World Cup Roundup – Goals Galore!

FIFA is still terrible. Qatar is still terrible. This tournament should not be happening in a place with social laws that would be antiquated even 100 years ago. The pitch invader at the Portugal match today carrying a rainbow flag and championing women’s rights has more integrity in his pinky toe than every member of FIFA combined.

That being said, we finally got some high-scoring matches today, and it’s about bloody time! There have been far too many 0-0 draws at this tournament, but today we had 14 goals scored across 4 matches!

Portugal vs. Uruguay

This was the big headline matchup of the day, and while the score line was a decisive 2-0 to the Portuguese, it was a very tense match throughout. It was goal-less at halftime with Portugal dominating possession, but Uruguay midfielder Rodrigo Bentancur came closest when his long run with the ball was snuffed out by Portuguese keeper Diogo Costa just before Betancur could shoot. The Uruguayans were also defending well, and they kept the opposition out for the first 45 minutes.

Portugal went ahead however on 54 minutes when a high-arcing cross from midfielder Bruno Fernandes nestled into the bottom corner of keeper Sergio Rochet’s net. Striker Cristiano Ronaldo was running onto the cross and leapt into the air to try and get a touch on it, and while he clearly missed the ball it fooled Rochet enough as to where he didn’t run out to collect the cross. Without Ronaldo’s run and leap I think Rochet makes the save, but Ronaldo did not get a touch on the ball in spite of animatedly claiming that he did. Bruno’s goal, but it doesn’t go in without Ronaldo leaping for it.

The Uruguayans responded by bringing on additional attacking threats, and striker Maxi Gomez was unlucky to hit the post from just outside as the box as the South Americans pushed for an equalizer. Costa was beaten, and maybe an inch to the left sees this match levelled. But the majority of Uruguay’s attacking threats were nullified repeatedly throughout this match. Much like the Portuguese in the first half, they simply couldn’t create that one clear chance they needed. Every shot was blocked, and every final pass was cleared by the resilient Pepe at center back and the rest of Portugal’s back line.

They got their second via the penalty spot, although for me it was never a penalty for hand ball in a million years. The Uruguayan defender was sliding across the ground to make a challenge on Bruno, and when Bruno passed it away it the defender’s hand while his hand was on the ground and trailing slightly behind him. 100% accidental for me, but that’s not the rule anymore. The referee adjudged the defender’s hand to be in an “unnatural position” (whatever that means) and the penalty stood. Bruno stepped up to the spot and sent Rochet the wrong way for 2-0. Bruno now has 2 goals and 2 assists in this tournament and is really showing how valuable he is to this team.

Credit to Portugal for defending well today, but I am disappointed with the Uruguayans, particularly up front. This is a squad that boasts the likes of Darwin Nunez, Luis Suarez, and Edinson Cavani. All of those strikers are world-class or world-class adjacent, and as a result I expected a lot more from them in terms of goal-scoring not only today but in their previous match as well. They sit bottom of Group H on 1 point, and will need to beat an impressive Ghana side outright to progress.

Congrats to Portugal on securing advancement to the Round of 16. They’ve done just enough in both matches to earn 3 points, with Bruno being the star of the show so far. A draw against South Korea in the final guarantees first place in the group.

Brazil vs. Switzerland

This was the only match with a single goal scored today, and it was by the Brazilians who held on to win 1-0. While they were the better side for most of this match, the Swiss definitely had their chances to get a surprise goal. Their build-up play via counter-attacks was very good, but they couldn’t find the key vital pass.

The Brazilians thought they went ahead early on in the second half via winger Vinicius Jr., who’s finessed shot found the far right corner past keeper Yann Sommer. VAR checked the goal and it was determined that Vinicius was marginally – and a very thin one at that – offside when the ball was played to him. It was close, but that’s often how these matches go at this level.

Brazil finally did their goal on 83 minutes, and it was from an unlikely source. Some neat build-up play on the left wing saw the ball played to midfielder Casemiro in the penalty area, and he struck a sublime curling effort into the far corner of Sommer’s goal. The finish was similar to that of Vinicius earlier, but this time there was no question of offside. A great goal from a man described by teammate and superstar striker Neymar as “the best midfielder in the world.” A lofty title, but given that he has an argument to be titled as such, I am very happy that Casemiro plays for Manchester United!

Brazil also secured progression to the second round today, joining France and Portugal. They need only a draw against Cameroon to win the group. Switzerland are also in good position to progress, but they will need to beat Serbia in their final Group G match to guarantee a place in the Round of 16.

Cameroon vs. Serbia

Goal-fest! This thriller of a match ended 3-3, with the Cameroonians fighting back from 3-1 down in the second half to keep themselves alive at this tournament. Had they lost, they would have been eliminated. They showed real heart and team spirit today.

Cameroon took the lead on 29 minutes after a cross from a corner was bundled home by center back Jean-Charles Castelletto. Nothing fancy about it, but a goal nonetheless. Cameroon were pegged back in first half stoppage time however when a Serbian free kick was re-directed home via the head of center back Strahinja Pavlovic. Cameroon where then stunned again just 2 minutes later when they lost the ball in their own third, and midfielder Sergej Milinkovic-Savic finding space to power a low shot home from just outside the edge of the penalty area. Cameroon went from winning the match to facing a World Cup exit in the span of about 120 seconds!

To compound their misery, Serbia got their 3rd on 53 minutes from striker Aleksandr Mitrovic, who had been in scintillating form the whole game. He is probably Serbia’s best player in terms of talent, and a player like him needs to be on the score sheet. It was a simple finish from just inside the 6 yard box, and the Cameroon defense was nowhere to be seen. Poor marking, but a professional finish from Mitrovic nonetheless.

The match continued to provide twists though, as just 10 minutes later the Cameroonians got one back from substitute striker Vincent Aboubakar, who beat the offside trap before chipping a finish over Serbian keeper Vanja Milinkovic-Savic. Initially, the goal was ruled out for offside, but a VAR check determined that Aboubakar was onside when he received the ball. Fine margins, but the goal stood.

Cameroon smelled blood in the water and kept pushing for the equalizer, and it was a scant three minutes later that they got it. Aboubakar did well to again beat the offside trap which gave the Cameroonians a man over in attack, and he then simply crossed the ball in from the right along the ground. Forward Eric Choupa-Moting was up alongside him to slot home with Vanja completely taken out of the play. It was a fantastic turnaround for the Indomitable Lions from west Africa!

Serbia were the more dangerous team in the final 25 minutes, with Mitrovic going close several times. His positioning and runs into the box were causing them all kinds of problems, but he could not find a winning goal for his side. The points were shared on the day when the final whistle blew.

Both teams are still alive in this tournament, but they are on the outside looking in. Cameroon face the tough task of having to beat Brazil to progress, while Serbia need a win over Switzerland to guarantee any kind of progression. The Swiss only need a draw though, so it could be tough for Serbia to break them down. Mitrovic will need to have another day like today for them to go through.

South Korea vs. Ghana

This was another thriller with five total goals scored, and the Ghanaians won 3-2 at the final whistle.

The Koreans were the better side for the opening 20 minutes or so, but Black Stars center back Mohammad Salisu got things underway on 29 minutes when he bungled home after a mad scramble in the box resulting from a free kick. The Koreans simply didn’t clear their lines, and letting the ball bounce around in the box like they did is very dangerous. The second goal on 34 minutes was much better in terms of quality, with forward Jordan Ayew whipping a delicious aerial pass into the box that found the head of midfielder Mohammad Kudus. Kudus was facing away from goal when he made contact, but showed excellent awareness to head the ball up and over Korean keeper Kim Seung-gyu. Midfielder Thomas Partey was then unlucky to not get a third after he made contact with the ball at close range from a corner, but somehow the ball inexplicably went over the bar from barely a yard out!

The Koreans came out strong again in the opening part of the second half, and this time they capitalized on their possession and chances. Striker Cho Gue-sung pulled one back for his nation with a close range header on 58 minutes, although Ghana keeper Lawrence Ati-Zigi probably should have kept it out as the shot was low and very close to him. Still though, at 2-1, the Koreans had life. They got their equalizer just three minutes later, and again it was Cho on scene to drive home a powerful diving header. Crosses from the left had been Ghana’s weakness all match, and that trend continued with this goal. The marking in the box was fairly good from Ghana, but Cho just wanted the ball more. He outjumped his marker and absolutely buried the header. It was 2-2 and with barely an hour gone, both sides knew there was plenty of time to find a winner.

Ghana struck back just seven minutes later, and it was well-worked goal finished off by Kudus. A low cross from the left was fired into South Korea’s penalty area, and the ball was deftly left to run by a Ghanaian attacker directly into the path of Kudus. His marker was too far away from him, and he re-directed the ball back across Kim Seung-Gyu’s goal and into the opposite corner. The shot was somewhat close to the keeper, but he couldn’t get down to the ground in time to stop it.

South Korea then dominated the final 20 minutes or so in desperate search of an equalizer, but a combination of last-ditch defending, poor finishing, and poor final balls kept the Koreans frustrated. After what seemed like an eternity of stoppage time for Ghana, the whistle blew and they were winners.

Ghana now find themselves second in Group H, which means they are in a good position to progress to the next round. Portugal have already claimed the other spot, which means that South Korea must now beat those same Portuguese to progress from this group. They are third with 1 point, tied with Uruguay but ahead on goal differential. Ghana need a win over a desperate Uruguay side to guarantee progression, but they could also progress with a draw and a South Korean loss.

The second round of group matches is now complete! Congratulations to Portugal, France, and Brazil for already securing qualification. Commiserations to Qatar and Canada for already being eliminated.

Ralf Rangnick’s First Match in Charge Ends In Victory

Manchester United continued their Premier League season today against London-based side Crystal Palace at Old Trafford. New manager Ralf Rangnick was in the dugout/on the touchline for this one, having had his required paperwork sorted out.

He lined United up in a familiar-looking 4-2-3-1, with Scott McTominay and Fred in defensive midfield. The specific players used were fairly expected as well, bar the presence of Diogo Dalot at right back and Jadon Sancho starting on the right wing ahead of Mason Greenwood. But despite using a lot of the same players the previous manager was using, it was clear from the first 20 minutes or so of play that there was a clear plan for how Rangnick wanted them to play. When in possession he wanted us to get the ball wide and incorporate the fullbacks, the aforementioned Dalot and left-back Alex Telles. The fullbacks were to provide crosses into the box towards striker Cristiano Ronaldo and let him work his magic. It seems the players were also encouraged to shoot more from distance, since I saw a lot more of that than we usually do. Bruno Fernandes was denied by Palace keeper Vicente Guaita from distance on 25 minutes, Ronaldo forced Guiata into another save with a fairly tame effort a few minutes later, and Dalot was unlucky to see his shot flash over the bar just before half time after some fine dribbling and combination play in the right channel.

Despite it being 0-0 at halftime, I was impressed with how United was controlling the game. It’s true that Palace were defending well and doing enough to keep us from scoring, but they had offered absolutely nothing going forward. Our tackling and winning back of possession was consistently excellent, and the only vague chance Palace had was a shot from distance by Ghanaian striker Jordan Ayew that went wide. For the first time in a long time, United looked solid at the back. Also for the first time in a long time, there seemed to be a coherent plan for pressing.

After the resumption of play it was United creating the opportunities yet again. Ronaldo came close to connecting on a header on 50 minutes only to be foiled by a punch clear from Guaita. Telles was also denied by Guiata on 67 minutes after his free kick was touched onto the cross bar and away by the Palace keeper.

Palace had their best chance of the match however on 74 minutes, and it was lucky for United that they did not capitalize on it. United failed to clear a cross from a corner and it was knocked back across the face of goal by Palace defender James Tomkins. The ball fell directly to Ayew in space, but he lashed a shot the other way across the face of goal and wide left. Ayew really should have done better as the United defenders were nowhere near him and keeper David De Gea was wrong-footed. Ayew has been in poor form as a striker recently and perhaps his lack of confidence did not help him in that situation.

But it was United who broke the deadlock on 77 minutes via an unlikely source – the diminutive and enigmatic Brazilian, Fred. Dalot was on the right wing and he played a crisp diagonal pass along the ground to Greenwood (on as a sub) in the box. Greenwood tried to dribble around his defender but was walled off, so he laid-off a pass sort of diagonally and behind him into the path of Fred. Fred had flashed down towards the edge of the box when he saw space open up. He hit the ball from about 20 yards out using a sweeping motion with his right foot first-time, and it floated beautifully with curve into the far corner of the net. It was a truly sumptuous strike, although completely unexpected from him. He is a tackler and winner of the ball. He starts the attack usually, he does not finish them. Still, no matter the source, it was a wonderful finish and Fred should take pride in how well he played today overall. He, Old Trafford, and even Rangnick himself could not contain their celebrations. It was a deserved goal given United’s dominance in the match.

There was truthfully not much further action after that, as United focused on keeping the ball and ensuring that Palace did not have a chance to score. Credit to the 36 year-old Ronaldo for sprinting back after 95 minutes of play to help defend a throw-in. Aside from that noteworthy moment, the match had slowed down immensely and Palace looked to be out of ideas. It ended 1-0 with Fred’s goal being the winner.

This was a very professional match from United. We were getting the ball forward to try and create chances, and the press was coordinated when we needed to win the ball back. It’s clear that Rangnick’s system will take some getting used to and the players can’t be expected to execute it perfectly on the first try, but there was a lot to be happy about with this match. It’s always a big plus to get a clean sheet, and this one was especially needed given United’s penchant for leaking goals this season. The clean sheet came as a result of United controlling the match almost from start to finish. We made a midtable team look like a midtable team, which is something that we have struggled to do all season. Aside from the odd set piece, Palace created nothing in attack and never really looked like scoring.

Fred was Man of the Match, not only for his goal but also for his pressing and breaking up of play in the middle of the park. He is an industrious player that always seems to play well for Brazil but is inconsistent for United. But I think Rangnick will figure out how to get the best out of him. Fred is our best presser of the ball, and Rangnick eventually will have system of pressing implemented where he will feature heavily. Very special performances from Dalot and Telles as well. It is important that those two are in good form, because it lets Aaron Wan-Bissaka and Luke Shaw know that their respective starting spots in the squad are not guaranteed. Sometimes there is nothing better for a group of players on a team than some friendly internal competition for places. One final shoutout to center back Victor Lindelof for yet-another solid defensive performance, with several key clearances and tackles made.

I think things will only improve from here. The final match of the Champions League group stage is next Wednesday, with United taking on BSC Young Boys at Old Trafford. United have already won their group however so I expect a lot of squad rotation from Rangnick during this fixture-congested part of the season. It is vital to keep the best players fresh and free of risk of injury.

Glory glory Man United!

United Grind Out a Win

The Red Devils traveled to South London today to take on Crystal Palace at a now-customarily empty Selhurst Park. With only three matches to go in the Premier League, points are at a premium and the race for the top-4 is incredibly close. Chelsea beat Norwich yesterday and Leicester City defeated Sheffield United earlier in the day, so Manchester United needed a victory to maintain control of their own destiny with top-4 qualification.

Crystal Palace are an interesting side, and it was difficult to predict just how motivated they would be to play. They are safe from relegation, but they are also nowhere near qualification for Europe. With little to play for, you figure they would either be utterly disinterested or because we have something to play for they would come out and treat the match like its a cup final and try to play spoiler. United manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer made some changes to his starting XI for the first time in five matches, opting to bring in Scott McTominay for Nemanja Matic and the surprising addition of Timothy Fosu-Mensah at left back, in for the injured Luke Shaw and Brandon Williams. Fosu-Mensah hadn’t played as a starter in the Prem for over a year, and I had temporarily forgotten he even played for us!

United once again got off to a slow start, and it was Palace doing all the early running. Our midfielders and defenders were harassed when on the ball and David De Gea was called into action very early on to make a strong save from Palace striker and shithouser extraordinaire Jordan Ayew. Ayew was by far my least favorite player by the end of the match for his general shit-stirring demeanor, but it was a good shot from him nonetheless and United were put on notice that Palace was going to try and beat us. De Gea was forced to make several important saves in the first half.

United weren’t really clicking in the attacking third, as our best opportunities were coming from a few near misses on headers from Harry Maguire on set pieces. To their credit, Palace kept up the pressure. Winger/forward Wilfried Zaha ran into the box on a break with the ball and went down under a challenge from United center-back Victor Lindelof. There was contact between them, but replays showed Lindelof got contact with the ball first and Zaha went down after the ball was cleared away. The referee waived off the penalty shouts by Zaha and his teammates, and interestingly I don’t believe VAR was used to check for a penalty.

That bit of fortune swung the game a little bit, and United opened the scoring just before half time. I love goals just before half time because they are demoralizing to the other team when they’ve been playing well. It sucks to keep a team like United out for 45+ minutes, only to concede just before going into the locker room. A 0-0 at halftime is much, much better than 1-0 down. McTominay played the ball into Bruno Fernandes about 25 yards from goal, who played a quick 1-2 with Anthony Martial. Martial hit it back to Bruno as he ran forward into the penalty area. Marcus Rashford had made a diagonal run across his marker and Bruno played a pass to him. Rashford knocked the ball into the space on his left, then stopped on a dime. The defender marking him fell down, and Rashford slid the ball along the ground into the net with the keeper beaten as well. Excellent buildup in passing, excellent run and finish by Rashford. Credit to Martial for making a dummy run into the box as well to create additional space for Rashford.

As we say in America, he broke his ankles!

A one goal lead is not enough in the Premier League though. You never feel comfortable up by only one. United were very lucky to not be back on level pegging 10 minutes into the second half when a scuffed shot by Zaha was turned in to the United goal by Ayew. VAR checked for offside and after a lengthy review it was found that Ayew was maybe an inch or two ahead of Aaron Wan-Bissaka when the ball was hit by Zaha. Palace probably felt they got the short end of the stick on the referee decisions today, and in the pre-VAR days their goal likely would have stood. Still though, United got the short end of the stick last week against Southampton so it was our turn for a bit of luck it seems.

Palace kept plugging away but encountered stiff resistance from the United defense and De Gea himself. Palace midfielder Luka Milivojevic struck a sweet free kick from the left channel that De Gea did very well to save. World-class level really, and just as valuable as a goal. De Gea had a real return to form today after some questionable performances of late. United goalkeeping legend Peter Schmeichel, who is now a pundit, pointed out that De Gea is a goalkeeper who does his best when he has a lot to do. If he is routinely and consistently making saves throughout the match, he tends to play well. It’s when he is largely untested that he is the most error-prone. I would tend to agree with that. De Gea is world class for this club when he is required to be, which in the past few years was quite frequently due to an inconsistent defense and lack of possession in midfield. The challenge for De Gea will be consistency going forward because the team is generally playing better now. This is the business end of the season and we need him to be in his best form.

United were able to work another slick passing move that ended in the vital second goal. in the 78th minute. They had been knocking on the door previous to that, with Bruno unlucky to not have scored when he hit the left post after great work by Martial in the box. For the goal, Bruno and Martial were at it again. Bruno brought the ball forward in the left channel and played an excellent pass to Rashford through the legs of a defender. Rashford one-touched it to Martial who had made a diagonal run across his defender. He took a touch his right foot and then curled it into the goal. Another very well-worked goal that was well-deserved for Martial. Whatever OGS said to him recently it seems to have worked, as he is in the best form his career by far. He and Rashford are now level on goals with 22 apiece this season. I think bringing on Matic for McTominay was key to improving our midfield shape and really solidifying our possession, which eventually led to the goal.

Celebrations were soured a bit though as there was a particularly nasty shoulder injury to Palace right back Patrick Van Aanholt on the tail end of the goal when he fell over the body of Martial. Treatment took several minutes and really killed momentum in the game for each side. Zaha got another half chance when he chased down a long ball in the 90th minute, but his shot was well saved by De Gea at a tight angle. After an agonizingly long 11 minutes of stoppage time in which United had the most possession and chances, the ref blew the whistle and United were home and dry with 3 points and clean sheet.

You can’t really ask for more than that in an away match towards the end of the season. Sure it was scrappy and a bit disjointed, but we won and that’s really all that matters. Can’t say enough about the form of Bruno, Rashford, and Martial in particular. As I stated, Martial is in the form of his life and his really doing it all. He always was a goalscorer but he has added passing, vision, and hold-up play to his repertoire as well. What a striker he is and OGS/his staff must be credited with his improvement. Rashford is having his breakout season and also assisted Martial’s goal. Bruno dramatically improved from the last match and looked to be back to his usual self.

Today also illustrated that we need another defensive midfielder when the transfer window re-opens. It’s very clear that Matic is our best defensive mid, and anyone deputizing for him is doing just that – deputizing. No insult to McTominay of course, but he appears to be more of a box-to-box midfielder instead of a purely defensive one. He can play the position in a pinch, but he’s better alongside Pogba or Bruno than he is playing behind them. A good DM is key to unlocking the full potential of the two mids in front him, but Matic is 31 and not capable of playing every game. A younger and more athletic natural DM is needed if we want to have any chance at competing in the Champions League next season.

Speaking of, only 2 games left now. United face relegation-battlers West Ham at Old Trafford next week, then the final game away to Leicester City which will decide the top-4. United are level with Leicester on points but are in 5th on the goal differential tiebreaker (-3). Leicester play Tottenham next and I am hoping former United manager Jose Mourinho will do us a favor and ensure that Leicester drop points. No matter what though, United will still be in striking distance of the top-4 on the last day. If we win our last two games, we are in.

Next match is against Chelsea at Wembley Stadium for the FA Cup semifinal. I hope that OGS prioritizes the Prem over this tournament with his squad selection, because even though its an important tournament its nowhere near as important as qualifying for the Champions League. I’d like to see some rotation where the younger lads get a run out, maybe with 1-2 of the established stars in support. I won’t be devastated if we lose out on the FA Cup if it means we go into Europe next year.

Glory Glory Man United!

We Lost to Crystal Effing Palace

Utter disappointment with this one. Took me a few days to calm down afterwards, hence the blog being a day or two behind. I really needed to collect my thoughts because what I saw from Manchester United on Saturday is incredibly worrying.

United lost their 3rd match of the season 2-1 to London-based club Crystal Palace at Old Trafford. It was the first time in history that Palace have beaten United at Old Trafford, and United really have no one to blame but themselves for this result. Now, I do have some criticisms of course and they are numerous, but now that its been a few days I’ve had some time to think about it and gain perspective on what it all means.

The first 30 minutes or so of the match were all United, who dominated possession and created 2-3 decent chances in front of the goal. Marcus Rashford took two free kicks that caused some nervous moments and Welsh winger Daniel James had a shot blocked off the line in that time. Although we hadn’t scored, you felt a goal was coming. It was Palace though who struck first though completely against the run of the play. Ghanian winger Jeffrey Schlupp won a header over Victor Lindelof in a forward position that was knocked into the path of Schlupp’s countryman Jordan Ayew, who was clean through on goal. Harry Maguire couldn’t get over in time to close him down, and Ayew swept home past David De Gea to shock the United supporters inside the stadium and put Palace in the lead. It was the first real mistake made by United’s center-backs this season. Lindelof was far too easily beaten to the long ball played over the top, and Maguire was incredibly out of position up the pitch and unable to cover Lindelof. They will need to improve their communication on the pitch to prevent this sort of thing from happening again. I don’t mind Maguire going forward to help in attack because he can be valuable going forward, but he is a defender first and foremost. He must ensure that when he goes forward he either 1) gets back quickly enough to cover, or 2) have someone cover him if he can’t get back. Lindelof simply just has to be more aggressive on his defensive headers! It was a bad mistake on his part and he must do better.

Lindelof had a bit of a shocker of a first half because Palace almost got a second a few minutes after that when Ivorian winger (and former United player) Wilfried Zaha got a shot on target that was saved by De Gea.  Palace were all of a sudden dominating. United managed to alleviate the pressure until half time though, thanks to Paul Pogba taking a bit of time on his free kick. This free kick was the beginning of a lot of controversy though from an officiating perspective.

Referee Paul Tierney made a series of decisions that were very questionable in this match, and even worse there was VAR controversy as well. For the above-mentionedfree kick Anthony Martial was fouled just outside the box when he appeared to be through on goal, and while a foul was awarded by Tierney and the offending player was given a yellow, it likely should have a been a red. The Palace defender was the last man back for them and Martial had a shooting chance. By rule, it should have been a red and Palace should have been down to 10 men.

More egregiously, a in the early part of the 2nd half Martial knocked the ball around Palace defender Martin Kelly who very CLEARLY pulled on Martial’s shoulder and dragged him back. Martial got a shot away but it was well wide due to him being dragged to the ground by Kelly. Tierney said no penalty, and to make matters worse, VAR confirmed the decision! VAR does normally allow the ref to fix his error, but this time it completely failed to rectify this obvious mistake. United should have had a penalty in the 55th minute.

Bizarrely however, I’m not sure it would have made a difference if it was awarded, because United are apparently jinxed at the penalty spot this season. Scott McTominay ran into the box on a pass and was tripped on the way through by a Palace defender in the 68th minute, and this time United were indeed awarded a penalty. Correct decision, stonewall penalty as he was clearly tripped. (So was the first penalty, but I digress…)

I was relieved to see that Pogba had been relieved of penalty duties and that they have been given to Rashford. He’s been smashing pens lately and he struck his shot with power and confidence. Unfortunately, the ball hit just to the wrong side of the post and went wide after flashing across the face of goal. He was a tad unlucky, but it a miss is still a miss and United were still down 1-0. I have no idea what to do to fix this problem now. Martial’s turn maybe? Have everyone make 10 penalties at the end of training before they can go home? We’ve got to break this curse as we are leaving points on the table because of it. We would have at least 7 points by now if we could make penalties, possibly even all 9. It’s inexcusable and it must be corrected by Ole Gunnar Solskjaer and his staff.

Disgustingly, Rashford was racially abused online after missing the pen. I have addressed this issue before and the solution remains the same: you won’t fix racism in football unless you fix racism in society. I don’t want to focus on it too much this blog, because I don’t want to give the trolls any more attention than the media already gives them. Special recognition to Pogba however for taking to social media himself and denouncing the racists with a message of positivity and endurance in the face of hatred.

United were eventually rewarded for their persistence in possession in the 88th minute when James finally got United’s equalizer. Pogba lost possession but did well to win it back, after which he played a slick pass along the ground into Martial. Martial played a nice 1-2 with Rashford on the edge of the area, and after he got it back Martial played it in to James who was lurking off to the left. After shifting the ball onto his right foot he finessed a shot into the top right corner from about 15 yards and United were level. Good movement and good passing to set up the goal. Also good to see the youngster get his 2nd goal in 3 games, which will be good for his confidence.

The rapturous joy felt by the fans after the equalizer was short-lived, however. Pogba was on the ball in midfield when he lost possession, and the Palace attacking players ran forward instinctively. Dutch left back Patrick Van Aanholt brought the ball up the pitch before playing it ahead to Zaha, who then delicately passed the ball back to Van Aanholt. He took a touch or two in the box and unleashed a shot towards the near post, which squeezed past De Gea for the Crystal Palace winner. Everyone in red was stunned. I was in utter shock myself. We had all the momentum going and they just came right back at us. The defense didn’t close down on Zaha or Van Aanholt at all, and De Gea really should have done better with the save. A world-class keeper should never be beaten at his near post from such a tight angle. De Gea was inconsistent last season and it is worrying to see the same mental mistakes persisting this season.

These defensive lapses that resulted in the two goals simply cannot happen. Defense was the one aspect of the team that we actually did manage to strengthen in the summer, and while they looked very good against Chelsea and solid against Wolves, they were dreadful in this match. The Premier League is so loaded with talent that you cannot afford to switch off for even one second, as you will probably be punished if you do. It’s true that Palace have been in good form in the Prem going back into last season, but that’s no excuse for this loss.

It seems we struggle against teams who allow us to have possession. It seems kind of counter-intuitive, but other teams know that aside from Pogba we lack creativity in midfield. If teams sit compact and defend well, we have issues breaking them down and creating clear chances. No one aside from Pogba seems willing or able to play in a dangerous pass. I said it at the close of the transfer window and I’ll say it again, we need another play-maker in the middle of the pitch.

Conversely, when teams press us and trying to keep us from having the ball, that’s when we are deadliest. Rashford, Martial, and Jesse Lingard are all excellent at making deep runs forward that Pogba can quarterback passes to from 30-40 yards. All the forwards also combine well in attack and when teams are stretched at the back we can make them pay. This is why Chelsea struggled against us and Wolves struggled against us for 45-60 minutes. It seems this club is tactically still a one-trick pony and other teams know how to beat us.

When we make mental mistakes on defense and can’t break other teams down, that’s a recipe for losing a lot of matches. I expect the defense will improve as things progress, but United were shown to be toothless in attack for large portions of this match. To exacerbate matters, left back Luke Shaw went off injured and now faces several weeks on the sidelines. Ashley Young will deputize in his absence. I love Young and everything he’s done for this club, but due to his age he’s not a Premier League-caliber player anymore. He did well enough in this match as neither of the goals were really his fault, but against the top-6 sides he’s going to get roasted. I am concerned about the direction we are headed in if things do not improve.

It is true that the refereeing was atrocious in this match, but that doesn’t take away from the fact that we only scored one goal and Palace got two clean ones. We were denied opportunities on our own for sure, but the loss cannot be blamed on the ref 100%. This team needs to improve tactically and mentally if it wants to challenge for the top-4 this season. People need to remember as well that OGS still needs time to continue building the team. Our problems were not going to be fixed by one transfer window, no matter who was at the helm. We are a project still, not a finished product.

Next match away to Southampton on Saturday, early morning America time. I expect improvement but I am worried about what will happen.