“Our greatest glory is not in never failing, but in rising up every time we fail.” ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson
For the first time in recent history, Manchester
United is failing on the pitch.
United has seen its share of obstacles over the
years. But this season it appears everything that could go wrong, is going
wrong for the defending Premier League champions.
A managerial change, the Wayne Rooney transfer
saga, a complete failure by the club during the summer transfer window,
injuries to key personnel, an aging roster, underperforming players, and a
complete reversal of fortunes on the
the pitch (officiating decisions/lucky bounce of
the ball) have all combined to put Manchester United in the position they are
currently in…seventh place in the Premier League; 14 points behind league
leading Arsenal and (depending on Monday’s result) they could be six or seven
points out of the final Champions League spot.
If the season were to end today, it’s safe to say
that it would be considered a failure.
But the season doesn’t end today. In fact, a win
in their next match against Sunderland on
Wednesday would send Manchester United into the League Cup final at Wembley
Stadium.
Following that contest, Manchester United plays
five consecutive Premier League contests against: Cardiff City (H), Stoke City
(A), Fulham (H), Arsenal (A) and Crystal Palace (A).
The BPL is the most competitive it has been in
years, but four of those matches are very winnable for Manchester United; the
most difficult of the pack would of course be against the league leaders at the
Emirates (a team United beat earlier this year).
So over a span of five BPL matches, United play
one team who are above them on the Premier League table.
During that same five game stretch, fourth place Liverpool play: Everton (H) and Arsenal (A). Fifth place
Everton play: Liverpool (A), Tottenham (A) and Chelsea (A). While sixth place
Tottenham play: Manchester City (H), Everton (H) and Newcastle (A).
Points will always be dropped over the course of
a season. But it seems January and February is going to be quite demanding for
teams competing for the Premier League’s final Champions League spot.
United fans shouldn’t kid themselves; the club
has a ton of work to do between now and the end of the Premier League season.
But the team has shown signs of life.
Manchester United has slowly seen their depleted
squad returning to 100% health.
Michael Carrick and Darren Fletcher returned to
the lineup a few weeks ago, as well as right-back Rafael. Phil Jones and Ashley
Young were back in the lineup against Chelsea
and Manchester United was on the attack for much of the first half at Stamford Bridge (despite missing Wayne Rooney and
Robin Van Persie).
Only a slip up by Jones and a deflection off of
Carrick’s leg led to Chelsea ’s
first goal. Until that point, United had surprised the television pundits with
their dominance of the London
club.
In his post-match press conference, Jose Mourinho
confessed that Chelsea
were “lucky” and “did not deserve” to be up 2-0 at halftime.
But that’s just how it is in football sometimes.
What can be said, despite the media firestorm
following the match, is that the 3-1 score line flattered Chelsea . United dominate possession on the
road (56%-44%) and were a threat going forward without their best two attacking
players.
The Red Devils lacked a cutting edge in the final
third and a solid performance from their back four (who have statistically
performed better than last year’s squad). United’s defense was unlocked by two
set pieces: one just before the halftime whistle and the other shortly after
the start of the second half.
But Rooney and Van Persie are nearing full
fitness while summer signing Marouane Fellaini should be back in training soon.
>Despite all of the negativity surrounding
Fellaini’s signing (and the club’s management can take the blame for United’s
transfer window failings), the midfielder has not spent a great deal of time on
the pitch with Manchester United since his move from Everton (11 appearances,
four in the league). He suffered an injury to his wrist very early on and
attempted to play through it. But the Belgian international eventually had to
have surgery. Fellaini should be back on the pitch in mid-to-late February.
Television pundits have stated that Fellaini is
‘not a Manchester United player’. But to make that determination after the
player spent the entire off-season with Everton and played a limited amount of
games with United while battling an injury which eventually needed surgery, is
overly critical and foolish.
It can also be said that Manchester United is a
completely different side with Wayne Rooney in the lineup.
After his falling out with Sir Alex Ferguson last
season, the 28-year-old forward has taken his game to another level while
proving to his critics that he still is a world class talent.
Rooney is a player with enormous technical
quality, a powerful finisher and an exceptional passer. Furthermore he is
physically strong and possesses a tremendous desire to win. His absence from
the starting eleven has been the catalyst for United’s recent poor
performances.
But once Robin Van Persie is finally partnered
with Rooney up front, Manchester United will be ready to make a serious run
over the final stretch of the season; which also includes a Champions League
tie against Olympiacos in March.
With Rooney and Van Persie in the lineup,
Manchester United are undefeated in seven games this season (5W, 2D, 0L) and
the two combined for 38 goals last year while literally dragging the club over
the finish line to a Premier League title.
There’s no doubt Manchester United has failed for
much of this season. But to their credit they haven’t made excuses.
The squad has slowly been returning to full
strength and has been galvanized by recent events.
Darren Fletcher addressed the media circus surrounding
the club: “It is as if some people have been waiting for it to happen and are
really relishing it. We’ve got to use that as fuel to prove them wrong. We have
got some great, talented young players in this squad. We have to keep
reiterating to them that they believe in themselves. They will come through it
without a shadow of a doubt and will be better and stronger for it.”
While Antonio Valencia added this: “The squad is
prepared for the pressure and I think we are heading for a big period of success.”
“You may encounter many defeats, but you must not
be defeated. In fact, it may be necessary to encounter the defeats, so you can
know who you are, what you can rise from, how you can still come out of it.” ~
Maya Angelou
2013/2014 EPL SEASON
reference: worldsoccertalk
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