Man United 0-3 Newcastle: Magpies run riot at Old Trafford

Man United 0-3 Newcastle: Pressure piles on Erik ten Hag as Red Devils suffer another DISMAL home defeat against Eddie Howe’s second string to end their Carabao Cup defence with a whimper

  • Eddie Howe’s side claimed victory despite making eight changes for the game
  • Man United suffered their second 3-0 defeat at Old Trafford in as many matches
  • Listen to the latest episode of Mail Sport’s podcast ‘It’s All Kicking Off!’

The problem for Manchester United at the moment is that there is always another game. When it arrives, Erik ten Hag’s team inevitably tend to get worse.

Sunday saw them lose 3-0 to their neighbours Manchester City. That was pretty wretched but City are the Premier League champions and treble winners, possibly the best team in the world. This was Newcastle reserves – a team full of footballers in the wrong positions – but still United lost by the same scoreline. 

And could it have been a greater margin? Of course it could. Apart from a 15 minute spell at the start of the second half, Newcastle were the better team by an absolute mile.

But then Ten Hag’s United are not a team at all, not really. The United manager made a raft of changes from Sunday for this one but none of that really matters as a seam of indifference and fecklessness runs through this United squad from front to back and from top to bottom.

It is hard to work out what was the low point of this shameful night. Was it young midfielder Hannibal Mejbri almost being sent off for two fouls of extraordinary immaturity within 15 minutes? Or three players moaning at the referee as Newcastle took a free-kick en route to creating their second goal? Or maybe it was Sergio Reguilon being booked for kicking the ball away when United were three down? Or Sofyan Amrabat seeing yellow for dissent a couple of minutes later? What an ugly debate that one would be.

Miguel Almiron got Newcastle off to a great start with a well taken finish after Livramento’s run

Youngster Lewis Hill scored a spectacular second when he volleyed from the edge of the area


Mason Mount and Marcus Rashford’s expressions said it all for Manchester United

The wonder strike was the 19-year-old fullback’s first goal in senior football

Erik ten Hag made subs but Bruno Fernandes and Rasmus Hojlund could not turn the tide

MATCH FACTS: 

Manchester United (4-2-3-1): Onana 6; Dalot 4 (Wan-Bissaka 46, 6), Lindelof 5, Maguire 6, Reguilon 6; Mejbri 6 (Fernandes 65, 6), Casemiro 4.5 (Amrabat 46, 6); Antony 6, Mount 5, Garnacho 5 (Rashford 65, 6); Martial 4 (Hojlund 64, 6).

Booked: Mejbri, Casemiro, Reguilon, Amrabat.

Manager: Erik ten Hag 4.

Newcastle (4-3-3): Dubravka 6; Livramento 7, Krafth 7, Dummett 7, Targett (Almiron 5, 8); Hall 8 (Burn 74, 6), Longstaff 7.5, Willock 8 (Guimaraes 64, 6); Ritchie 7 (Trippier 75, 6), Joelinton 7.5, Gordon 8 (Wilson 64, 6). Scorers: Almiron 28, Hall 36, Willock 61.

Booked: Willock, Joelinton.

Manager: Eddie Howe 8.

Referee: Robert Jones 6.

Attendance: Not provided.

Reguilon and Amrabat, for example, have only been at the club since the end of August but this is a football club where irresponsibility and lack of accountability spreads like a virus. Quite simply nobody is safe and that now includes the manager.

Ten Hag has done some impressive things in his 18 months at United but none of them have come this season. Right now the Dutchman looks as impotent as any captain of a sinking vessel. 

United are heading south at lightning speed and unless Ten Hag can somehow bring about a complete change of direction over the next few weeks he simply will not survive a regression as sharp and ugly as any that have preceded him in the decade since Sir Alex Ferguson’s departure.

Newcastle, it must be said, were magnificent. Short of bodies, this was an Eddie Howe team that didn’t necessarily look set up to win. But they were marvellous all night, playing with an expression and a freedom that used to be the preserve of those wearing red.

They were two up and in control by half-time, thanks to Miguel Almiron and young Lewis Hall. They wobbled for fifteen minutes as United tried to throw the kitchen sink at them early in the second period. But United couldn’t get any further than unscrewing the taps and when Joe Willock drove in the third just after the hour another chapter in Ten Hag’s increasingly ugly story at Old Trafford had been written.

By full-time Old Trafford was virtually empty apart from the 8,000 supporters who had travelled south from Newcastle. The support and loyalty being shown by United’s fans is impressive. 

United started the second-half brightly but came unstuck when Joe Willock fired past Onana

The former Arsenal midfielder capped off his return to the first team with a stunning finish

They have seen their club stripped of its soul by the owning Glazer family and, bit by bit and piece by piece, their team has followed suit. But still they come. Still they try to rouse their team. It isn’t a surprise that they don’t always stay until the end. It’s a miracle they are still turning up at all.

Strangely for Newcastle, it was an early injury blow that played a part in what transpired to be a night of dominance. Howe was trying to protect players ahead of Saturday evening’s game with Arsenal but when Matt Targett pulled his hamstring in just the second minute, it prompted the introduction of Almiron who was superb and did much more than just score the opening goal.

Both teams started slowly but Newcastle grew in to the game in a way their opponents didn’t and in the 29th minute they were ahead.

Alejandro Garnacho drove at Tino Livramento down the left side but when the full-back tackled him, United were in trouble. Livramento sped up field, eased past Mason Mount as though he was not there and then played a pass inside Diogo Dalot that Almiron was able to finish off with a shot across Andre Onana.

It was a superb Newcastle goal, counter attacking football at its finest. Briefly United rallied, jolted from their lethargy by the shock of the goal, but soon after Newcastle got them again.

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Erik ten Hag made seven changes from the team that lost to Man City but looked to his bench when his side were 3-0 down

Second-half substitute Sofyan Amrabat was at fault for Newcastle’s third goal on the night

Man United winger Antony endured another unproductive outing for the home side 

Conceding a free-kick in centre field, three United players were still arguing with the referee as play restarted. Newcastle were able to build down the left, Almiron played Willock to the byline between Dalot and Casimero and when the dinked cross was cleared, Hall volleyed his first Newcastle goal in to the corner from just inside the penalty area.

United had been utterly uncompetitive but, with the hapless duo of Dalot and Casmiro hauled off at half-time, that changed for a while. They had 80 per cent of the ball in the first 15 minutes of the second period and had they scored the direction of the game could have shited.

But the goal didn’t come and when the Brazilian Joelinton, playing at the base of the midfield, won the ball from Amrabat in the 61st minute, Willock was able to run forward with it. The former Arsenal player had been impressive all night and as Harry Maguire’s path to close him down was blocked by a Newcastle body, Willock passed the ball right-footed in to Onana’s bottom left hand corner from 18 yards.

United were done and pretty soon so may be their manager. Ten Hag currently looks like a man tied to a train track and even in Manchester if you wait long enough one will come along eventually.

Eddie Howe and Paul Dummett grin after full time after the Magpies’ victory 

Erik ten Hag has now seen his side lose 3-0 at home in as many games as pressures continues to mount

IT’S ALL KICKING OFF! 

It’s All Kicking Off is an exciting new podcast from Mail Sport that promises a different take on Premier League football.

It is available on MailOnline, Mail+, YouTube, Apple Music and Spotify.

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