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United star issues strong claim after the team matched an unwanted club record in draw vs. Chelsea

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Manchester United defender Noussair Mazraoui has insisted that he and his teammates have too much quality to be in 13th position in the Premier League.

United are at the bottom of the table, having won just three of their opening 10 top-flight fixtures.

The Red Devils have garnered just 12 points – their worst points tally after 10 matches since the 1986/87 campaign.

Mazraoui was one of the team’s standout performers during Sunday’s 1-1 draw against Chelsea, excelling in a largely unfamiliar left-back position.

The Morocco international was brilliant both defensively and offensively and earned himself rave reviews from the media and supporters.

After the final whistle, he spoke to MUTV (via the Independent) and pointed out, “We fought really hard. But I think eventually if you look at the game and the chances we created, we deserve to win.”

“I think if you look at the table where we are now, you cannot say that’s where we belong. Everybody knows that. We know that.”

“We have to step up and get away from there really, really fast because, yeah, that’s just not us.”

He added, “You see that (against Chelsea). We have too much of a quality to be there in this position.”

Mazraoui disagreed with suggestions that the match was too physical. He opined that it “was really passionate” as both sides wanted to win and clinch all three points.

The 26-year-old further stated, “I think for the supporters a great game to watch, even though there were just two goals in there. I think an amazing game to watch from everybody.”

Mazraoui and his teammates are set to host Greek outfit PAOK FC on Thursday and they will undoubtedly be keen to register a first Europa League victory of the campaign.

Featured image Carl Recine via Getty Images

Derick Kinoti is a football writer at The Peoples Person who has covered Manchester United and the game extensively for many years. He is a keen analyst with expertise in SEO and journalism standards. Derick is convinced Wayne Rooney is the true GOAT and won’t hear otherwise!

Amorim has directed United to go after £90m attacking superstar who can “light up Old Trafford” – report

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Manchester United’s profligacy in front of goal cost them two points on Sunday as the Red Devils were held to a 1-1 draw by Chelsea despite creating the better openings.

In fact, it was the hosts who took the lead at Old Trafford only to get pegged back five minutes later, a frequent occurrence this season that incoming manager Ruben Amorim must fix.

The team lacked any real composure in midfield and in the final third with gilt-edged chances being spurned by Marcus Rashford, Alejandro Garnacho and Bruno Fernandes.

The wingers inability to score regularly coupled with Rasmus Hojlund and Joshua Zirkzee’s poor form means the Portuguese tactician’s first priority will be to try and help the team rediscover their touch up front.

Goals have been hard to find

Antony’s future remains up in the air as does Amad Diallo, whose contract ends in 2025, while INEOS are open to moving on Rashford if he cannot re-find his mojo under the new boss.

This is why the Sporting Lisbon manager wants help in the transfer market and is said to be eyeing a sensational move for a “special talent” who can “light up Old Trafford” — Khvicha Kvaratskhelia.

The Georgian, who excels on the left wing, already has five goals this season, more than Rashford, and two assists, while in the last two seasons, he netted a total of 27 times while registering 26 assists.

And his impressive form at Naples has alerted multiple Premier League teams to his availability with CaughtOffside claiming the Arsenal, and Liverpool have joined the 20-time English league champions in the race.

Napoli want to hold on to the 23-year-old and are in talks over a new deal with his current contract ending in 2027. But the winger’s camp has been insistent on including a release clause, something the Serie A club are yet to agree.

“CaughtOffside sources have suggested that he is already eyeing a “special talent” who will “light up Old Trafford.” Although Napoli are believed to have put a £90m price tag on Khvicha Kvaratskhelia’s head, Amorim is keen to land the Georgian ace.

Kvaratskhelia chase heating up

“Sources have also advanced that although the 23-year-old is in talks with Napoli regarding extending his contract, they are currently at an impasse.

“It’s understood that the Partnopei are not willing to accede to a low release clause insisted upon by the agent, no doubt with a view to the player being sold at a later date – with a fee much more attractive to potential buying clubs.

“Arsenal and Liverpool are also keeping tabs on what is a developing situation for a winger who is known for his offensive skills and creativity.”

Rashford and Antony’s sale could hand INEOS the budget to go after Kvaratskhelia but for now, Amorim needs to try and get the existing attackers to fire. The lack of goals needs to be addressed if the club are to end the season on a high.

Ayantan has worked for 10 years in the Indian sports media industry, writing for the biggest newspapers and websites but his heart was always set on writing about his favourite club. Currently an editor at The Peoples Person. You can follow him on X: @ayantanc_25

What is the best start by a new Premier League manager?

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Arne Slot has had the fourth best start of any Premier League manager over his first 10 games at a club but he’s no John Gregory…

10) Avram Grant (Chelsea, 23 points)
Just two months after becoming Chelsea’s director of football, Grant found himself leading Chelsea in September 2007 after Jose Mourinho was mutually consented. Despite five dropped points in the Blues’ first two games under the Israeli, they were then unbeaten throughout October, November and then deep into December as Chelsea moved from fifth to third. Defeat to Arsenal in Grant’s 11th match would actually be their last Premier League loss of the season, but that still wasn’t enough to keep Grant in the job.

9) Pep Guardiola (Manchester City, 23 points)
Initially it really did look like Pep Guardiola – much to the chagrin of the ‘he thinks he can come over here…’ brigade – was going to flatten every Premier League team in his path after his arrival along with John Stones, Ilkay Gundogan and Leroy Sane. Frankly, it looked like a piece of p*** until the seventh game of the season when they got Spursed. Then came 72% possession and two saved penalties to see them emerge with just a point v Everton. Welcome to the Premier League, Pep. They eventually finished a lowly third. Embarrassed for you, Pep.

8) Luiz Felipe Scolari (Chelsea, 23 points)
It’s extraordinary how many Chelsea managers start with a bang, with this 2007/08 iteration of the Blues scoring a ludicrous 22 goals across those first 10 games. But Scolari’s style eventually exhausted the Chelsea players and he was out on his ear by early February. Remember when Chelsea sacked managers for being fourth?

7) Carlo Ancelotti (Chelsea, 24 points)
A year after Scolari’s Chelsea began with a bang, Ancelotti’s Chelsea went a step further, winning eight of their first 10 games with the only blips coming in a lacklustre performance against Wigan marred by a sending-off and a defeat away at Aston Villa. Didier Drogba and Nicolas Anelka were on fire, Terry and Carvalho were resilient, and this was the midfield of Frank Lampard, Michael Ballack and Michael Essien. What a bloody team. What a manager. And this one actually won the Premier League title.

6) Maurizio Sarri (Chelsea, 24 points)
Remember when Sarriball was an innovation that could bring glory back to Chelsea and the spark back to Eden Hazard rather than a dirty word. Chelsea were unbeaten across the first 12 games of the Italian’s reign, though a smattering of draws meant that they never looked like potential champions. Things – as so they often do at Chelsea – soured over the winter months and Sarri left at the end of the season with all happy to part ways. But that start was far better than we remembered.

5) Guus Hiddink (Chelsea, 25 points)
The Dutchman proved there wasn’t an awful lot wrong with Scolari’s Chelsea squad as he began with four straight wins before defeat at Spurs. But they recovered to settle into third and an automatic Champions League qualifying spot, all while reaching the semi-finals of the actual Champions League.

4) Arne Slot (Liverpool, 25 points)
It’s not been spectacular but they have conceded just six goals in 10 games, with home defeat to Nottingham Forest a wake-up call.

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3) Ange Postecoglou (Tottenham, 26 points)
That Tottenham started last season with a 10-match unbeaten run now feels like a fever dream but IT HAPPENED. Without the departed Harry Kane and with excellent new signings James Maddison, Micky van de Ven and Guglielmo Vicario, Tottenham looked unstoppable, mate. They beat Manchester United and Liverpool in those first eight heady games that ended with a narrow 10-man victory over Luton that took them top of the actual Premier League. Two months later they were fifth. Fantasy over.

2) Ole Gunnar Solskjaer (Manchester United, 26 points)
The only man to remain unbeaten across his first 10 games at a Premier League club. No wonder people were losing their minds and screaming ‘Ole’s at the wheel’. After the dismal days of Jose Mourinho, the smiling face and twinkling eyes of the Norwegian brought joy and freedom to a United side that rose from sixth to, erm, sixth as Paul Pogba, Marcus Rashford and even Anthony Martial were on fire. How did that end again?

1) John Gregory (Aston Villa, 27 points)
Brian Little resigned (remember when managers resigned?) in February 1998 with Villa looking like outside bets for relegation. Villa decided against a big-name replacement and instead turned to Wycombe manager John Gregory. His first game was a come-from-behind Villa Park win over Liverpool featuring two Stan Collymore goals; the Villa fans were on board. By the end of an 10-game run with a bizarre home defeat to Barnsley the only blip, Villa had moved from 14th to seventh and a place in Europe. Now that’s what we call a new manager bounce.

Man Utd transfer: Amorim ‘plots’ January sale of ‘rotten apple’ in ‘drastic move’ by new boss

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New Man Utd boss Ruben Amorim could sell Marcus Rashford in the January transfer window unless his performances improve, according to reports.

The Red Devils decided to sack Erik ten Hag on Monday before acting quickly to bring in his successor in the form of Sporting Lisbon head coach Amorim.

Man Utd have made a terrible start to the Premier League season with the Red Devils sitting in 13th position ahead of their 1-1 draw against Chelsea on Sunday.

Amorim will inherit a side who have won just three of their ten matches in the Premier League this season with only newly-promoted Southampton and Crystal Palace scoring fewer goals than them this season.

Rashford, who scored 30 goals in 56 matches in Ten Hag’s first season at Old Trafford, has been on a barren run ever since, registering just eight goals in his last 43 Premier League matches for Man Utd.

Last month, Algemeen Dagblad journalist Geert Langendorff branded Rashford a “rotten apple” after his disappointing start to the campaign under Ten Hag.

Langendorff said on the AD Voetbalpodcast: “He is one of the rotten apples. Rashford had problems off the pitch last year. He didn’t quite colour within the lines.

“And anyone who saw him on Sunday against Aston Villa. He was ostentatiously applying for a red card. Fortunately, Ten Hag was able to intervene just in time and get him off.

“Mourinho never mentioned names. But he did say there were one or two more rotten apples who made the job impossible for him. Anthony Martial was one of them, who has since left. The fact that Mourinho said there is one more sitting there. That can only be one and that is Rashford.”

MORE ON MAN UTD FROM F365:
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👉 Ruben Amorim ‘rinsed’ Bruno Fernandes as Man Utd urged to sack off eight
👉 Man Utd staff ‘can’t wait to leave every day’ as ‘poisonous’ mood sweeps the club

And now, ahead of Amorim’s arrival at the club on November 11, Football Insider claim that Man Utd are ‘now plotting’ Rashford’s sale in the January transfer window.

It is understood that Man Utd are ‘considering selling’ Rashford ‘amid concerns about his recent performances’ and Amorim ‘will assess the winger’s level before making a decision, but he will need to see a significant improvement for the player to stay’.

The report adds:

‘Having come through the academy set-up, his connection to the club has earned him leeway, but his declining performances in recent seasons have caused concerns among the hierarchy, led by the new Ineos regime.

‘Amorim will be given a chance to get the best out of the winger following his appointment in a last-gasp assessment of his true level.

‘Should Rashford prove unable to display his best form under new management, there is a growing feeling that he will be moved on in what would be seen as a drastic move by many observers and supporters.’

Van Nistelrooy’s big night

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Presenting 10 iconic images of Ruud during his outing as interim head coach.

Help Garnacho win Goal of the Month

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Thursday 31 October 2024 13:00

Alejandro Garnacho’s volley against Brentford has been nominated for the Premier League’s October Goal of the Month award.

The Argentina international evaded the attention of a couple of Bees defenders at the far post to coolly sidefoot home Marcus Rashford’s cross, during our 2-1 victory over Thomas Frank’s side earlier this month.

Garna’s goal came at a key time for the Reds, who were trailing at the break through Ethan Pinnock’s header.

But our no.17’s sidefooted strike arrived just 90 seconds into the second half and sparked a fightback, with Rasmus Hojlund’s similarly delightful dink later securing all three points in what would turn out to be Erik ten Hag’s final Old Trafford game at the helm.

Here’s another chance to watch Garnacho’s brilliant goal against Brentford.

Alejandro, who made his 100th United appearance at West Ham on Sunday, is bidding to claim this award for the second time in his short career.

He came out on top in November 2023, following his remarkable overhead kick at Everton – the same goal later claimed the league’s official Goal of the Season gong.

Garnacho’s goal is one of eight in the running, with Facundo Buonanotte, Ryan Christie, Jeremy Doku, Josko Gvardiol, Nicolas Jackson, Andreas Pereira and Bukayo Saka completing the shortlist.

You can vote for Alejandro now, via the Premier League’s official website.

Be quick – the polls close on Monday 4 November, with the winner being announced next Friday (8 November).

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A tribute to the trailblazing Dennis Walker

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Old Trafford.

Thursday 31 October 2024 12:00

Dennis Walker’s contribution as a pioneer at Manchester United will never be forgotten.

It is little wonder the Manchester United Academy youngsters have been taught the story of the club’s first black player, with Dennis making his debut in May 1963.

Nearly 60 years on, his feat in pulling on the red shirt is far more poignant and heroic than it seemed as the curtain came down on the 1962/63 season. The 18-year-old youth graduate made his bow standing in for Bobby Charlton in the final Division One game, a 3-2 defeat at mid-table Nottingham Forest that meant Matt’s Busby’s developing side ultimately steered clear of relegation by just three points.

Five days later, United lifted the FA Cup, beating Leicester City 3-1 at Wembley, but Walker wasn’t involved. In fact, he didn’t feature again and, a season later, was transferred to York City, where he netted 10 goals in his first eight outings. Walker’s Reds career was over as soon as it had begun, but his trailblazing role had been indelibly scorched on the club’s history.

Dennis featured, along with his youth-team colleagues, on the front page of the programme in 1961.

Sadly, Dennis passed away in 2003, aged just 58. But Paddy Crerand, who played alongside Walker that afternoon at the City Ground, is always keen to shine a light on his one-time team-mate. “I remember Dennis very well,” Crerand recalled in an interview for Inside United magazine a few years ago. “He was a lovely lad and a good player. That he was black didn’t make any difference whatsoever to me, it really didn’t. I don’t remember us talking in the squad about him being the first black player for United, but it was a big issue in English football because, sadly, black players did get abused at matches. Dennis was such a nice guy and I remember when he died a few years ago; I saw his family at Old Trafford, where his ashes were scattered.”

Today, Walker should be viewed as a pioneer whose courage inspired future generations of black players, breaking down barriers in the not-always beautiful game. But in truth, his name isn’t well known. In fact, many believe the first black United player was Tony Whelan, a bustling striker who spent four seasons at Old Trafford without making a first-team appearance. And Whelan, who has maintained a long connection with the club through his work with the Academy, is desperate to correct this common misconception.

“A lot of people think it was me,” Whelan explains. “I feel embarrassed because it’s not right for the Walker family, who should be very proud. People don’t know his name, which staggers me in light of how high-profile race issues are now. His legacy is tremendous.”  

“Ultimately, Walker’s one appearance created an immense legacy and paved the way for future generations of black Manchester United players, who have done him proud. His is a remarkable tale and his name deserves to be remembered for as long as football is played at Old Trafford.” 

Formerly captain of Cheshire Schoolboys, Walker signed apprentice forms with United before becoming professional in November, 1961. Although used as a striker, he eventually settled into a left half-back role at York City, before moving to Cambridge United. He retired after racking up 211 games in league football, scoring 23 times.  

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Old Trafford.

Thursday 31 October 2024 12:00

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Lopetegui sack nears as Arsenal, Palmer slammed but Bournemouth and Liverpool outcast hailed

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Bournemouth, Joe Gomez and Nottingham Forest’s assistant are praised. But Arsenal and Julen Lopetegui are in trouble and Cole Palmer must improve.

Bournemouth
“I think we need to improve, I think, from the games we played against these top three,” said Andoni Iraola in September, since when Bournemouth have lost 3-0 to Liverpool while having 19 shots at Anfield, before beating Arsenal and Manchester City in successive home games within a fortnight.

A draw against Aston Villa in between those memorable Dean Court displays only reinforces Bournemouth’s position as a legitimate and established top-half force. They are among the toughest opponents to face in the Premier League and that is remarkable.

This is incredible, scalable, achievable progress. Bournemouth have done nothing particularly ground-breaking beyond making brave decisions and capitalising on where it puts them each time. It is a while since the Be Careful What You Wish For warnings; comparisons with Gary O’Neil and Wolves feel hilariously irrelevant and outdated not 18 months since that controversial switch was made.

They have recruited consistently wisely, operated on a sensible and sustainable budget, quietly identified areas which can be improved and found a wonderful coach suited to the existing squad and willing to work with and develop players rather than insisting his own must be bought first.

Bournemouth conquered the reigning champions and their best players on the day were signed from Dynamo Kyiv, Feyenoord, AZ Alkmaar, Celtic and Bristol City, brought together by a manager from Rayo Vallecano who inherited eight of that starting XI. It is no coincidence that Iraola’s last season in La Liga featured home wins over Barcelona and Real Madrid.

“When you beat Real Madrid, it’s kind of similar,” he said after vanquishing Manchester City. “You know you have to be at your best level and wait for them to not have their best day.”

That almost does a disservice to Iraola and his players; they brought out the worst in Manchester City as much as they did the best in themselves.

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Rui Pedro Silva
One of the biggest compliments Arsenal defector Edu’s future employers can be afforded is that Nuno Espirito Santo’s touchline absence has barely been noticed. The banned manager has watched from a distance as Nottingham Forest have won three Premier League games in a row for the first time since the final matches of their most recent relegation season in 1998/99.

It was earlier in that campaign when Forest last finished a Premier League weekend in the top four back when it wasn’t really a thing. There will be no such slide this time around, even if it is accepted that this cloud is unlikely to carry through until May.

But there is no real reason it shouldn’t. This is neither unsustainable form nor unrepeatable performances. While this Chris Wood scoring streak might end soon, other players are chipping in frequently and that wonderful defensive record isn’t nearly as prone to volatility.

Forest first and foremost have formed unshakable bonds across their squad, the sort which can absorb the loss of a manager or even their phlegm-afflicted owner. It is to assistant coach Rui Pedro Silva’s credit that he has led this team as capably as Nuno down to the details of frequent bookings.

Newcastle
Eddie Howe said it had “been a long time coming” after some “very difficult” weeks, that his players “wanted more” and “weren’t happy with what we had” despite earning a first Premier League victory in two months.

This wait was not quite as long as in 2022/23, when a six-game winless streak was halted by a 4-1 victory over Fulham which triggered a 17-game unbeaten run and ultimately carried them to Champions League qualification. But the sight of a team remembering what makes them so powerful was eerily similar.

So too was that Willock-Guimaraes-Longstaff midfield. Central to the blueprint which turned things around in their best season together, Howe reverting to that triptych with Sandro Tonali continuing his struggle for minutes might make for a curious situation but the manager has his trusted lieutenants for good reason.

When it backfires it is infuriating to see Howe lean on them. When it works, Newcastle are not among the absolute best sides in the country but they are the most effective.

And with Newcastle more than any other team, it feels like these seasonal journeys of rediscovery are becoming an increasingly painful and necessary part of the process. The Magpies have endured long fallow periods in each of Howe’s campaigns, which shake the belief as to whether he is the right man to lead them into the next phase of their plan. It sometimes seems like they’ll never emerge but once they inevitably do they are stronger and more unified.

Joe Gomez
If this summer felt like the end of Gomez and Liverpool’s complicated love affair then his start to the season only reinforced it: across the first nine Premier League and three Champions League games he was given barely over half an hour to make his mark, having capably occupied a bench throughout the European Championship.

His services were certainly being offered elsewhere, be that in delicate part-exchange deals constructed with a panicking Newcastle, or with Chelsea hovering ominously in the background.

But Gomez knuckled down and waited patiently for the sort of opening which only an injury to a teammate can really provide. As difficult as it is coming into a game in those circumstances – not least when losing – he is a professional with a role to play.

Any of those Liverpool subs can be pinpointed for praise, even those brought on late to consolidate the lead. But Arne Slot was right to focus on Gomez and how that performance said “a lot about his mentality and his quality”.

Liverpool’s longest-serving player remains one of their most reliable. When he does finally score, the reaction will be biblical.

Aaron Ramsdale
Even in the details of Ramsdale’s last two career clean sheets, the reality of his situation was hidden as Arsenal’s distant second-choice to ineligible loanee David Raya; both of them came against Brentford.

This was different, a proper contribution from a keeper trusted by his club to deliver when called upon. Ramsdale has had his confidence knocked from painful pillar to public post over the past year or so and that can only have an adverse effect.

Russell Martin described Southampton as “lucky” to have Ramsdale, and himself as “surprised” they managed to sign him. Just on a base level, that must feel incredible for a player whose self-assurance can only have suffered of late, even before factoring in displays which measurably help his team again.

Pape Matar Sarr
No player has won possession in the midfield third more times in a single game this season than Sarr did against Aston Villa. It was how the third goal was created, how Spurs turned the tide against Unai Emery’s side and West Ham, and how the foundations for their League Cup victory over Manchester City were established.

Ange Postecoglou neatly summed up the strengths of a 22-year-old who only continues to flourish under his guidance: “His capacity again to work for the team but also the quality he has in breaking open oppositions with his running with the ball.”

Those are crucial characteristics helping form part of very possibly the most rounded midfield department the Premier League can currently offer.

Boubakary Soumare
The touch from Jamie Vardy was sublime and the finish produced by the Premier League’s surprise clutch player matched it. But without the work of Soumare in charging back to win the ball, carrying it, shrugging off one challenge and then offloading to the forwards to trigger the match-saving move, it wouldn’t have been possible.

Those 19 minutes were the most Soumare has been afforded in a league game for Leicester since May 2023. The influence he exerted in that cameo – and the drop-off in Wilfred Ndidi’s form – adds weight to the growing calls for him to be given more of opportunities.

Brighton
Losing consecutive games to Liverpool by a single goal is disheartening but certainly not disastrous. With Ferdi Kadioglu’s goal they have had 10 different scorers in the league this season – at least two more than any other team and halfway to the overall record. Get them shared out, Welbz.

Manuel Ugarte
No Manchester United player has ever committed more fouls in a single Premier League game. On only his second start, that is some going.

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Premier League losers

Arsenal
Before this season and since he signed permanently, Martin Odegaard had missed 11 games for Arsenal. The solutions conjured by Mikel Arteta ranged from Emile Smith Rowe to Granit Xhaka, Fabio Vieira and Kai Havertz.

In 2024/25 alone, Odegaard has now been sidelined for a dozen consecutive matches. And while the brilliance of Bukayo Saka could initially mask that loss, the captain’s absence and what that represents for this team was always likely to become too big a problem to resolve with makeshift fixes.

Arsenal have been without Odegaard for their last two trips to St James’ Park. It doesn’t feel like a coincidence that they lost both games 1-0 but he scored in their previous visit: a 2-0 away win in which they matched the physicality of their hosts without sacrificing their technical strengths: compare that May 2023 midfield of Xhaka, Jorginho and Odegaard with Zinchenko inverting to Saturday afternoon’s, when Rice and Merino were supplemented by Partey and Timber stepping out.

The balance was all wrong; the concept of creativity was abandoned, or at least that entire responsibility was placed on Saka’s shoulders. It is why fans have been calling for Ethan Nwaneri to be trusted as the player most capable of replicating Odegaard’s ability on the ball and energy off it.

Arteta played to try and nullify Newcastle’s strengths rather than accentuating Arsenal’s. It was weak management which culminated in one of the least recognisable Gunners performances in recent memory.

READ: Arteta and his ‘Mourinho-lite’ pragmatism are costing Arsenal

Manchester City
That had been in the post, and for some time. While the suggestion was that Manchester City’s early lead of the Premier League table was a foreboding sign from a team which tends to stutter at the start before finishing seasons strongly, more than a few cracks were visible and waiting to be exploited by a side brave enough to try.

Manchester City have not won in the Premier League by more than a single goal since August. They have lost consecutive games for the first time in over a year. Only the smallest of violins can provide a backdrop to complaints about injuries sustained by a deliberately small squad, with that crisis helping distract from how it has been assembled sub-optimally with regards to the future.

But the reality is that much like Arsenal with Odegaard, Manchester City are yet to establish a consistently reliable alternative plan without Rodri. The positive results had concealed a series of disjointed, hesitant performances and Guardiola didn’t seem surprised at how it all unravelled under the weight of Bournemouth’s “intensity”.

Julen Lopetegui
The second-favourite in the Premier League sack race, having beaten only the first winner and the managers in third and fourth so far. Sean Dyche will avoid such woke nonsense as dressing up as the grim reaper but a home game against Everton just before the aching void of another international break feels particularly precarious for West Ham and Lopetegui’s relationship.

The first-half stoppage-time sending-off of Edson Alvarez does offer a caveat but when a manager deems it necessary to make multiple half-time substitutions four times in 10 games it is a damning indictment on whatever the initial plan was supposed to resemble.

Two against Nottingham Forest. Three against Manchester United. Two against Brentford. Two against Fulham. These are wholesale alterations being made, often aimlessly, to fix an irrevocably broken system and approach.

And those multiple half-time substitutions have all involved different players being taken off each time: Summerville, Rodriguez, Soler, Paqueta, Mavropanos, Kudus, Emerson, Soucek and Antonio. That is astonishing mismanagement and only compounding West Ham’s problems.

In 2023/24, David Moyes made the fewest substitutions of any manager who lasted the entire season, and brought them on at the latest time on average. Only four coaches have used more subs than Lopetegui in 2024/25 and the number of times he has felt compelled to change things so early is worrying.

West Ham supporters will be offered humble pie for forcing Moyes out but they need not indulge. There is no point in reminding them to be careful what they wish for when none of them wished for more of the same, only much worse and on an even less explicable scale.

Cole Palmer
It is more a reflection of Palmer’s rapid progress than any actual shortcoming in his game but the narrative is set: this 22-year-old in only his second proper full season as a Premier League player goes missing on the big occasions.

The idea is rather undermined by a) his goals in actual cup finals for Manchester City, b) his actual goal for actual England in the actual Euro 2024 final and c) the actual hat-trick he scored against Manchester United last season. But these things stick and it does show the next necessary steps.

It is true that in 13 games for Chelsea against Arsenal, Liverpool, both Manchester clubs and Spurs, he has scored two non-penalty goals and provided one assist. It is also true that trying to appease anyone on social media is a fool’s errand. But if there are any gaps on this burgeoning CV then Palmer’s brilliance is such that he has to do his utmost to change that.

READ NEXT16 Conclusions on Manchester United 1-1 Chelsea: Garnacho, Caicedo, pathetic Martinez and more

Ipswich
It is funny to see Ipswich supporters starting to parrot the recent Gary O’Neil line about how Premier League officials might “subconsciously” favour “the big guy” over “the little guy”, as if that wasn’t the Wolves manager talking after a game against Manchester City and something not in any way applicable to a home draw against the protected elite of *checks notes* Leicester.

Kieran McKenna veered into that sort of territory even when saying he didn’t want to complain about “the smallest team not getting things”. Adding later that “I didn’t think we got anything today in the game in general” suggested he didn’t mind playing up to that crowd at the slightest push.

It took more than that from Abdul Fatawu to barrel Conor Chaplin over in the area, granted. And perhaps there was an element of frustration which boiled over into Kalvin Phillips being sent off seconds later. The game swung on those moments and there is an alternate timeline on which Ipswich scored a penalty to go 2-0 up with 11 men.

But they didn’t and their responsibility is to channel that anger into what they can control. Tim Robinson didn’t miss those chances to establish a firmer cushion, nor those opportunities to stifle that last Leicester attack. He and his colleagues do provide easier targets to avoid proper introspection but if Ipswich prefer to foster a persecution complex than that is their prerogative.

Aston Villa
It is a privileged position Villa find themselves in, that Champions League perfection is able to provide respite from domestic struggles which have them down in lowly sixth.

The Carabao Cup exit was disappointing, particularly in light of defeat in a meeting with Spurs which was clearly prioritised.

But one possible read is that Morgan Rogers is even more crucial to this team than first thought. Ipswich equalised eight minutes after he was taken off in that 2-2 draw, while Villa were drawing with Spurs when he was substituted, only to be losing six minutes later.

He scored in both games and the dynamic between him and Ollie Watkins is certainly more fruitful than that between Villa’s two main character strikers currently, even with Jhon Duran’s record off the bench.

Eddie Nketiah
No player has had more shots without scoring this season. That honour has gone to Ryan Christie and Cheick Doucoure in the last two seasons, neither of whom a) are strikers or b) cost £30m.

Jarrad Branthwaite
While his return from injury is an undeniable factor, it feels beyond negligent for Everton to have a £70m asset on the bench with a manager only prepared to bring him on at 1-0 down in the final minutes so Michael Keane can be freed to go up front in search of an equaliser.

Gary O’Neil
One win against a current Premier League team in 20 games. The Crystal Palace draw does at least bring Wolves level on points with Burnley in a Premier League table since the beginning of March. Spot the problem there.

READ NEXTGary O’Neil displays hint of deep-thinking genius for Wolves rarely seen since MNF reveal

Ruud praises Dalot’s mentality

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Thursday 31 October 2024 09:59

Ruud van Nistelrooy was impressed by the mentality that Diogo Dalot demonstrated in our 5-2 win over Leicester City.

After Casemiro’s 25 yard rocket opened the scoring for the Reds, Dalot went tearing down the right fifteen minutes later and delivered a lovely cross into Alejandro Garnacho, who slammed the ball in to the back of the net.

Casemiro scored again before the half was out, with Bruno Fernandes also netting a brace on the night as United put in an encouraging display.

Speaking after the game, the interim boss said: “Diogo is a very important member of the team. He is one of the leaders and is always training professionally. 

“He is always there to help the team and I was delighted.”

Van Nistelrooy also praised how the Portuguese international bounced back from last weekend’s defeat to West Ham in the Premier League.

The Reds’ No.20 had missed an opportunity to put us ahead in the first half of the contest at the London Stadium, having done well to break in behind the Hammers’ defence.

“His mentality is very strong,” Van Nistelrooy added.

“He was in a bad moment after the miss [against West Ham], but the day, after, in training, he was preparing and doing everything possible.

“It pays off in the end. A great assist and a good performance. I’m delighted to have him around.”

 Although Leicester found the back of the net twice, United were ruthless, with Dalot playing his part in a backline that were untroubled for much of the night’s proceedings.

His and the Reds’ reward for our progression in the competition is a last-eight tie away to Tottenham Hotspur in December.

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Thursday 31 October 2024 09:59

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How Ruud reacted to a big night at Old Trafford

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How Ruud reacted to a big night at Old Trafford

ManUtd.com reporter Adam Marshall at Old Trafford.

Wednesday 30 October 2024 23:43

Ruud van Nistelrooy admitted football can be a cruel game sometimes after Manchester United enjoyed some luck in front of goal to comfortably see off Leicester City in the Carabao Cup fourth round.

The Reds won 5-2 as Casemiro and Bruno Fernandes both bagged doubles and Alejandro Garnacho also found the net.

It was an enjoyable occasion at Old Trafford and van Nistelrooy clearly relished a night to remember but admitted clearer chances were created, and missed, during the latter part of Erik ten Hag’s reign.

Speaking to the official broadcasters, here are some of his comments…

SUPERB SUPPORT

“In the days leading up to this, it was with mixed feelings. Of course, I was sad to see Erik [ten Hag] go. He was the one that got me here. It was sad to see him leave but he’s leaving the club with two trophies and can have his head held high. Of course, matchday comes and 75,000 fans are here and they support the team. They supported me in an unbelievable way.”

UNITED WILL NEVER STOP

“As coaching staff, we prepared the players and I have to say they were fantastic today. Credit to the team, they pulled off a great performance today, after difficult moments. On the day it got announced, it was difficult for them and every one of us. Of course, when you have the manager is going, for us, as staff as well, so to react and play like this, it was a great achievement of the players. We promised to fight for the 75,000 fans and the millions at home watching and supporting United. For them, we wanted to show up, show this club is building and continuing to fight and never stop. That’s what it is about.”

BRUNO BREAKS SEASON DUCK IN STYLE

“You know, with his qualities, we knew he just needed some luck to get the goals going and then they will come with many. I’m delighted for him. He’s leading the team through many, many difficult phases and he’s fantastic to have around.”

A CRUEL GAME

“I have to say the chances we created against Fenerbahce and West Ham, also I remember at Crystal Palace, we created so many bigger, better chances than today. We had the luck with the post and the deflection. Sometimes, it’s what you need. It makes football a cruel game sometimes. As I said, we created much better and bigger chances in past games than today so, hopefully, the luck has turned today and we can build on this victory.”

ENJOYING THE GOALS

“We scored some great goals. The first one was an absolute beauty from Casemiro. I just enjoyed the moment, as it was in the top corner, and an amazing goal. He’s an amazing person and player and it’s fantastic to have him around. Garnacho’s was a very good finish, from Diogo Dalot’s cross. I think the crowd goes home after a nice night of football.”

THE FUTURE?

“I came here as an assistant, to help the club, and now in this role, I’m helping as long as I’m needed. In the future, in any capacity, I am here to help the club further, to build towards the future. There are so many people around me who want the best for the club and that will never change. I think it’s important to focus on Sunday, and the league game against Chelsea. What the future holds, let’s wait on that.”

HUGE savings on trainingwear at the United Store! 

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ManUtd.com reporter Adam Marshall at Old Trafford.

Wednesday 30 October 2024 23:43

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