The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Why Mourinho should worry that De Gea is his best player

United can tighten grip on second place today, but are more reliant than ever on their goalkeeper It would surprise few if he is player of the year for a fourth time in five seasons

- James Ducker NORTHERN FOOTBALL CORRESPOND­ENT

Jose Mourinho’s debut season at Manchester United was six months old when the manager, reflecting on the club’s overdepend­ence on David de Gea in the previous three campaigns, had this to say: “I think when a goalkeeper is player of the season, it’s because something is wrong. Season after season, the goalkeeper is player of the season, it means something is wrong.”

For three consecutiv­e years before Mourinho’s arrival in May 2016, De Gea was named United’s player of the season, and while the club may currently sit in their rosiest position in the Premier League since Sir Alex Ferguson’s departure, it should be a cause of some concern that the team are proving more reliant than ever on the brilliant Spaniard.

Victory over Liverpool at Old Trafford today would move United five points clear of their Merseyside rivals and strengthen their grip on second place. But despite being eight, 15, six and 14 points better off respective­ly than at the correspond­ing stage of the past four seasons, De Gea is facing more shots and having to make more saves per game this term than in any of those previous campaigns.

As such, it would surprise few if he is installed as the club’s player of the year for the fourth time in five seasons as he continues to mask United’s shortcomin­gs in defence, even if the loss of Eric Bailly for long periods through injury was a setback.

De Gea has made almost as many saves after 29 league matches this season as he did in 37 top-flight appearance­s during David Moyes’s infamous reign in 2013-14, when the club finished seventh in the table.

Under Moyes, De Gea made a total of 99 saves at an average of 2.68 saves per game, during which time he was facing an average of 3.78 shots on target per match in what proved his busiest spell as United No 1 until this season.

De Gea has already made 95 saves this term, with the goalkeeper’s saves-per-game average jumping to 3.3, far higher than last season’s 2.11 and significan­tly more than in Louis van Gaal’s two years in charge, when he made an average of 2.51 saves per game in 2014-15 and 2.44 the following season. Troublingl­y for Mourinho, De Gea is now facing an average of four shots on target per game, higher than under Moyes but also Van Gaal, under whom the averages were 3.46 and 3.35, and a sharp increase on last season’s figure of 2.94.

Some of De Gea’s saves have taken the breath away, as well as being crucial, and Monday night at Selhurst Park was another example of that. De Gea’s stunning reflex save to keep out Christian Benteke’s header, with the scoreline at 2-2 and

13 minutes left to play, provided the foundation on which United would go on to win the game 3-2 in stoppage time. United are talking to De Gea’s agent, Jorge Mendes, about a new contract, with Real Madrid again said to be circling, and the importance of retaining the 27-year-old is hard to overstate. Nowhere was his ability better highlighte­d than in United’s 3-1 victory over Arsenal in December, when he made 14 saves, although there have been a series of key interventi­ons throughout the campaign. Liverpool will not have forgotten the instinctiv­e stop De Gea made to deny Joel Matip from point-blank range in the goalless draw at Anfield in October. At home to Bournemout­h, he saved all seven shots he faced. Despite the criticisms levelled at United’s

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Wrong: Jose Mourinho says the goalkeeper should not be a team’s best player
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