The National - News

United travel to Wolves looking for revenge after last season’s struggles

- ANDY MITTEN

Wolverhamp­ton Wanderers were a nightmare for Manchester United last season.

Three times the teams met, three times the promoted side were superior, winning two and drawing one.

The pair meet again tonight at Molineux, with United vengeful and hoping to continue their positive start to the season. It will be United’s third trip in five months to the stadium, which has introduced a safe standing area.

The 2-1 FA Cup defeat there in March deflated United’s season completely. Such was the optimism following an FA Cup run in which United beat both Arsenal and Chelsea away, 14,500 season ticket holders applied for 4,500 tickets.

Although the fans turned up on a rainy Saturday night, the team did not as Wolves scored from Raul Jimenez’s opener after 70 minutes while Diogo Jota’s double six minutes later. That second away loss followed nine consecutiv­e away wins but with it went Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s best chance of a trophy.

United started better in the league game at Wolves two weeks later and Scott McTominay’s first senior goal put them ahead. United had 18 shots to Wolves’ four, but Fred gave the ball away and Jota finished.

“We played well enough and created enough chances to win the game,” Solskjaer said.

Perhaps, but the wins that marked his early reign had turned into defeats – four out of five to end the season.

Nuno’s men, who finished one place below United in seventh last season and have ambitions to go higher this term, drew their opening game at Leicester City and have played two Europa League qualifiers, winning both 4-0 against Armenian side Pyunik.

The 48 fans who travelled to see the away leg all received a letter from captain Conor Coady after making their way independen­tly, flights costing upwards of £600 (Dh2,700).

Thousands will go to their next away game against Torino this Thursday in the play-off for the group stage, which is where Manchester United will enter the Europa League.

“Those were tough games and Wolverhamp­ton are a tough team to break down,” Solskjaer said on Friday. “They defend deep and don’t give you a lot of spaces. They can play, they can counter attack, set pieces are dangerous.”

He was keen to stress that his side will prove more formidable opponents than they were last season, and enter the game following a 4-0 win over Chelsea in their opening Premier League fixture.

“We go into the game confident,” Solskjaer said. “We’ve had a great week training, the mood has been good and it has been competitiv­e. There were some players who weren’t involved who want to prove to the coaches and myself that they should be.”

Solskjaer feels that his players’ increased fitness will play a part and also stressed that “towards the end of last season we were mentally tired and now we are mentally fresh. I’m looking forward to the first hurdle.”

“You want to see the reliance, the robustness that we can bounce back as a team when the going gets tough – and I’m sure it will be on Monday.

“We have to break them down, stop them counter attacking and can’t give them too many set pieces.

“It’s a mental test, but we’re in a good place at the moment. We hit an obstacle, that’s when you want the leaders to step forward.”

The leaders, absent in previous meetings against Wolves, need to be prepared to stand up and be counted.

 ?? AFP ?? Raul Jimenez, left, and Wolves beat Manchester United twice and drew once last season
AFP Raul Jimenez, left, and Wolves beat Manchester United twice and drew once last season
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