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United seek more joy on the road Posted: 04 Apr 2014 02:22 AM PDT
The fact United travel to the North East with all the focus on Wednesday’s return leg in Munich is extremely surprising, given the general – and justified – doom and gloom that surrounded the club ahead of Tuesday’s 1-1 draw. The trip to Bavaria is firmly in the minds of players and fans alike, particularly considering that United have nothing left to play for in the Premier League, as it’s been to the case for the last month or so.
With Spurs conspiring to push us into the Europa League, a win tomorrow could see United momentarily leapfrog Tottenham in sixth place, as they do not play until Monday night when they host Sunderland. Regardless of all the PR talk that will be trot out by the club and its employees if United do qualify for the Europa League, the Champions League’s poor sister remains a competition nobody wants to be involved with, unless you’re Newcastle or a team managed by Rafa Benitez, of course. With that and Wednesday in mind, expect David Moyes – who, miraculously, has enjoyed a rather positive week – to ring some changes to the team. Patrice Evra could replace Alex Buttner, who has very much played himself into contention for a starting spot at the Allianz Arena, while Rafael is likely to come in for Rio Ferdinand, with Phil Jones moving alongside Nemanja Vidic. The human bog brush was yet again hopelessly out of his depth on Tuesday and we can only hope Fellaini is given the nod tomorrow, mainly as it’d limit his chances of embarrassing himself on Wednesday night, while TClevz23 might return to the starting line-up. Cleverley once scored at St. James’ Park and managed to look like a good midfielder that day, which is more than can be said about any other ground he’s played on during his career so far. Ashley Young and Juan Mata are likely to come into the team, while Adnan Januzaj could enjoy the opening stages of the game from the bench for the fourth consecutive match. Adnan’s last start came against Liverpool and while it’s too soon to be ringing alarm bells, we can only hope that Moyes doesn’t treat him the way he handled Ross Barkely at Everton (ie: start him for a while, make everybody aware of how good a player he is and then bench him for the rest of the season). Wayne Rooney will again be up-front on his own and expect the self-proclaimed best fans in the world to remind him of Bastian Schweinsteiger’s red card every time he touches the ball tomorrow. Newcastle’s season has gone from being unexpectedly good to utter mediocrity and they’ve now failed to score in 10 of their last 14 games – a situation not helped by an injury to their talismanic striker Loic Remy – and have lost four of their last six games at home, which doesn’t bode well for them ahead of tomorrow, given United have the best away record in the Premier League. It’s hard to get excited about tomorrow but a positive result would at least avenge the defeat earlier this season – Newcastle’s first win at Old Trafford in 41 years – and build some confidence ahead of Wednesday. Probable starting XI: |
Moyes succeeds where others have failed Posted: 03 Apr 2014 12:41 PM PDT
That the Red Devils produced such a result against the odds attributes a lot to their counter-attacking game-plan. The approach drew criticism from many experts and fans alike, who claim that United's rudimentary and direct style flew in the face of the maverick qualities instilled in the club by Sir Alex Ferguson. However, the recently retired Scot used the same rearguard action in big European games himself. Despite boasting soon to be World Player of the Year Cristiano Ronaldo in their ranks, the focus of United's 2008 Champions League semi-final triumph over Barcelona was stopping Lionel Messi and maximising their limited opportunities to counter-punch. The knockout blow was duly delivered by Paul Scholes, Old Trafford erupted, before the trophy was secured in Moscow. That similar organisation and tactical discipline was sorely lacking was a major factor as Tuesday's adversary Pep Guardiola later twice led the Catalans to the trophy with the Big Ears at the expense of United, within the space of three years.
Last season, en route to an unprecedented treble, Bayern thrashed the Barcelona side Guardiola built 7-0 over two legs; the world's best team in terms of retaining ball possession, led by Lionel Messi were outplayed comprehensively. Borussia Dortmund's Jurgen Klopp features on most fans' shortlists of replacements for David Moyes, but his side's high intensity pressing game was unsuccessful against FC Hollywood's 2014 vintage – BVB succumbed to a 3-0 home defeat in the sides' November meeting. Manuel Pellegrini's Manchester City outfit have irrefutably had a better campaign than their neighbours, but even they were comprehensively beaten when Bayern came to town. An Arjen Robben-inspired 3-1 victory made a mockery of the Citizens' reputation as the country's great entertainers. The limited options available to Moyes make this result even more impressive. It is likely that, with a full complement of players to choose from, the Scot would have selected the more mobile Phil Jones and Jonny Evans at centre-half, flanked by Rafael and Patrice Evra. A combination of injuries and Evra's suspension meant that Jones had to re-locate to right-back, with the aging Vidic and Ferdinand joining the erratic Alexander Buttner in the back-line. Consequently, United were forced to concede a great deal of ground in the midfield area, where Bayern are so strong, as they sought not to leave their centre-backs exposed the pace of Franck Ribery and Arjen Robben. Not only that, but Brazilian right-back Rafinha was allowed to maraud forward, linking with Robben to over-load Buttner, but this was with good reason.
Not only is a defence-based strategy more risky than many people realise – one defensive slip-up and it's very hard to recover, especially in a tie governed by the "Away Goals" rule – but the decision to give his side two central outlets outlined Moyes commitment to attacking where possible. He identified Rafinha as Bayern's weakest link and was quite prepared to let him have the ball, especially when shorn of a crossing target for the game's first hour. In truth, he may have been too brave; a 1-0 advantage and the introduction of Mario Mandzukic as Bayern's attacking spearhead probably rendered Welbeck's aggressive positioning too risky, as evidenced by the roles of both Rafinha and the Croatian striker in Bastian Schweinstiger's cruical equaliser. Moyes combined pragmatism with endeavour – he knew his team would be defending for long periods (when Bayern are so good at keeping the ball, what else can you do?) but also hatched a plan – something sorely lacking too often this season – to hurt Bayern when in possession. Had Welbeck found a corner with a low and hard shot five minutes before half-time, the approach would have seen United travel to Germany with a slender lead.
Bayern Munich will be without Martinez and linchpin Bastian Schweinstiger for Wednesday's return clash, while David Moyes should have more defensive options to call upon. With a 1-0 win enough to secure a place in the Champions League semi-finals, some fans may dare to dream. Although, whatever happens in Munich, David Moyes has already experienced a resounding success, where many of Europe's elite have tasted bitter failure, before him. |
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