Manchester United 0-3 Bournemouth: Cherries expose frailties in ...
Boos rang out after brilliant Bournemouth won 3-0 at Old Trafford for the second season running, with Manchester United's fortunes continuing to yield mixed results under new boss Ruben Amorim.
Erik ten Hag was in charge the last time the Cherries put three goals past Man Utd on home turf a year ago, but a change of manager has not prompted a change of outcome, undone by similar failings and a clear weakness from set-pieces.
The hosts at least worked hard without reward in the first 45 minutes, but shot themselves in the foot after the break and didn't have the guile to respond in the attacking third either, perhaps casting further doubt on Amorim's decision to exclude Marcus Rashford for a third game on the bounce.
As it happened: How Bournemouth picked off sloppy Man UtdTeams | Match stats | Live Premier League tableWatch PL highlights for freeStream the Premier League with NOWImage: Manchester United's Bruno Fernandes is dejected after his team conceded a third
Bournemouth teenager Dean Huijsen became the latest player to capitalise on United's lax set-piece defending, glancing home a first-half opener when unmarked from Ryan Christie's free-kick. And that was just the start of a performance that unravelled quite alarmingly.
A quick-fire double in the second period - Justin Kluivert's penalty and Antoine Semenyo's finish two minutes and eight seconds apart - sealed the biggest blow of Amorim's short reign to date, and condemned United to their seventh Premier League loss of the season.
Image: Manchester United's Amad Diallo (left) and Bournemouth's Milos Kerkez battle for the ball
The Portuguese head coach had always warned there would be bumps in the road but a fourth defeat in his ninth match in charge further underlines the severity of issues at hand.
Andoni Iraloa's side leap into fifth in the table, while United are marooned in 13th - the first time they've been in the bottom half of the table at Christmas since 1989-90.
Player ratings:
Man Utd: Onana (6), Mazraoui (4), Maguire (6), Martinez (6), Dalot (5), Mainoo (6), Ugarte (5), Malacia (6), Amad (6), Fernandes (5), Zirkzee (4).
Subs: Yoro (5), Hojlund (5), Garnacho (5).
Bournemouth: Kepa (7), Kerkez (8), Huijsen (8), Zabarnyi (7), Smith (6), Adams (6), Christie (8), Ouattara (6), Kluivert (7), Semenyo (7), Evanilson (6).
Subs: Cook (6), Unal (6), Billing (6), Brooks (n/a), Hill (n/a).
Player of the Match: Ryan Christie
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Man Utd head coach Ruben Amorim:
"It's hard. In this context, it's hard to push for two or three wins. We're trying. But this game was hard on us.
"Without any situation we suffered again at set-pieces. We were a little bit nervous, the stadium.
"We controlled the rest of the first half with some clear chances, and then in the second with the penalty and then another goal is really hard on everyone here.
"In this kind of moment, every thing is hard on us. The set-pieces, the penalty, then we want to score again but we are too nervous. We have to fight this.
"We tried to score but in the end, it was a tough match in a tough situation. We need to move on."
Iraola: We were solid - not amazingBournemouth head coach Andoni Iraola:
"I'm happy we were more clinical today, we scored from a set-play, that gives us the chance of having more of a threat because we're a short team otherwise.
"It was a solid performance. Not amazing, but solid. I'm happy we kept playing the same way, kept pushing until the end.
"We have 28 points, that's good, everyone is quite bunched up but to have that at Christmas is a good amount. We have two more chances this week and we'll try to get the maximum there too."
Analysis: Man Utd fail at basicsImage: Manchester United players look dejected after getting beat by Bournemouth
Sky Sports' Laura Hunter:
Perhaps nothing summed up the state of Manchester United, conceding their seventh loss of the Premier League campaign, more than opposition head coach Andoni Iraola. "We were solid - not amazing," the Bournemouth boss summarised. A damning indictment. No longer do you have to be amazing to triumph at Old Trafford, merely solid.
Only Southampton (5) have conceded three-plus goals in more home games this season than Man Utd's four, and Saints sit rock bottom of the table. So many - too many - statistics can be used to characterise United's mediocrity. It's endless, because flaws are so numerous.
One that will dominate headlines, though, is their pathetic set-piece record, undone again by a simple set-play routine for Bournemouth's easy opener. United have conceded 17 goals from set-pieces in 2024, their most in a single calendar year. Pre-match drills with Ruben Amorim's assistant Carlos Fernandes clearly fell on deaf ears.
So many fundamentals are failing, and if you can't do the basics right, the Premier League is a very unforgiving place to be.
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