Had Manchester United's convincing 3-1 defeat at Watford occurred
under Louis van Gaal last season, it would have been cast as a
watershed, a moment that proved once and for all the need for change and
restructuring.
Sunday's lame defeat was as bad as anything that has gone before and
if Jose Mourinho's appointment as United manager signified a rebuild,
surely that process must be accelerated now.
Watford's victory on Sunday was their first over United for 30 years
and only the third time Mourinho has lost three consecutive games as a
manager. On their own, statistics do not always mean much -- but when
the negative figures rack up together it tends to suggest something is
amiss and the overriding sense is that Mourinho may never have faced a
challenge like this.
Not that you would know it from his comments in the postmatch news
conference -- at least without a little reading between the lines.
"Individually, collectively, we have to improve, and that's my job,"
he said, but not before pointing out who else was to blame. Chief among
his frustrations was the Miguel Britos challenge on Anthony Martial that
led to Watford's first goal ("You don't ask me about that if you think
nothing happened," he said, claiming a foul) and, just as there had been
after last weekend's 2-1 defeat to Manchester City, there was a
specific focus on individuals' failure to implement his game plan.
Mourinho provided a detailed breakdown of Watford's second --
effectively decisive -- goal, describing it as "a mistake that goes
against our plan and our training," later explaining specifically that
his left-back, Luke Shaw, should have pressed higher up on Nordin
Amrabat in the buildup.
"It's tactical, but also a mental attitude," he said.
Mourinho, who also repeated his assertion of eight days ago that some
of his players do not handle pressure situations well, appears well
attuned to the fact that something fundamental needs to change in
United's mentality -- but that is far from the whole story.
The natural question, upon hearing Mourinho so willingly pick apart
an error like Shaw's, is why he does not address the more glaringly
obvious. It does not take a frame-by-frame replay to understand that
United, just as last season, are painfully sluggish going forwards and
lack the most basic fluidity. There are no partnerships across the
pitch, no real relationships being formed, and there seems little
prospect of that being remedied until difficult decisions are taken.
Wayne Rooney sometimes seems an easy target but can rarely have been
less effective in a United shirt than here. One second half cross,
delivered straight into the stands under no pressure, was quickly
glossed over by Marcus Rashford's equaliser to make it 1-1. By the end,
though, Rooney's frustrated figure was very much to the fore, lashing
wildly over from 30 yards and receiving a booking for a rash challenge
after Camilo Zuniga's goal made it 2-1. There is never any shortage of
effort from Rooney; the things that lack, these days, are speed,
invention and confidence. Too many moves broke down at his feet and the
sense, increasingly, is of a player needing to be put out of his misery.
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