Manchester United earned a valuable point with a spirited comeback against Everton following a dramatic 2-2 Goodison Park draw.
Despite enduring the most underwhelming campaign, the travelling supporters were in fine voice ahead of the fixture as Ruben Amorim’s men aimed to climb the Premier League.
But David Moyes has inspired a resurgence on his Merseyside return, and this looked set to continue following a dominating 45-minute-display from his side.
Beto hit his fifth goal under the Scotsman after a shambolic goalmouth scramble before Abdoulaye Doucure acted quickest to seal a poacher effort in heading his side a deserved second.
Disregarding what he saw, Amorim retained the same XI that had visibly struggled throughout the opening half after the restart, and Bruno Fernandes led a much-improved showing.
The Portuguese captain reduced the deficit with a fine free-kick in the final quarter before a Red wave of pressure paid dividends through Manuel Ugarte heading into the final ten minutes.
United pushed for a winner but were always susceptible to a home surge on the counter-attack, surviving an injury-time scare when Ashley Young went down under a Harry Maguire challenge in the area.
However, a VAR intervention led referee Andrew Madley to the pitchside monitor and the decision to award a penalty was reversed.
Although frustration will once more be the prominent word as a Manchester Jekyll and Hyde performance is dissected, Amorim will at least take stock in a spirited second-half comeback that could have returned three points for his weary side.
Ahead of the midweek visit of Ipswich Town, supporters will pray for a spark of momentum as their team enters the business end of what has been a disastrous campaign.
Yet another tumultuous outing for the Manchester United faithful
Amorim made one change to the starting XI that tasted defeat in North London, with Ugarte replacing Alejandro Garnacho.
Truthfully, his side has struggled to look cohesive and is particularly frail when going behind. However, their second half – particularly the final 20 minutes – will provide ample optimism for the former Sporting man ahead of a testing schedule at home and abroad.
A popular topic in recent weeks has been a growing divide within a disgruntled fanbase, as many have turned to venting their frustrations across social media.
Speaking to several match-going Reds after the game, a consensus of frustration for a continuous reaction is the most frustrating pill to swallow. “Why can’t we play like the last 20 mins for a whole game?” Cian (33) stated. “So often, we just seem to have a lack of effort. It’s the same old issues recurring every week.”
He wasn’t alone in his exasperation, with his brother Darragh (30) equally aggrieved with another baffling performance.
“An insufferable first hour,” he said through gritted teeth.
“I mean, 60 minutes of that followed by some good play once some changes and tweaks happened. It’s frustrating that we can’t get out of first gear until we desperately need to, often leading to too little, too late.”
Matt has been an avid supporter since the days of Sir Matt Busby, witnessing plenty of highs and lows throughout the years. He’s struggling to come to terms with Amorim’s philosophy, and despite a gutsy comeback, is finding it hard to see green shoots within this squad.
“Completely different second half,” he stated. “But, when all is said and done, we were lucky with the penalty decision. Overall, it’s another very poor outing – no heart or desire, can’t defend, and they seem to be finding it harder to score every single week.
“It’s pretty bleak, ain’t it?”
With Manchester United remaining 15th in the table, 13 points from safety and uncertainty as the common theme in the North West, how are you feeling ahead of a midweek visit of Kieran McKenna?
Let us know in the comments or across our social channels.
Recent Posts
- Everton 2-2 Manchester United | Five Talking Points
- Spirited fightback returns a Goodison point for Manchester United
- Manchester United gunning for Goodison joy in farewell encounter
Leave a Reply