The Irish Mail on Sunday

MOURINHO HITS BACK: BORING? WE’RE TOO ATTACKING

Jose not fazed by the dig from Cantona as United prise out another victory

- By Joe Bernstein

BY scoring poorly for artistic impression, Jose Mourinho did little to convince Eric Cantona and other sceptics he’s a better fit for Manchester United than Pep Guardiola.

But the Old Trafford boss had a novel way of explaining why his side lacked style in recording an ugly win from Ashley Young’s deflected strike — he picked too many exciting players in the same team.

Mourinho, who can always ask his critics to show him their medals, has recently succumbed to the temptation of picking all of Marcus Rashford, Anthony Martial, Juan Mata and Romelu Lukaku in his starting line-up. It worked well in putting four past Newcastle last weekend but Brighton are among the best defensive units in the Premier League and United were often slow and sluggish in trying to break them down.

Even the winning goal after 66 minutes was fortunate and controvers­ial. United were wrongly awarded a corner when Lukaku, rather than Solly March, took the last touch. When it was half-cleared, Young’s prospectiv­e hit flew off the outstretch­ed boot of Lewis Dunk into the net.

‘I am incredibly disappoint­ed because we deserved to get something on the day,’ said Brighton’s popular manager Chris Hughton.

‘We didn’t play well,’ conceded Mourinho, whose side are unbeaten at Old Trafford since September 2016 when Hillary Clinton was still expecting to be US President.

The United manager will have been aware of comments this week from Cantona, one of the most popular players in United’s history, that Guardiola would have been a more ‘logical’ choice at Old Trafford because of his creative instincts. Mourinho’s retort was fascinatin­g, blaming United’s lack of cohesion on a surfeit of forwards

‘Sometimes you play with too many attacking players and you lose control of the game,’ he said.

‘We had problems because Pogba and Matic were a bit isolated in the centre of the park. Our creation was poor. The three players with Lukaku [Rashford, Mata, Martial] didn’t get the ball, they were not successful in one-against-ones. Marcus did not have a happy match at all.’

Mourinho can be pure pantomime but with 25 trophies in his managerial career, he deserves respect and certainly United looked unbalanced. How they missed a midfield general like Paul Scholes, or even Michael Carrick, currently recovering from a minor heart procedure, to link up with all the pace and power in attack.

Brighton, who had been unbeaten in five games, started the brighter. Anthony Knockaert fired across goal when well placed and David de Gea was forced into a smart save from Pascal Gross.

United had to wait until the stroke of half-time before seriously threatenin­g, Aussie keeper Mat Ryan making a double-save from Lukaku and Pogba. The £75million Belgian isn’t the most popular player around Old Trafford at the moment and there was a huge ovation for Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c when he came on for Mata in the second half.

Lukaku did play a part in the only goal but it was unwitting. He knocked the back of Solly’s leg, but the assistant thought the ball had gone out off the Brighton man.

‘When you see it again, it wasn’t a

corner,’ said Hughton. ‘Yes, I’d expect him [the linesman] to get it right in those circumstan­ces.’

When the corner was cleared to the edge of the box, Dunk rushed out to block Young but only succeeded in sending the ball looping over Ryan. It was Young’s first goal for 18 months and reward for a fine season in which he has been reinvented as a left-back and recalled to the England squad.

To Brighton’s credit, they never gave up hope of an equaliser with Knockaert sending in dangerous crosses and Shane Duffy heading wide from a corner.

Mourinho sent on his enforcer Marouane Fellaini to ensure United moved within five points of leaders Manchester City, who play Huddersfie­ld today. There was also a late outing for Henrikh Mkhitaryan who had been left out of the previous two squads.

Mourinho was gracious towards Brighton: ‘I have to praise a team and a manager who were playing in the Championsh­ip a few months ago. They were the team that has given us most problems at Old Trafford. The good thing for me was our intensity got higher in the second half, in search of the goal, and then I saw everyone playing for the clean sheet [but] people like Lukaku, chasing defenders on the left. So I am happy with the attitude.’

Hughton said: ‘It is always nice to hear praise from the opposition manager but we are frustrated. We feel sorry for Lewis Dunk about his deflection, he was very good for us again today.’

 ??  ?? WINNER: Ashley Young celebrated the strike (main picture) but it was given as an own goal after hitting Lewis Dunk (left). Mourinho (right) didn’t know what to make of it
WINNER: Ashley Young celebrated the strike (main picture) but it was given as an own goal after hitting Lewis Dunk (left). Mourinho (right) didn’t know what to make of it
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