Irish Sunday Mirror

Another Knight of woe for sinking Antony

- Verdict from the City Ground

IN a nod to the New Year honours list, two longstandi­ng knights of the realm sat side-by-side in the City Ground directors’ box.

Sir Alex Ferguson and Sir Dave Brailsford did not appear to engage in too much animated conversati­on, but you can imagine how any chat might have gone.

“Are you the marginal gains man?” “Yep.” “Don’t suppose you know a substantia­l gains man?”

That is what Manchester United need and the doubts about whether or not Erik ten Hag can provide those substantia­l gains become more compelling every time his team post performanc­es as lamentable as this one.

Huge credit goes to a ferociousl­y committed Nottingham Forest and their manager Nuno Espirito Santo (with Ten Hag, right).

To find a way to win after the pain of conceding a soft, late equaliser bodes well for the rest of the season.

Nuno has inherited a collection of highly-energetic players whose technical levels are not quite where they need to be, but he is already getting a very decent tune out of them.

But this result was another testament to the Red Devils’ mediocrity. This is a United team that is rarely on the front foot from the first whistle, that hardly ever imposes itself on its opponent, even if that opponent is lower-ranked.

It was a good half an hour before they managed a shot on target and Aaron Wan-bissaka’s effort was more pass-back than shot.

Although his first-ever Premier League goal was probably lauded a little too lavishly, it did not help that Rasmus Hojlund had to miss the game through illness.

O n e o f t h e ramificati­ons of his absence was that Marcus Rashford was, initially, used in a central role and even when he is in any sort of form, that is a position he still does not feel comfortabl­e in.

On paper, the combinatio­n of Alejandro Garnacho, Rashford and Antony looks like it should be quite potent, but that is without reckoning for Antony’s startling rut of underachie­vement. It is becoming harder to put a finger on Antony’s strengths, simply because there do not appear to be any. A rascal from Ajax must have slipped an extra zero – or even two – onto the price tag when United were not looking. To be fair, he was only one contender for the worst performer of a truly terrible first half of football. Suffice to say, the travelling support were not too dissatisfi­ed when Antony was hooked early in the second half.

And, cruelly, they will probably not lose any sleep over the fact he appeared to be injured.

It is hard to see a golden future for Antony at the club when pitiful contributi­ons such as this one are becoming the norm rather than the exception.

Again, to single out anyone for significan­t criticism would be harsh, as this is a side that collective­ly underperfo­rms on a frequent basis.

But after Nicolas Dominguez had given Forest a deserved lead, United were gifted a way back into the contest by Matt Turner.

It is fine playing out from the back but it is probably best if your keeper is even remotely accomplish­ed with his feet. Turner gave the ball away, Garnacho was clever and Rashford’s finish was a throwback to his best form.

United should have gone on to win but somehow allowed Forest to launch a counteratt­ack – started by a Turner save – that went unchalleng­ed until Morgan Gibbs-white struck a beautiful winner.

As Forest and Turner held on inside a febrile City Ground, TV cameras again focused on the knights in the posh seats.

Next to Sir Alex, Brailsford looked particular­ly stony-faced. Marginal gains? United are having a laugh if they think that is all they need.

 ?? ?? NO HAPPY RETURNS Fergie, who is 82 today, with Sir Dave Brailsford
NO HAPPY RETURNS Fergie, who is 82 today, with Sir Dave Brailsford
 ?? ?? SAMBA SHAMBLES Antony loses out again as the boy from Brazil has another stinker for United
SAMBA SHAMBLES Antony loses out again as the boy from Brazil has another stinker for United

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