Daily Mail

Mourinho told his players to explain to fans why they went missing. Nobody did

- JACK GAUGHAN

An incandesce­nt Jose Mourinho told his players that someone must articulate why, alarmingly, their passion and desire had gone missing. none of them did.

One by one they left Huddersfie­ld looking vacant and headed for the coach expression­less, just half an hour after the final whistle. ironically, Manchester United’s swift exit strategy was the only time they appeared in sync. they were negotiatin­g the rapids on the M62 by the time david Wagner had finished celebratin­g such an historic win for Huddersfie­ld.

no player heeded their manager’s desire for them to offer an explanatio­n and it is no great surprise. nobody wanted to take responsibi­lity for the pig’s ear they had served.

What a strange day. United had arrived in Huddersfie­ld primed to record their finest start to a Premier League season — and as such it would be churlish to write them off yet — but they departed looking worn out, beaten up and lacking focus.

United were atrocious and this was without doubt the worst after afternoon of Mourinho’s reign so far. Huddersfie­ld had ad not won since august 20. they had not scoreded since september 16. .

the result and the e performanc­e had been coming. despite a sound defensive display against Liverpool last week, United were still unconvinci­ng and a goalkeepin­g error giftedd them victory in Lis- sbon on Wednesday.day. But it was the mannerner of the defeat here whichhich distressed Mourinho.

He was taken aback, watching on in torrential rain. Victor Lindelof’s poor defending for the two goals — the second of which was an abominatio­n — could have come from anyone, he said. United were that bad.

a lack of gumption — effort, even — had Mourinho seething and his players were left in no doubt of that.

He was curt in the immediate aftermath and there was a far fuller debrief at carrington yesterday. some egos were bruised as the lavish cars screeched away from the training ground after lunchtime. Home truths were dished out and the manager can only hope it serves as a wake-up call. already five points behind rampant Manchester city, the alert needs to have an impact quickly.

tom ince suggested United are easy to plan for. ‘they don’t really play with the same fluidity as spurs or Man city,’ he said. ‘they build up quite slow, they like to get it out wide and we felt we could win the ball back and exploit the space in behind.

‘We know Man United may have come here and thought they could roll us over, but we showed them otherwise.’ that was someso accusation but one that is not unfounded. United were sluggish, and even complacent well beforebef aaron Mooy’s openerop on 28 minutes. they only started playingp once Lindelof had ducked out of the way of a long punt downfield and Laurent depoitre rounded davidd de Gea. By thenth it was too late. notn even Marcus Rashford’sRa introducti­on could rouse them. Mouri Mourinho had hoped to start RashfordRa­s but the teenager’s knee issue had clearly preyed on his mind. anthony Martial struggled in his place and was probably lucky not to have seen red for a number of fouls in the first half.

Rashford offered some spark as he came on at half-time, scoring to open up the game, but United created little. all of that enthused Huddersfie­ld on a momentous day in their history.

a first win over United since 1952 and in front of old hero denis Law. Frank Worthingto­n waved his fists in delight at full-time, Wagner celebrated to such an extent that his glasses fell and chairman dean Hoyle, sat next to his two sons danny and Joshua, could not contain himself.

depoitre’s goal sparked a melee in the directors’ box, as dignitarie­s fell over each other in a moment of unbridled joy.

‘since we arrived, we have produced a lot of extraordin­ary performanc­es,’ Wagner said, before toasting the day with a Pepsi at home and messaging Jurgen Klopp. children looked at their fathers in awe, open-mouthed. a hugely memorable 90 minutes for them. Huddersfie­ld town beat the mighty Manchester United.

although, as a concerned Mourinho will rightly tell you, that was not his Manchester United.

JOSE’S VERDICT

I heard Ander Herrera in an interview after the game saying the attitude and desire was poor. Oh my God, when a player says and feels that, I think they should then all go to the press conference and explain why because I cannot explain that. I don’t remember a friendly match when our attitude was so poor. Of course it concerns me because if it happens today, then why can’t it happen tomorrow?’ JOSE MOURINHO, HUDDERSFIE­LD SATURDAY

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