The Sun (Malaysia)

Rodgers hails Belgian trio’s ‘winning mentality’

Lindelof’s problem illustrate­s unresolved issues in United’s defence

- Ű RICHARD JOLLY

LEICESTER boss Brendan Rodgers believes his trio of Belgian imports have a “winning mentality” shaped by playing for the country ranked No. 1 in the world.

Belgium rightback Timothy Castagne has caught the eye since signing from Atalanta earlier this month, while compatriot­s Dennis Praet and Youri Tielemans have already establishe­d themselves in Rodgers’ side.

When asked what he likes about the Belgium connection, Rodgers pointed out they have some

MANCHESTER UNITED’S season was about 10 seconds old when Victor Lindelof misjudged his first header and sent the ball in the wrong direction. No metaphors there, then, for a campaign United began rather shambolica­lly, seemingly heading in the wrong way. Nor, indeed, for an afternoon when Lindelof played a part in three goals, all scored by Crystal Palace.

The Swede was luckless as well as hapless, unfortunat­e his hand was ruled to be in an unnatural position for Palace’s controvers­ial, and twice-taken, penalty.

The temptation was to joke that Lindelof had been in an unnatural position for 90 minutes, even if it would have been a cheap gag.

He is a career centreback, just one who did not look it when Palace’s 4 x 100m relay team of Jeffrey Schlupp, Wilfried Zaha, Jordan Ayew and Andros Townsend ran at him.

“I don’t want to point the finger at individual­s,” said Ole Gunnar Solskjaer magnanimou­sly, and he had a point as all of United’s defence were eviscerate­d by Palace’s electric counter-attackers.

They are not alone, and Palace’s speed on the break is a reason why they have spent the last few seasons claiming the scalps of the elite on the road.

A 90-minute horror show from an understand­ably rusty rearguard felt an outlier. How poor are United’s defence? In one respect, not that poor at all.

Only Liverpool and Manchester City conceded fewer goals last season, only just and in a campaign when David de Gea had some erratic moments. In another, few think Solskjaer’s defence is remotely comparable with Jurgen Klopp’s.

As ever with United, the issues of spending are never far from the surface, but put Aaron Wan-Bissaka in for Timothy Fosu-Mensah and the back four and goalkeeper would have a combined cost of over £200 million (RM1.1b), second only to City’s.

There is a typically United situation where money has been spent and many feel more needs to be spent. Money is the problem and money is the solution.

A club with a mixed record in the transfer market are urged to buy. “We need players,” said Luke Shaw, though the first arrival could be an alternativ­e to him, of the best players in the world such as Manchester City’s Kevin de Bruyne and Real Madrid’s Eden Hazard.

“For me they are in the midst of a real golden generation of players, the talent they have,” Rodgers said.

“Firstly, they are very profession­al. How they prepare themselves for life as football players is very, very good. They have a real good tactical understand­ing of the game.

“And the players we have are young players. in Porto left-back Alex Telles.

“Until they get a centreback in who can run and defend one-on-one, you’re never going to win a League,” said a blunt Gary Neville; Virgil van Dijk can do that and Lindelof can’t.

Neville speaks from a position of experience and expertise: at his peak, Gary Pallister could defend one-on-one. Jaap Stam could. Until age slowed them, Rio Ferdinand and Nemanja Vidic could. There has been no genuinely high-class partnershi­p since Ferdinand and Vidic.

Social media featured many a quip wondering how Lindelof had caught a thief in his native Sweden in the close season. He made for a convenient scapegoat. He is a symbolic figure.

Lindelof has had three seasons at Old Trafford, a fine 2018-19 flanked by less notable campaigns. He is one of five centreback­s signed in six summers, with Marcos Rojo, Daley Blind, Eric Bailly and Maguire.

Only Rojo stands out as a failure. Blind was excellent in 2015-16 but did not meet Jose Mourinho’s definition of a central defender.

Bailly, if he could ever stay fit for long enough, has the ability to dovetail with Maguire. Absence may have made the heart grow fonder but increasing­ly, many wonder if exiling Chris Smalling to Roma was wise.

Which, in turn, illustrate­s the unresolved issues at the back. Smalling and Phil Jones were Sir Alex Ferguson’s succession planning. Smalling has been owned by United for a decade; Jones – in theory, anyway – is in his testimonia­l year.

For all the mockery each attracts, neither has been a failure at Old Trafford. But nor, by the standards United have traditiona­lly demanded, have they been a success. Cases of unfulfille­d potential are not bad players but not quite good enough.

Like Lindelof, they have occupied the no-man’s land in between, sometimes exposed and embarrasse­d, damned by comparison­s with their illustriou­s predecesso­rs and their title-winning peers, forever supposedly making way when – if – United need sign an upgrade.

But, United being United, the focus is often on more glamorous, more attacking recruits. United can target Jadon Sancho but, on Saturday, they could not stop Sancho-style forwards with pace and trickery. – The Independen­t

The likes of Youri, he is still very young as a player.

“But they all have a real understand­ing of the tactics of the game and they have a winning mentality. These boys want to win and they devote their life to that. They have been absolutely first-class to work with.

“And then they go away with the national team and go into a group of players who are the No. 1 ranked team in the world and a real strong group of talents. So yeah, they carry that mentality here with them as well.

“You want a group of players who are very focused on their lives as players. They work hard every single day to be the best they can be and to help the team. All of them have been first-class.”

Castagne and midfield duo Praet and Tielemans all played some part in Belgium’s Nations League win over Denmark on Sept 5 and were unused substitute­s against Iceland a few days later.

Asked whether them representi­ng the topranked nation in the world brings a healthy dose of confidence, Rodgers replied: “Yes, they come back with confidence but they are always very humble guys as well.” – The Independen­t

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