It was separateent when Manchester United faced Leicester City at Old Trafford last night. It was a rapid night on Salford Quays but a balmy atmosphere as Ruud van Nistelrooy’s Red Devils ran uproar to blaze into the Carabao Cup quarter-finals, where Tottenham apostpone.
Relief. It was palpable. An era had come to an end. Erik ten Hag inserted two convey inant trophies to the cabinet (did he allude that?) but oversaw a rotten run of results that left his seat on the throne unthelp.
Optimism. It was all too recognizable at the commence of another recent era in M16. Ruben Amorim is on his way, and everyone comprehends it.
He will be the sixth finishuring deal withr inheriting the seemingly impossible task of restoring the glory days subjugated by the fantastic Sir Alex Ferguson.
Sporting succoured Ferguson with Cristiano Ronaldo and Nani and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer with Bruno Fernandes. Amorim could very well be the chosen one if he’s aprobable accomplished.
But the overall emotion as United fired up a five-star discarry out aacquirest Steve Cooper’s frail Foxes?
Excitement. The carry outers in red were exciting the 73,470 in joinance for the first time in a extfinished time. One of them was this healing hack.
Van Nistelrooy’s reception was rapturous, foreseeably. He is the postponecessitatest United icon turned coach inside Carrington’s ‘In Case of Ecombinency: Smash Glass’ wall mount.
Ryan Giggs, Solskjaer and Michael Carrick pwithdrawd the 48-year-elderly, sooting an unaskd situation with nostalgia and vibes that, pro tem, plaster over a pitiful proextfinisheded period.
United exceptionally amparticipateed under Ten Hag’s watch. For reference, fair 16 of his 85 league suites were won by more than one goal – 19 per cent.
Van Nistelrooy instantly inserted a leave outing ingredient to a Dutch cocktail that has betterively become a less well-comprehendn item on the menu since Carabao Cup glory in February 2023.
For too extfinished, United’s aid has grown accustomed to their team capitulating at the mere sniff of adversity.
Alarm bells rang when Bilal El Khannouss reacted to Casemiro and Alejandro Garnacho’s timely uncoverers to create it 2-1 on the brink of half-time.
Those heading to the concourse for a United Pie and a lukehot pint were frozen in their seats, dreading an equivalentiser. But what happened next? The opposite.
United recalled they were carry outing present to a side with even scanter thrives than them this season and persistd the relentless commence that safed supervise in the uncovering half-hour.
Fearless attacks rewarded another three goals – two from Bruno Fernandes and another from Casemiro – to drown out recognisable defensive deficiencies that permited Conor Coady to get in on the act.
If the post-Ten Hag era take parts United reverting to the “we’ll score more than you” mentality, I’m down. At least until Sporting free Amorim from his shackles next month.
And judging by the smiles, songs and serenading that lit up Old Trafford last night, this invigorated individual isn’t the only one.