Belfast Telegraph

United have themselves to blame for Euro worries

Solskjaer’s men suffering the cost of a worrying run of avoidable mistakes

- By Mark Critchley

THERE is little room for error at this rarefied level, and Wednesday night’s 3-1 defeat to Paris Saint-germain is a timely reminder of that fact for Manchester United and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, just in case they need it.

You would hope that they don’t but, then again, this second defeat of their Champions League campaign included their second instance of a basic, avoidable error which scuppered their game plan and surrendere­d all their hard work.

A month ago, having taken six points from two games against their main challenger­s for a place in the knock-out stages, United were undone by a moment of pure amateurism: failing to keep a single player back as defensive cover on an attacking corner in the 13th minute.

Allowing Demba Ba to establish a lead for Istanbul Basaksehir that was never relinquish­ed in that 2-1 defeat away in Turkey is the reason why United still needed a point from their penultimat­e game on Wednesday night to secure last-16 qualificat­ion.

And now, Solskjaer’s decision not to substitute Fred before his 70th-minute sending off against PSG stands as yet another fundamenta­l and easily avoidable mistake. It is partly why they will travel to Leipzig still looking for that point.

Sacrificin­g Fred was the obvious course of action from the moment he escaped a straight red card for headbuttin­g Leandro Paredes, instead only seeing yellow.

It was only more necessary at half-time, shortly after he had narrowly avoided another yellow for a challenge on Paredes again.

It is not as if Solskjaer was limited in his number of substituti­ons — with five available in the Champions League — or as if adequate replacemen­ts were not on hand.

Paul Pogba’s fitness may have been in question after only recently recovering from an ankle issue, but Nemanja Matic is a natural defensive midfielder, while Donny van de Beek has deputised well in a similar role.

Removing Fred and introducin­g either Matic or Van de Beek at half-time would have been the sensible move.

Instead, Fred was the first out of the tunnel when United reemerged and remained on the pitch until suddenly — after one challenge on former team-mate Ander Herrera — he didn’t.

To his credit, Solskjaer was quick to answer the inevitable questions about his game management which followed in his round of post-match interviews. He defended his decision to persevere with Fred and explained his thought process, albeit while gently admitting that he had considered a substituti­on and he could have done things differentl­y.

“There was no reason from his performanc­e to take him off,” Solskjaer said.

“I thought Fred kept his head and cool exceptiona­lly well in the second-half and was unlucky with that decision by the referee. You can say in hindsight to have 11 men, of course that would have been better, but who’s to say?

“We spoke to him at half-time and just said be sensible, and

I thought he was, I thought he played really well and was very sensible in the second-half,” the United manager added.

“He played well, but with the decision the referee made, you maybe look back and say you should have (taken him off ).”

Another key plank of Solskjaer’s defence was that Fred’s second yellow for a tackle on Ander Herrera was soft.

Replays suggest he had a point. And in fairness — given that the dismissal came with the scoreline at 2-1 to the visitors, moments after Marquinhos’ 69th minute goal — there is every chance that United might have fallen to defeat with 11 players on the pitch regardless.

Yet even if the second yellow was contentiou­s, you lose any leeway you have to make the type of challenge which Fred made when you have already been cautioned for headbuttin­g somebody. And though it is true United had just fallen behind, the red card immediatel­y killed off any realistic hope of a comeback with much of the second-half remaining.

Management is about making decisions, and making decisions often involves weighing up risks. Some risks — like when deciding how long to persist with a player who is on a booking and walking a tightrope — are more difficult to gauge than others — like when choosing whether to send every player forward for a 13th-minute corner.

This error was not as egregious as the one in Istanbul.

Then again, that is not saying much.

Both are basic mistakes that can and usually will be punished at any respectabl­e level, certainly in the Champions League.

United are guilty of committing both in a group stage campaign that has otherwise been quietly impressive, one that should already have secured qualificat­ion.

For all the positives of the opening round win in Paris, for all the optimism generated by the emphatic 5-0 victory over Leipzig, a failure to do the basics right has allowed both of their Group H rivals to make up for lost ground and has left United’s fate in the balance with one game remaining.

If they do not take the point they need, they will only have themselves to blame.

(© The Independen­t)

‘Removing Fred at half-time would have been sensible’

 ??  ?? Price paid: Ole Gunnar Solskjaer admits he could have substitute­d Fred before his red card
Price paid: Ole Gunnar Solskjaer admits he could have substitute­d Fred before his red card

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