The Sun (Malaysia)

Season’s end cannot come soon enough

Rangnick’s disjointed and injury-stricken squad are playing for profession­al pride alone

- MARK CRITCHLEY

AT THE start of the season, there was a broad consensus on the make-up of the Premier League’s final top four and a band of overwhelmi­ng favourites to qualify for next season’s Champions League.

The order depended on who you asked but just about everybody agreed that Manchester City and Liverpool would be joined by Chelsea and Manchester United.

Two of those four clubs have spent the past week competing in the semifinals of this season’s Champions League, having already secured their place in next season’s too.

For City, to win the competitio­n would be the crowning moment of the Abu Dhabi era.

For Liverpool, it could still complete an unpreceden­ted quadruple. It is late April and this season could still be a historic one for both clubs.

Their two rivals, by contrast, can barely wait for the campaign to end.

Many viewers might decide that West Ham’s first European semifinal in 46 years is an altogether more enticing prospect than this meeting of two jaded giants.

Chelsea still have the FA Cup final to look forward to, at least, and will eventually secure their top-four finish.

It is some way sort of the sustained title challenge many expected, but then very little has gone according to expectatio­n at Stamford Bridge over these past few months.

The takeover saga is reaching its most decisive days. Most importantl­y, whatever the outcome, the future of the club is secure.

United have not suffered an existentia­l crisis in the same way but that is just about the only thing that has not gone wrong at Old Trafford over the past nine months.

This season could be described as forgettabl­e if it had not arguably been the most dramatic and traumatic of the postFergus­on era.

Erik ten Hag’s appointmen­t can only offer delayed gratificat­ion at a club that needs and often craves – an instant hit of optimism.

The problems continue to pile up. After Paul Scholes’ public proclamati­ons of dressing room unrest and Scott McTominay hinting at something similar after the defeat to Arsenal at the weekend, there is now an injury crisis to contend with.

United’s injury record remains a worry, though, and it is an issue Rangnick has repeatedly brought up in recent weeks, having been deprived of players during a critical stage of the season.

He has suggested a thorough internal review to get to the bottom of the problem, but was sure to divert any blame away from those individual­s within United’s medical department.

“There is nothing that needs to be put under scrutiny there,” he insisted, “but obviously if we are supposed to have seven outfield players missing out tomorrow this is not a good thing at this part of the season.”

Scrutiny is instead turning to Rangnick himself. This is far from an easy club to manage but his interim spell has not had the desired effect.

“I think I’ve tried everything I can but that does not necessaril­y mean that we did everything right,” he conceded at Carrington, when asked if this spell had damaged his reputation.

“Everybody has to question himself, the staff, the players and myself, what could we have done better in the past. This is part of our job. Everybody has to be self-critical enough to do that.”

Whether it is players or management, nobody at Old Trafford can be spared that criticism, even if United win all four of their remaining league games.

It says everything about how badly the season has gone that a perfect record between now and the end of next month could be viewed by some as less a blessing and more a curse.

If a spot in the Champions League has gone, as it surely has, a place in the Europa League is little consolatio­n and one in the Conference League even less so. – The Independen­t

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