The Sun (Malaysia)

Pattern of discontent

Devils bruising defeat by City isn’t an anomaly – it’s the new normal under Solskjaer

- Ű BY MIGUEL DELANEY

AT half-time yesterday, an irate Ole Gunnar Solskjaer forced himself to calm down slightly, and to strike a more positive tone in front of his Manchester United players. It was naturally difficult, since he admitted that first half against Manchester City had been “the worst we’ve played”.

Solskjaer argued to them that it was only the first half, and that the second offered the opportunit­y for something like a clean slate, to reset themselves.

The players did that to a degree, but it is a message they’ve heard before. It has pretty much been the pattern at Old Trafford since March, a period when they’ve been unable to win three consecutiv­e League games.

It is remarkable to think that, as recently as a week ago, United were facing into the new year with new hope since they’d won two League games in a row and were facing a nascent Arsenal who should really have been there for the taking. Solskjaer’s side instead gave way, and not just in that game.

They followed it with that dismal 0-0 at Wolves and have now followed that with this collapse against City.

The fact it wasn’t as bad as looked like it would be at half-time is no real solace, because a “tired” City – in the words of Pep Guardiola – so visibly dropped off.

They knew the game was won, and it’s difficult not to think the tie is too.

City are on course for yet another trip to the League Cup final. It is meanwhile difficult to know where United are going.

This is the great danger of this period, though. After 10 months since the win over Paris Saint-Germain where they’ve been pretty much teetering on the brink, and perpetuall­y wavering between a stumble and a step forward, there is suddenly the threat this January period could see so many problems come together and unravel.

So many of those problems of course go way beyond the manager, but a core issue is that he just doesn’t seem to be constructi­ng anything in terms of an idea of play.

It remains so vague, so dependent on reactive football and counter-attacking, that ultimately means it wavers so much.

One source at another highprofil­e European club openly wondered whether “the win rate would be much more different with the kit man in charge”.

And whatever about building attacks, it doesn’t seem to be building the confidence of a fairly fragile and incomplete squad.

They are absolutely crying out for some kind of short-term creativity in the absence of Paul Pogba, even a stop-gap individual signing.

Sources say Ruben Neves has been mooted as a January target, especially as James Maddison is really the big summer target, but that the Wolves midfielder is not currently interested in a move to Old Trafford.

Back to the drawing board, then, and looking around the market.

Back to looking at the fixture list, for that is what so much of United’s form seems dependent on.

They are in that regard lucky that it’s a home game against 20th-placed Norwich City next, rather than the following week’s trip to Liverpool.

Except, right now, you wouldn’t really bank on them in any individual game. – The Independen­t

 ??  ?? Sadio Mane smiles after winning the Player of the Year award during the 2019 CAF Awards. – AFPPIX
Sadio Mane smiles after winning the Player of the Year award during the 2019 CAF Awards. – AFPPIX

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