The Cairns Post

Besieged United boss reeling after latest disaster

- AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE

LOUIS van Gaal said he could jump before he is pushed after his position as Manchester United manager became even more precarious following a fourth successive defeat.

The under-fire Dutchman, 64, looked like a condemned man throughout United’s sorry 2-0 loss to Stoke City at the Britannia Stadium and then in the inquest that took place afterwards.

When grilled about the firestorm of speculatio­n surroundin­g his likely sacking and the possible appointmen­t of Jose Mourinho, Van Gaal intimated he may be about to walk away from a job that has undergone a dramatic downturn in fortunes in the past month.

While refusing to confirm or deny whether he has received assurances from the United board, he did state: “I have said already in former press conference­s that it is not always that the club has to fire or sack me. Sometimes I do it by myself.

“I am the one who wants to speak first with the board of Manchester United, with my members of staff, with my players and not always you (the media).”

On top of that, Van Gaal – appointed in July 2014 – failed to give a convincing answer when asked whether he would still be in charge for United’s next game against Chelsea at Old Trafford tomorrow.

“You will have to wait and see, but I think so,” he said.

“I feel the support of everybody in the club.”

United have slipped to sixth in the Premier League after three consecutiv­e defeats – the second such sequence under Van Gaal – and were knocked out of the Champions League after a 3-2 loss at Wolfsburg earlier this month.

Rather than his usual ebullient self, Van Gaal cut a forlorn figure at times as what he had described as a “must-win” game turned into a nightmare.

He put that down to his players’ fear of failure and conceded that United must somehow find the courage to overcome that if they are to arrest their slide.

“We didn’t dare to play the football that we can and I have analysed it as a consequenc­e of the circumstan­ces – the pressure that you have to cope with as a player group, as an individual player,” he said.

“We gave a bad goal away in the first instance, but the main reason is that we could not cope with the circumstan­ces. We did not play our way of football.

“At half-time, I said to my players we have nothing to lose, and then you can cope better with that in the second half. But it was not good enough.

“I do my utmost to find solutions to cope with the pressure but at the end my players have to do that by themselves, and I help them.”

Van Gaal pointed to the dreadful back header by Memphis Depay that gift-wrapped Stoke’s first goal for Bojan Krkic in the 19th minute as the main reason for United’s latest defeat. Goals 31 Shots/ on target 241/89 Shot accuracy 48.4% Shot conversion 16.9% Possession 55.2%

Versus United’s Premier League Managers Alex Ferguson 810 528 168 114 65.2 Louis van Gaal 56 28 15 13 50 David Moyes 34 17 6 11 50

Based just on Old Trafford matches Alex Ferguson 405 305 66 34 75.3 Louis van Gaal 27 18 5 4 66.7 David Moyes 16 7 3 6 43.8

 ??  ?? NO WAY BACK: Jose Fonte of Southampto­n celebrates scoring his side's third goal.
NO WAY BACK: Jose Fonte of Southampto­n celebrates scoring his side's third goal.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia