The Guardian (USA)

Solskjaer turns back clock while Pereira highlights value of a modern No 10

- Richard Williams

Manchester United were unrecognis­able on Sunday. Which is to say that for most of the time they played like Manchester United rather than the dispirited rabble written off by many commentato­rs in the noisy lead-up to their meeting with Liverpool, the European champions and Premier League leaders, at Old Trafford.

The weekend papers would have made Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s players feel as though they were reading their own obituaries. Their tactics were “muddled”. The club had “decayed”. Their performanc­e in their previous match, a bedraggled defeat at St James’ Park just before the recent internatio­nal break, had been “historical­ly bad”. They were described as “shorn of authority and confidence” and “the last cuts of offal” compared to the prime steak offered in the glory years. Two former internatio­nal players, in separate columns in different papers, reached the same conclusion: only one current United player – Harry Maguire – would be good enough to join 10 from Liverpool in a combined XI.

Even the efforts of the club’s management to explain their long-term

strategy were derided as a piece of spin-doctoring transparen­tly intended to cheer up the home fans before a fixture with so much history and emotion built into it. Everything was being dissected and anatomised to the club’s discredit, all the way up to the owning family’s habit of taking dividends from a company they bought by loading it with debt before relocating the corporate HQ to a tax haven.

Much of the criticism was justified, based on the events of the six and a quarter seasons since Sir Alex Ferguson left. It is perfectly easy to draw comparison­s between the progress made by his successors, of whom Solskjaer is already the fourth, to the obstacle course that brought down Wilf McGuinness, Frank O’Farrell, Tommy Docherty, Dave Sexton and Ron Atkinson as they tried to fill Matt Busby’s shoes.

But on Sunday the 11 players chosen by Solskjaer to start the match ran out as if none of that mattered and all they had to do was trust their own talent and treat their opponents as if they were just another team who happened to be in the same league. And to keep to the shape carefully designed by their manager to counter Liverpool’s known threats. As they did so, the lights came back on at Old Trafford.

Recreating the form they found after Solskjaer’s arrival at the beginning of the year, the players showed speed, skill and dynamism in exploiting the manager’s unusual 3-4-1-2 formation, using it as a platform on which to express themselves. They were lucky when Roberto Firmino hit an uncharacte­ristically weak shot straight at David de Gea and Sadio Mané had a goal disallowed for a handball offence that would not have been spotted in the pre-VAR era, and when Martin Atkinson was persuaded by the extravagan­ce of Divock Origi’s fall not to blow up for a foul at the start of the move that gave United their goal. The way they were playing, however, would permit them to claim the luck was deserved.

When Scott McTominay sent the ball lost by Origi instantly out to Daniel James on the right and the young winger crossed for Marcus Rashford to stab the ball home, the stadium seemed like itself again. This was not cagey counteratt­acking football. This was the pure attacking style that is in the genes of Manchester United and Real Madrid: not a rebuke to the obsessive intricacy of Barcelona and Manchester City but a genuine riposte.

At the heart of their best work in attack, so effective it forced Jürgen

Klopp to adjust his team’s formation twice in their second-half search for an equaliser, was Andreas Pereira, the Belgium-born Brazil internatio­nal whose five years at Old Trafford have included two loan periods. Pereira’s difficulti­es in finding a place in the United side evoked memories of Ferguson dithering over the possibilit­y of signing Zinedine Zidane from Bordeaux because he couldn’t decide which was the Frenchman’s best position.

Pereira settled that question on Sunday. A couple of days after Juan

Mata had given an interview in which he lamented the death of the “classic No 10”, Pereira demonstrat­ed there is still a powerful role for a No 10 to play, as long as he can adapt to the different conditions of the modern game. Now 23, he played behind Rashford and James, both of whom will turn 22 within the next month, to provide United with an attack that, on the day, lived up to the fans’ hopes. The sight of Rashford bullying Virgil van Dijk on the right-hand touchline before feeding Pereira during another exhilarati­ng move will not quickly be forgotten.

Over at Villa Park 24 hours earlier, Jack Grealish had played similarly to Pereira, giving a demonstrat­ion of the all-round art of the modern No 10 as he made one goal and scored the other in the 2-1 win over Brighton. The watching Gareth Southgate would have been given something to think about as he waits for Phil Foden to succeed David Silva and gain experience in the same still-vital role.

At Old Trafford a late equaliser reminded Solskjaer that his forwards had failed to take opportunit­ies to close out the game and his defenders had tired under Liverpool’s late assault. They are still lying in the bottom half of the table but there had been unmistakab­le signs of better times to come. Now his biggest problem may be how to restore Paul Pogba, expected to return soon from a foot injury, to the side without sacrificin­g the pace and fluency he glimpsed on Sunday.

 ?? Photograph: Matthew Peters/Manchester United via Getty Images ?? Andreas Pereira, the Belgium-born Brazil internatio­nal who joined United when he was 16, tries to escape the clutches of Andy Robertson of Liverpool.
Photograph: Matthew Peters/Manchester United via Getty Images Andreas Pereira, the Belgium-born Brazil internatio­nal who joined United when he was 16, tries to escape the clutches of Andy Robertson of Liverpool.

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