IAN LADYMAN: Man United rolled back Eric ten Hag’s early days at the club with loss by Liverpool
Manchester United’s aggregate score over two Premier League games against Liverpool last season was 0-9. This season it’s 2-8. United have improved, then. But after this remarkable afternoon at Anfield, it seems Erik ten Hag’s team have more work to do than we thought.
This was a result and a performance taken right from Ten Hag’s difficult early days at Old Trafford. A 4-0 defeat Brentford and a 6-3 defeat at Manchester City that flattered them were staging posts in Ten Hag’s opening attempts to drag his club out of the darkness and back in to the light. We thought all that had gone.
We thought that dysfunctionality, weakness and refusal to take individual responsibility had disappeared out of the door with Cristiano Ronaldo back in the early days of winter.
But here, out of nowhere and on the back of a long run of winning, progressive football, all the horror – all the unspeakable stuff – came frothing and bubbling back to the surface like sewage.
United stank here. Maybe that goes without saying. Maybe it’s impossible to lose by seven goals and emerge with any kind of credit at all. But still the feeling remains that this was a showing that pointed at something not quite right at the heart and soul of Ten Hag’s team. In some ways, this was about more than the football.
Manchester United were humiliated 7-0 by Liverpool at Anfield on Sunday evening
David De Gea showed concergning signs shortly after Cody Gakpo scored the first goal
Captain Bruno Fernandes showed no fight or leadership with his behaviour on the pitch
All the concerning signs were there. David de Gea moaning at Lisandro Martinez after the first goal went in. The young Brazilian Antony (goals this season: six) waving his arms around at Marcus Rashford (goals this season: 22) after losing possession and choosing not to chase back for goal number four.
And that’s before we come to the captain Bruno Fernandes. The Portuguese is a talent. He’s also a baby. Great United captains down the years – the likes of Keane, Robson, Cantona, Bruce – did not always have their things their own way. Nobody is perfect. They all had bad days. But a captain’s armband brings with it a responsibility to lead, to set an example, to keep your head up.
Fernandes presented absolutely none of that at Anfield. His most notable contributions came not from his feet but from his mouth. At full-time, he was still arguing, this time with Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson Becker.
Prior to that, he rattled Ibrahima Konate with a late challenge. He feigned injury – holding his face – when swatted on the chest by the same opponent. It was extraordinary that he was not booked. It was equally surprising that Ten Hag left him on the field for the whole 94 minutes.
Fernandes was not alone. Luke Shaw resembled a wrecking ball in over sized shorts. De Gea – so impressive on the whole this season – had an afternoon when the simple stuff suddenly felt difficult. Diogo Dalot, butchered down his side by Liverpool’s Andrew Robertson, was so confused that by the time Roberto Firmino swept in the seventh goal, the United full-back was trying to stop it on the goal line whilst actually standing half a yard behind it.
It was chaotic, it was ill-disciplined and for those United supporters brave enough to stay until the end it must have felt not only embarrassing but also utterly confusing. Before this game, United had lost once since November 6. One defeat in 22 games. And then this.
The first half saw United carry a latent threat that has steadily become recognisable as this season has moved forwards. Liverpool were the better team but until Cody Gakpo scored the opening goal just before the interval the better chances – one for Fernandes and one for Rashford – had come United’s way on the break.
Anfield was alive with hope at half-time. The goal had done that. But the manner in which Jurgen Klopp’s team trampled all over United in the second period is what will have sent Ten Hag back home to Cheshire wondering if there is still a sickness lying deep in the make-up of a squad with which he has already achieved so much this season.
Liverpool were electrifying in the second half. They smelled blood once the second goal went in in the 47th minute and the manner in which they went after United like hunting dogs was reminiscent of some of their great modern performances.
It was a showing that pointed at something not quite right at heart and soul of Ten Hag’s team
Liverpool were electrifying in the second half. They smelled blood once second goal went in
All the issues that became visible in United’s football and in their minds were clear to Liverpool’s players on the field. They turned small tears in to gaping holes. They turned vulnerability in to naked, aching weakness. And on the back of that they turned their own energy, belief and aggression in to goal after goal after goal. We have seen many exceptional things at this stadium in the Klopp era but we have not seen much like this.
Still, though, United were complicit. They are a good side these days but Liverpool and City have set the standards in the decade that has passed since Sir Alex Ferguson’s last Premier League title in 2013. Here United discovered that they remain short, mentally and emotionally as much as technically and tactically.
Ferguson was here for this one. He always is. He knows what it takes to win titles and complaining, fighting, fouling and moaning have never been part of the tool kit.
Good teams can lose but they don’t lose like this. Good teams shut games down. They limit the damage. They get out with dignity. Here, United opened the door to Liverpool and simply looked the other way.
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