volume

Man Utd boss irked by ‘quiet’ Old Trafford

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MANCHESTER, England — Jose Mourinho criticized Manchester United’s home fans after suggesting that Old Trafford was too quiet during Saturday’s 2-0 Premier League win over Leicester City.

United is top of the standings after substitute­s Marcus Rashford and Marouane Fellaini scored in the final 20 minutes against the stubborn Foxes.

At one stage, it looked as if Leicester would hold on for a point, with its goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel saving a Romelu Lukaku penalty early in the second half.

Mourinho admitted that he missed Rashford’s opening goal as he was giving instructio­ns to Jesse Lingard, who was about to enter the fray off the bench.

But in discussing that moment, the United manager also expressed surprise that a crowd of over 75,000 did not make more noise.

He said: “I didn’t see the first goal. I was speaking with Lingard because Lingard was going to be the next player to come in.

“I saw the ball in the net and all the guys jumping around. It was the first time I saw the crowd. They were very quiet today.

“It was easy to know that was a goal because it was the first time I really understood the stadium was full.”

United has won all three of its Premier League matches so far, scoring 10 goals and conceding none.

The Red Devils also appear to have developed a more ruthless streak, having drawn 15 league matches last season as they finished sixth.

Mourinho believes players deserve credit for subduing a Leicester side which had scored five times in its first two matches, losing 4-3 at Arsenal before beating Brighton and Hove Albion 2-0.

The visitor’s England striker Jamie Vardy had few chances to impress as United centerback­s Eric Bailly and Phil Jones marked him out of the game.

Mourinho said: “We didn’t have many matches last season where we played 90 minutes with the control we had today.

“Vardy is a very dangerous player. I would say he is one of the most dangerous players in the Premier League.

“Was he dangerous today? No. Why? Because we played so well to control them.

“Were Leicester very dangerous against Arsenal? Yes. I watched the match many times. Were they dangerous against us? No. Why? Because of us. So we had a very good and solid performanc­e.

“After the penalty, when you miss a penalty with half an hour to go, normally there is always a little collapse, and that didn’t happen. We kept creating chances and getting corners, and in the end it was from a corner that we scored.”

Foxes boss Craig Shakespear­e felt his team performed well in frustratin­g United for large parts of the game.

But having also conceded from a corner to cost them defeat at Arsenal, he was disappoint­ed that his players once again fell behind from a set-piece.

At Old Trafford, it was a Henrikh Mkhitaryan corner that was diverted in by Rashford for the opener, and Shakespear­e warned that it must not become a habit.

“It’s a set-play. We need to be mindful that it doesn’t become an Achilles heel for us,” said Shakespear­e.

“We spoke about it after the Arsenal game and we worked on it, but we have to put it into action as well.

“We knew we would have to frustrate coming here. For large parts of the game, I thought we did that and did it really well.

“We knew they would have their moment. And the big moments, they managed to capitalize on.”

 ?? RUI VIEIRA / AP ?? Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho acknowledg­es the Old Trafford fans after his side beat Leicester 2-0 on Saturday for a third Premier League win in as many matches. Marcus Rashford and Marouane Fellaini scored United’s goals.
RUI VIEIRA / AP Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho acknowledg­es the Old Trafford fans after his side beat Leicester 2-0 on Saturday for a third Premier League win in as many matches. Marcus Rashford and Marouane Fellaini scored United’s goals.

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