Saturday, October 5, 2024

Man United dream defence with Erik ten Hag transfers

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There was a point during the 4-3 FA Cup quarter-final win over Liverpool in March that Manchester United had just one centre-back on the pitch. Jurgen Klopp fielded three throughout.

It got to the stage that Antony was effectively playing at full-back. Harry Maguire had been left alone with Diogo Dalot on one side and a lot of space on the other.




In hindsight this defence, even in the brief period it was deployed for out of sheer desperation, possibly wasn’t even the worst that Erik ten Hag put out onto the pitch. Was the group of players who conceded three on that day really more incompetent and rag-tag than the selection including Aaron Wan-Bissaka at left-back and Casemiro centrally during the 4-0 defeat to Crystal Palace six weeks later?

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Ten Hag was rightly criticised for the lack of structure around and in front of the defence, especially after Andre Onana was often left facing 20 or more shots at his goal on a weekly basis, but the coach did have a point. His options had been decimated by injury throughout, and having serious success with an XI including multiple players out of position or not in the plans 12 months ago doesn’t help.

The extent to which Ten Hag was responsible for these issues is now a moot point. The United hierarchy, headed by Sir Jim Ratcliffe, his Ineos minority ownership investment group, and the fresh model in place, reached a decision one way or another, to keep the head coach in charge.

Now the plan is to give him better tools to work with. The exit of Raphael Varane on June 30 marked the beginning of the transition but is almost certain not to be the end. United have already set their stall out in the summer transfer market to make defensive changes.

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