A Result for Manchester United to Build on or a Reminder of How Far They Must Climb?

Marcus Rashford gives Manchester United the lead against Liverpool and the England man looked back to his best on Sunday. Photograph: Jon Super/AP
Marcus Rashford gives Manchester United the lead against Liverpool and the England man looked back to his best on Sunday. Photograph: Jon Super/AP
TT

A Result for Manchester United to Build on or a Reminder of How Far They Must Climb?

Marcus Rashford gives Manchester United the lead against Liverpool and the England man looked back to his best on Sunday. Photograph: Jon Super/AP
Marcus Rashford gives Manchester United the lead against Liverpool and the England man looked back to his best on Sunday. Photograph: Jon Super/AP

So close. So, so close. Manchester United came within five minutes of pulling off their best result since Paris in March. Had they done so, Ole Gunnar Solskjær would have been hailed for his tactical genius, for the boldness of the changes that forced Liverpool into their worst performance of the season, for the vision that found a plan from the most unpromising pieces.

But results are the great validifiers, and the 1-1 draw leaves United two points above the teams in the relegation zone. As Solskjær observed last week, in what must have been for him a moment of devastating self-realization, it’s not the 1990s anymore.

Perhaps this will prove a springboard. Perhaps this was the performance that will remind United what they can be. Perhaps (and this may be more important to United fans in the short term) this will sow doubts at Liverpool and interrupt their title challenge.

The sense was that Adam Lallana’s late equalizer changed everything. That it will persuade Liverpool they can still pull out results when everything is going against them and that it will confirm to United – board, fans, and players – that stagnation is now their state.

Even the identity of the goalscorer seemed to be making a point: Lallana, a player blighted by injury, scoring his first goal since May 2017. Sometime the fates really have it in for you: Mohamed Salah is injured; you have blunted Sadio Mané; you have kept Roberto Firmino quiet; you have seen off Divock Origi; and you end up being the patsy to a heartwarming comeback story. In the 90s it was United who played with the force of fairytale story behind them.

Solskjær got much right. The switch to a back three allowed the wing-backs, Aaron Wan-Bissaka and Ashley Young to push higher and engage Trent Alexander-Arnold and Andy Robertson early. The Liverpool pair contributed 23 assists between them last season and had added a further two each this. But at Old Trafford they ended up hitting a string of crosses from deeper positions from where they are easier to defend, particularly when you have three central defenders waiting. The result was the cross accuracy of Liverpool’s full-backs was 17.6%, having been at 27.6% over the first eight games of the season.

But the leveler, of course, for this really was not Solskjær’s day, stemmed from a mis-hit cross from Robertson on the left, on one of the few occasions he had got into a dangerous position high on that flank.

The back three also allowed Solskjær to sit two holding midfielders deep, in just the area where Firmino likes to drop. At the same time, that trapezium of five defensive players packed into a central block – the same structure that was so effective for Antonio Conte’s Chelsea – was hard for Liverpool’s midfield to penetrate, one of the reasons why their passing was so wayward. Again and again they seemed to choose the wrong option, at least in part because the usual option was not available.

For the front three, Solskjær then turned to the disposition he had successfully employed at Tottenham last season with the two center-forwards split and Andreas Pereira operating as Jesse Lingard had then as a false nine.

That Marcus Rashford and Daniel James are both used to operating wide helped and Liverpool struggled to cope as the space behind those attacking full-backs was targeted. If they went forward as usual, there was a major risk of the two central defenders becoming stretched. That in turn placed huge pressure on Fabinho to sit deep and cover Pereira as he sought to exploit any gap that might appear between Virgil van Dijk and Joël Matip. On a handful of occasions in the first half he nearly did; overall Pereira had an excellent game but had his final ball been better on a couple of key occasions United might have been further ahead by the break.

Jürgen Klopp countered first with a switch to 4-2-3-1 and then 4-4-2, which meant Gini Wijnaldum dropping deeper to support Fabinho, and additional players wide to try to take the game to United’s wing-backs.

The balance of the game tipped Liverpool’s way, without them creating a hatful of chances, to which Solskjær responded by dropping Pereira deeper and trying to overman in central midfield. Doing so, though, pulled the two center-forwards narrower, liberating the full-backs, which in the end, however fortuitously given Robertson scuffed his cross, brought the equalizer.

Solskjær, for all his innovation, was undone by the fact that, fundamentally, Liverpool have better players. It has perhaps been forgotten that in the early part of his reign, the win over Tottenham at Wembley and in Paris especially, he seemed to be living up to Alex Ferguson’s glowing assessment of his tactical abilities. Whether he has the drive, the charisma and the organizational capacity to oversee the rebuilding of United is another matter.

Perhaps the most telling detail was that, even if United had held on to win, they would have done so with the second-lowest possession figure they have recorded at Old Trafford. It really isn’t the 90s any more.



Arsenal Must Be Ruthless to Earn Statement Win at Sporting, Says Arteta

Arsenal FC head coach Mikel Arteta attends a press conference at Alvalade Stadium, in Lisbon, Portugal, 25 November 2024. Arsenal will face Sporting CP in the UEFA Champions League on 26 November. (EPA)
Arsenal FC head coach Mikel Arteta attends a press conference at Alvalade Stadium, in Lisbon, Portugal, 25 November 2024. Arsenal will face Sporting CP in the UEFA Champions League on 26 November. (EPA)
TT

Arsenal Must Be Ruthless to Earn Statement Win at Sporting, Says Arteta

Arsenal FC head coach Mikel Arteta attends a press conference at Alvalade Stadium, in Lisbon, Portugal, 25 November 2024. Arsenal will face Sporting CP in the UEFA Champions League on 26 November. (EPA)
Arsenal FC head coach Mikel Arteta attends a press conference at Alvalade Stadium, in Lisbon, Portugal, 25 November 2024. Arsenal will face Sporting CP in the UEFA Champions League on 26 November. (EPA)

Arsenal need to be ruthless to secure a win against Sporting and snap their negative run of form away from home in the Champions League, manager Mikel Arteta said ahead of Tuesday's clash.

Winless in their last four European outings, Arsenal arrive in Portugal following a 1-0 defeat against Inter Milan at San Siro earlier this month.

Arteta's side currently sit 12th in the new Champions League 36-team format, where the top eight teams qualify automatically for the last 16 and the next 16 enter a two-legged playoff to join them.

The Spaniard acknowledged that improving their away form is key to his team's chances in Europe's top-tier club competition.

"It's certainly something we have to improve. We have the right steps, and looking back at the way we played against Inter, we dominated the game and should have won," Arteta told a news conference on Monday.

"But the reality is you have to make it happen, and we didn't. Those steps are what we need to take next - be ruthless and much more efficient in the opposition box.

"We wanted to be higher (in the standings), but it's the position we are in right now.

"We have to play in a way that's going to give us a chance to win the game and fight to do it as quickly as possible. Tomorrow we have a great opportunity to do that."

Sporting, who thrashed Manchester City 4-1 in their last outing, are enjoying an outstanding campaign, remaining unbeaten in second place with 10 points.

Arteta acknowledged the Portuguese champions pose a major challenge for Arsenal but also offer an opportunity for a morale-boosting triumph.

"The run they are on is incredible, which tells you it's not only about their qualities but their ambition and the team energy they have. That's the great challenge we have," he said.

"To come here tomorrow, make a statement, and show that we are capable against this kind of opponent by being ourselves and winning the game."