Watershed moment for United bosses Manchester United

LONDON. — Manchester United’s limitations were laid bare as Atletico Madrid did a classic Champions League football number on them to snuff out their slender hopes of success for another season on Tuesday night. 

United’s limitations mean a last-16 exit is about par for the course given their current reduced status. And those limitations mean their only hope of anything resembling salvation from this mess of a campaign rest on finishing in the Premier League’s top four.

It will also be the measure of whether the experiment of handing Ralf Rangnick the levers of control can be judged a success – albeit a very qualified one — because if United do not overhaul Arsenal or any other contenders, then it must be deemed a failure. 

Manchester United are currently a point behind Arsenal, who lie fourth and played against Liverpool late last night, but have played three games more and do not present a convincing case that they can climb that particular hill. 

In an ironic twist, just as United’s players trudged off after a 1-0 defeat that carried every hallmark and characteristic of Diego Simeone’s streetwise Atletico, television screens at Old Trafford were showing images of Ajax coach Erik ten Hag. 

Here was the visionary touted by many as the ideal candidate to drag United out of their current no-man’s land, but who had just presided over Ajax’s own last-16 exit after a home loss to Benfica. Ten Hag has a track record but hardly comes with a guarantee. 

This had the feeling of a watershed moment for those in charge at Manchester United. 

Yes, we have all seen this movie before with Atletico Madrid. They defend magnificently. They spoil with well-practised dark arts, then dig you on the counter-attack before dropping deep and erecting the sort of defensive barricade on which so many have floundered over the years. 

United were full of effort but showed little guile. Once the early storm had blown itself out and Renan Lodi headed what would prove to be the decisive goal, the beneficiary of non-existent marking, Atletico had United pretty much where they wanted them. 

It does help to have defenders who seem to live for being under pressure and penned in their own penalty area, plus a world-class keeper in Jan Oblak happy to use every part of his anatomy to defy opponents, whether it is his face to stop Anthony Elanga or a giant claw to save brilliantly from Raphael Varane late on. 

United’s main hope, as it has been for some time, is to cross fingers and hope for a moment of individual brilliance. Cristiano Ronaldo provided it with a hat-trick to beat Tottenham on Saturday. There was no such impact here and out went United, running short of ideas and invention long before the inevitable conclusion. 

United’s place in the domestic and European order is clear for everyone to see. They are also-rans at home and abroad. 

Ronaldo started in a blaze of tricks but fizzled out. Bruno Fernandes threatened to influence but, as usual, descended into spending too much time bickering with officials – all while Atletico set the familiar traps plucked straight from the Simeone playbook. 

And in Harry Maguire, Manchester United have a captain playing with an air of desperation. His dawdling, panicky play in possession resulted in frequent groans around Old Trafford. His removal to applause — as he was replaced by veteran Juan Mata late on — was a signal both of his struggles and of Rangnick’s own desperate straits. — BBC Sport

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