As we
walked down Wembley Way, there was that feeling in the North West London air. The
feeling every football fan gets at this time of year. The belief, the hope and
the expectation only the start of a new football season can bring. Of course,
it could pop like a balloon, but it’s always fun while it lasts, right?
Whatever’s gone before becomes irrelevant as we look ahead to the next ten
months - ten months in which our lives will once again be shaped by a group of
strangers kicking a bag of leather around the length and breadth of this fair
isle. Yet year after year, for the love of our club, we put ourselves through it.
With the
buzz of a United matchday in full swing, came the dopamine hit: United’s summer
spending was not done yet. As we finished our pints in Wembley’s United
fanzone, there it was in black and white: United had agreed a deal to sign not
one, but two, Bayern Munich players. Mathijs de Ligt and Noussair Mazraoui were
on their way to swell United’s defensive ranks, for a combined fee of £60m as per BBC Sport. Could
the day get any better?
This may have ‘only’ been the Community Shield, and a far cry from May’s FA Cup final epic, but the mood was still one of high tension: as a United fan, you always want to get one over on those bluenoses from over the road, no matter the scene or setting.
This may have ‘only’ been the Community Shield, and a far cry from May’s FA Cup final epic, but the mood was still one of high tension: as a United fan, you always want to get one over on those bluenoses from over the road, no matter the scene or setting.
Yet despite Bernardo Silva’s late equaliser when so close to victory, even when
Jonny Evans skied the 15th penalty of the shootout into the wide
blue yonder, there was optimism. There was a positive feeling. United had
played well and did more than enough to win. We may have lost on penalties but there
are far more positives than there are negatives. So what
now?
The narrative suggests the Community Shield has little bearing on the
season itself. Often, the opposite is true. Only once in the last 13 years has
the winner gone on to become Premier League champions. The last three Shield losers have gone on to win the league that season. United again proved we
can go toe-to-toe with Pep Guardiola’s City slickers on the big stage and run them
close.
For the first time in a long while, United head into a new campaign on an
upward trajectory. The winds of change are certainly swirling around Old
Trafford. We’ve four new additions and a new look coaching staff spearheaded by
a manager with the ink barely dry on his new contract. With de Ligt and
Mazraoui set to be included in Friday’s matchday squad, the future is bright for 2024-25. As we sang loud and proud on Saturday, we're on the march with ten Hag's Army.
Manchester
United began this campaign as the last one had ended ten weeks ago - with a
derby day dust up against that mob in blue from across the city. At the
national stadium, with silverware on the line and the world watching. The cast
list may have been quite different with both sides missing several of their star
turns, but the two combatants remained the same.
Had the hamstrung Rasmus Hojlund been on the end of those two gilt-edged chances Marcus Rashford saw, and then squandered, the outcome would have been different. Quite what club legend and newly appointed assistant manager Ruud van Nistelrooy made of the man in his old number, we’ll never know. Van Nistelrooy’s compatriot and the newest addition to our striking ranks, Joshua Zirkzee, remained an unused sub at Wembley. His time surely cannot be far away.
Had the hamstrung Rasmus Hojlund been on the end of those two gilt-edged chances Marcus Rashford saw, and then squandered, the outcome would have been different. Quite what club legend and newly appointed assistant manager Ruud van Nistelrooy made of the man in his old number, we’ll never know. Van Nistelrooy’s compatriot and the newest addition to our striking ranks, Joshua Zirkzee, remained an unused sub at Wembley. His time surely cannot be far away.
Yet
there was so much to admire from United’s Wembley showing. Casemiro looked back
to his best and more the totemic figure of his debut season. Evans, his
spot-kick aberration aside, was excellent. Bruno Fernandes came into the match
with no pre-season or minutes under his belt but looked like he’d never been
away. Alejandro Garnacho got himself another Wembley goal. We defended stoutly,
moved the ball quickly and slickly and outplayed City, particularly in the
second half. If we carry this into the season proper, starting with Fulham on
Friday night, we won’t go far wrong.
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