Business Day

Mourinho under fire after United’s exit

Fans have the mutters over cagey tactics and lack of attacking play

- Agency Staff Manchester /AFP

Jose Mourinho was condemned for his negative tactics after Manchester United crashed out of the Champions League to Sevilla, with Alexis Sanchez anonymous and Paul Pogba’s confidence apparently in tatters.

Jose Mourinho was condemned for his negative tactics after Manchester United crashed out of the Champions League to Sevilla, with Alexis Sanchez anonymous and Paul Pogba’s confidence apparently in tatters.

United, riding high in the Premier League, started the second leg of their last 16 tie on Tuesday as strong favourites to progress to the quarterfin­als after a goalless draw in Spain but mustered just four shots on target across both legs.

Two goals from substitute Wissam Ben Yedder gave the home side a mountain to climb and a consolatio­n goal from Romelu Lukaku was too little, too late, with United exiting the competitio­n 2-1 on aggregate.

Mourinho fielded four forwards — Sanchez, Lukaku, Marcus Rashford and Jesse Lingard — in an line-up that looked attacking, but United broke free of the shackles only in the desperate closing minutes.

A stubborn Mourinho, who has won the competitio­n with Porto and Inter Milan, said his side had not put in a “bad performanc­e”. But that contrasted with the sour mood of fans in Manchester after a first home European defeat since 2013 to a Sevilla side only fifth in La Liga.

“If you are a team at home, the onus is on you to go out and attack and make sure you take the game away from the opposing team,” said former United defender Rio Ferdinand, who won the Champions League under Alex Ferguson in 2008.

The question for fans is why Mourinho is seemingly unable, or unwilling, to set his attacking superstars free.

Pogba, who cost a then world record £89m in 2016 as Mourinho’s first big signing, was again dropped, this time in favour of the more robust Marouane Fellaini, a decision that drew stinging criticism from The Times newspaper.

“Fellaini was by no means United’s worst player but what was he there for exactly? To expose what failing in Seville? To bring what to United’s midfield?” asked chief sports writer Matt Dickinson.

“True, he did go closer than his teammates to breaking the deadlock but if picking him always felt like turning up at a party with a baseball bat, United were lacking in any subtlety. Creative passing through central midfield was nonexisten­t.”

The Telegraph called United’s display “embarrassi­ngly inept”.

Only once the situation was dire did Mourinho throw on another £70m of attacking talent in Anthony Martial and Juan Mata to ride to the rescue. But to no avail.

“There are players in that squad to play good attacking football with the money that’s been spent,” said former United midfielder Paul Scholes, also part of the team that won the 2008 Champions League.

A major investment was made to bring Sanchez to the club in January, but he has been a huge disappoint­ment so far.

“Sanchez for one, he just looks a shadow of the player he was,” said Ferdinand.

“When he was at Arsenal, he was the one everyone looked to for inspiratio­n. At Manchester United, he just looks like a stranger in this team.”

The mounting evidence suggests it is Mourinho’s failure to harness the best from his attacking players that is to blame, rather than a clutch of stars going off the boil.

Despite the uncomforta­ble marriage between United’s much-vaunted attacking history and Mourinho’s cagey tactics, the club has backed the manager with a new contract until 2020 and he hinted that even more cash may be thrown at fixing United’s problems.

“Everything together needs to improve, everybody spends money, not just us,” he said.

The added problem for Mourinho is that runaway Premier League leaders Manchester City are setting pulses racing, and Liverpool and Tottenham Hotspur also play an exciting brand of football. In contrast, Mourinho has little to fall back on when his resultsdri­ven approach fails to deliver.

“They approach every game conservati­vely. Some games they get away with it,” said Scholes. “The performanc­e was very bad and they lost, as they rightly should do, but there are a lot of performanc­es exactly the same and they win and it gets swept under the carpet.”

 ?? /AFP ?? Too little, too late: Romelu Lukaku rushes back to the centre spot after scoring a late goal for Manchester United against Sevilla, but it was too late and United were bundled out of the Uefa Champions League.
/AFP Too little, too late: Romelu Lukaku rushes back to the centre spot after scoring a late goal for Manchester United against Sevilla, but it was too late and United were bundled out of the Uefa Champions League.

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