- ROB DRAPER AT THE LONDON STADIUM: If these are the last months of Jose Mourinho in English football, they will have been atypical. Of course, the conflict and the preening, the displays for TV cameras at training and the staged outrage of press conferences are all par for the course. That was Mourinho’s default from the moment he arrived at Chelsea and swept us all away. But the football? That’s a wholly different matter. HIs teams were never like this; supine, incoherent and timid
West Ham 3-1 Manchester United: Marko Arnautovic and Felipe Anderson strike to seal three points and pile more misery on Jose Mourinho as Paul Pogba struggles to shine in heavy loss at London Stadium
- Felipe Anderson produced a clever finish from close to score his first West Ham goal and give them the lead
- West Ham doubled their lead before the break after Andriy Yarmolenko's shot deflected in off Victor Lindelof
- Marcus Rashford halved the deficit with a deft flick from a corner to give the visitors a glimmer of hope
- West Ham killed the game minutes later after Marko Arnautovic sprung the offside trap to go clear and score
If these are the last months of Jose Mourinho in English football, they will have been atypical.
Of
course, the conflict and the preening, the displays for TV cameras at
training and the staged outrage of press conferences are all par for the
course. That was Mourinho's default from the moment he arrived at
Chelsea and swept us all away.
But the
football? That's a wholly different matter. HIs teams were never like
this; supine, incoherent and timid. That awful period at Chelsea in 2015
was like this; his players a shadow of the team that had won the
title.
Marko Arnautovic scored the third to put the game beyond doubt just minutes after Manchester United had halved the deficit
Marcus Rashford's had briefly given the visitors some hope after his deft flick from a corner crept inside the near post
Felipe Anderson opened the scoring early on after a clever flicked effort beat David de Gea and nestled in the corner
Andriy Yarmolenko was fastest to the second ball from the corner and doubled after his effort took a fortuitous deflection
Yarmolenko's shot flicked off Victor Lindelof's thigh and looped into the net leaving a helpless de Gea no chance in goal
But generally, like him or loathe
him, you know a Mourinho team comes with added fight; with a fierce
intelligence; a basic competitiveness.
For
56 minutes, United showed none of the above. And forget the Paul Pogba
show, underwhelming though he was and withdrawn on 70 minutes. This ran
far deeper than an Instagram feud between two global brands.
The
manner of the performance was once unthinkable in a Jose Mourinho team.
The fact that a struggling West Ham team could induce him to field a
back three, which at times played more like a back five, given the
possession they conceded, would have been unimaginable at his peak.
When
he first arrived in England, his tactical switches were innovative and
usually they came off and so were inspiring. Now they just seem
bizarre.
Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho takes his place in the dugout ahead of kick-off at the London Stadium
Manchester United chief executive Ed Woodward takes his seat for the game amid unsettled relationship with boss Mourinho
Andriy Yarmolenko tries to take the ball forward and shield it as Paul Pogba applies pressure on the West Ham forward
West Ham defender Issa Diop times his sliding challenge to perfection to stop Romelu Lukaku from advancing up the pitch
Mark Noble stretches out his leg to block Nemanja Matic's pass and regain possession in the middle of the park
Playing
a back three was one thing: employing Chris Smalling as the central
pivot and Scott McTominay as the right-sided central defender simply
looked as though he was again making the point that the board hadn't
provided him with the requisite defenders in the summer.
Victor
Lindelof only lasted until 56 minutes, hooked for Marcus Rashford as
Mourinho eventually reverted to 4-3-3. Phil Jones, after his penalty
misses in midweek, didn't make the bench.
Neither
did Alexis Sanchez. It would be hard to argue with that on the basis of
his performances, And yet: this was West Ham, not Bayern Munich.
In
the opening ten minutes, United barely ventured out of their half.
Within six minutes they were 1-0 down. Mark Noble was the best central
midfielder on display but he is not a man for the modern game: not only
does he lack an emoji, his social media interactions are minimal.
Lukaku tries to turn the ball goalwards after making some space in the box but can't connect with the cross properly
Mourinho berates the referee from the touchline after he awarded a free-kick to West Ham near the halfway line for a push
Yarmolenko leaps for joy after his curled effort deflected in to give West Ham a two-goal advantage before the interval
United midfielder Pogba uses his body to fend off Noble and Fabian Balbuena as he tries to protect possession of the ball
Diop does well to regain ground on Ashley Young and block the United defender's cross to deflect it out for a corner
Frustration begins to creep in as Mourinho holds his arms out aloft from the touchline early on in the second half
Pogba throws his arms about in exasperation after having to buy a free-kick due to the lack of movement in front of him
He
did play a superb ball through to Pablo Zabaleta and the Argentinian,
inspired by his old Mancunian foes, raced onto it and crossed for Felipe
Anderson, who had drifted into space to score easily from a few yards
out. Zabaleta might have had a foot offside; yet McTominay was deeper
than his colleague and it was a mightily close call which required VAR.
There
was no real response from United. They looked a team constrained by
their innate caution. Romelu Lukaku did head against the post in 21
minutes after good work from McTominay and Young. But that was a rare
foray.
West Ham had the upper hand;
they were the team attempting to play on the front foot. As such, they
got a little lucky on 42 minutes; though, that is often the case when
you press your cause constantly. Anderson's corner was met mis-headed by
Issa Diop and picked up by Yarmalenko. He sized up his options, tried a
chipped shot and saw it rebound off Victor Lindelof and loop over David
de Gea.
If ever a moment summed up
what United are becoming it was a corner on 56 minutes. In front of
their travelling support, Ashley Young sized up the striker. A brief
frisson of hopes was almost tangible. Until Young, attempting to play a
cut back ball to the edge of the box, succeeded in finding only Noble,
who gleefully pounced and counter attacked. It was woeful stuff.
It
was of course a coincidence that the moment Paul Pogba left the pitch,
Manchester Unietd scored. He alone could not be blamed for the
performance. Equally, he had done nothing to ameliorate it.
West Ham goalkeeper Lukasz Fabianski gets down well to his right to deny Marouane Fellaini's close-ranged header
Pogba and Mourinho shake hands after the United boss hauls off the midfielder in the 70th minute of the match
Arnautovic seals the victory by slotting past the United goalkeeper de Gea just minutes after the visitors had scored
Mourinho looks furious and wags his finger in the air towards the bench as the West Ham players celebrate their third goal
A dejected Rashford makes his way over to applaud the travelling supporters after the final whistle at the London Stadium
So,
after this week of contention and conflict, it seemed poetic that just
as he trudged off the pitch on 70 minutes to be replaced by Fred,
United's afternoon brightened a little. A corner immediately followed
from Luke Shaw and Marcus Rashford met it with an impudent back heel,
which beat Fabianski and suggested that a comeback was imminent.
For
United had been much better since the 56th minute switch to 4-3-3. With
Rashford tying up Masuaku, Young had repeatedly got in to cross, and
Fellaini always lurked, ready to punish any lapse.
But
United had left themselves too much to do. They couldn't afford further
mistakes yet their listlessness tends to invite them. So it was on 74
minutes, they were authors of their downfall. De Gea tried to play long,
but United immediately gave the ball away to Mark Noble. No-one pressed
him so he threaded a ball through for Marko Arnautovic who simply ran
through a static back line and finished cooly.
He
celebrated by holding up the shirt of Carlos Sanchez, who damaged
ligaments in midweek and faces months out. A few yards away from the
celebratory melee stood Mourinho. He seemed lost, a man cut adrift and
without the answers to the ever pressing questions.
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