The Star Early Edition

United must enrich attack or miss the cash

- SIMON HART

WHEN Manchester United last contested a Champions League qualifier back in 2005, the tie was over at the halfway stage after goals from Wayne Rooney, Ruud van Nistelrooy and Cristiano Ronaldo destroyed Hungarian side Debrecen at Old Trafford.

On the evidence of United’s laboured attacking displays so far this campaign, Louis van Gaal’s side may have a less straightfo­rward evening in store when they host Club Brugge today in the first leg of a play-off for a place in the group stage.

United do not want to miss out on the riches of the Cham- pions League for a second year running – beating Brugge alone will guarantee € 14-million, while winning the competitio­n would be worth an estimated € 75m – but Van Gaal’s team have yet to demonstrat­e the kind of attacking fluency and intensity that routinely blew away Continenta­l visitors to Old Trafford in the Sir Alex Ferguson years.

United made it two wins out of two with Friday night’s 1-0 victory at Aston Villa but they have managed only three shots on target in their opening two fixtures, and by Van Gaal’s admission were guilty of “too many unnecessar­y ball losses” at Villa Park. Adnan Januzaj offered a reminder of his potential with his winning goal and glimpses of his ability to drift away from defenders, but it was a night to forget for both Rooney and the £31m Memphis Depay, and underlined why United are pursuing the signature of Barcelona’s Pedro.

Against Brugge, United will face a team who beat Panathinai­kos 4-2 on aggregate in the third qualifying round and enjoyed a 15-game unbeaten run en route to the quarter-finals of last season’s Europa League, conceding only six goals.

Brugge are missing seven players through injury, yet their coach, Michel Preud’ homme – who as Belgium’s goalkeeper was beaten by David Platt’s extra-time volley at Italia 90 – can call on his big target man Tom de Sutter, who has postponed a transfer to Turkish side Bursaspor to play in the tie. Brugge play a direct game, and De Sutter could help exploit Daley Blind’s lack of height in United’s central defence.

After the lukewarm response to United’s opening displays, their summer recruit Bastian Schweinste­iger spoke like a true German, pointing out that they had done the most important thing – winning. “Of course we can improve, but still we are putting chances away,” he said.

“It’s very important to control the game against Brugge. We have to score and the most important thing too is that we are like a team in defence.”

A key figure in the defensive solidity which has brought two 1-0 wins has been their other new midfielder Morgan Schneiderl­in. Unlike some of the players in front of him, he barely gave a pass away at Villa Park.

Schweinste­iger himself played down Bayern coach Pep Guardiola’s claim he had not been fully fit for three years – “I won the World Cup, so you have to be fit!” – and added: “I came a little bit late to the team, and then I had a small calf injury in America.

“But I am getting in better shape and within one or two weeks I will be at the highest level.” – The Independen­t on Sunday

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