This was one of the strangest games in my watching of United ever. I've been watching United when possible for as long as I can remember, probably 25 years or so of actually being old enough to know what's going on. It's such an odd feeling to think we played really well, or at least a much more attractive style of football since the Sir Alex days and come away with one of our heaviest home defeats. I think we lost two home games 0-3 when Moyes was in charge, but this is the biggest defeat I can remember us taking at home without having a player sent off (and not counting the disaster that was David Moyes).
The game itself is strange because I think if we played it another nine times, we wouldn't lose again, and we'd probably win about seven of them. That first half was like Gary said in the studio, the fastest we've played for quite some time. It wasn't just a higher tempo either, it was everything. Everything but the goals we probably deserved. Maybe if Lukaku is 10 games into the season we take a 2- or 3-0 lead in at the break and it's a comfortable home win. However, our defensive woes hurt us again as once we let the first goal in, we crumbled slightly, again missing a big chance to get back into it. However, I think there are quite a few positives (as well as some negatives) to take from it:
Pros:
- Luke Shaw was excellent and had been pretty good in the first two games as well. Assuming he avoids injury, not signing a Left Back like most of us wanted could be the right call. This is the best he's played since the ankle break so long may it continue! Even more telling was when Luke was the first player Jose went to speak to at the end of the game. I'm sure his words were something along the line of "You deserved better than this, you played really well".
- Valencia, Smalling, Herrera, Matic, and Lingard all looked very good in what was pretty much their first competitive minutes of the season. Just getting all of them on the pitch for so long is good. Hopefully, they can do the same against Burnley and build fitness over the International Break before kicking on for the rest of the campaign. Smalling was particularly good and should start every game at CB - we need to build a partnership with him for the rest of the season.
- We played a great first half for sure and at 0-2 down we looked OK at least. It's easy to play when you're losing, so we can't look into that too much, but if we can play more like the first half a lot, then I'm sure we will win a lot of football matches this season. I'm actually a bit more optimistic than I thought I'd be after that defeat.
Cons:
- Defensive issues again, mostly Phil Jones this time. We played much more offensively and pressed more than usual this time, so some of the defensive issues can be combatted with that. If you attack more and press high, you're going to be more susceptible at the back. However, Phil Jones was lucky to not give away a penalty, lost Kane for the opening goal, was out of position for the second goal and then to top it off got injured. Again. I think his time here is done, it was a miserable return to the side for him. He's injured too much and isn't good enough when he's fit. I thought Valencia, Smalling, and Shaw were all very good, bar Smalling getting done at the end by a very good Lucas Moura on the day for their third goal (when let's be honest, it was already over anyway).
- Poor finishing. On another day we probably score more than two goals in the first half alone. Fact is we did not and it has cost us dearly. Lukaku needs to get his shooting boots on quickly or we're not going very far this season. Slight benefit of the doubt as it's early season and he's been thrust into a starting role after a long World Cup and no pre-season with the team. However, if he's not up to speed after the Burnley game then we're in trouble.
- Lack of fitness. Again, I believe if this game came late September or October time, we'd have not lost. It isn't an excuse, just an unfortunate turn of events. Half of our starting XI and a couple of subs had a lack of playing time and most of them due to injury. The former mostly all put in an excellent first 45 minutes and worked hard (bar Jones). Come the second half and conceding the first goal, the tiredness clearly crept in with some players. This can only be fixed with playing more, so we just have to crack on.
I don't think we deserved to lose 0-3, but you don't always get what you deserve in football. I don't think we should be worrying too much just yet, but if we don't beat Burnley then we could be in for a tough season for sure. The problem could be that all of Man City, Liverpool, Spurs, and Chelsea could and probably should very well be on 13-15/15 points come mid-September. We play Burnley and Watford away which sound like tough old games for us. If we don't win at least one of them we could easily be 8-10 points behind all of our main rivals after just five games which would indeed be worrying to say the least. Are we 10 points better than those teams over 33 games? I'm not so sure...