Garnacho and Højlund scoring the goals against Aston Villa was a sign that the club can still look forward with some optimism
Buy low: always a good start in any deal. With 25 minutes gone at Old Trafford, Manchester United’s players certainly seemed to have been reading their investment briefings, skimming the handbook, underlining exactly the right parts.
Eighth in the league and out of Europe, the corporate scythe about to swing, even the stadium threatened with a righteous bulldozing. Add to that a 2-0 deficit to a finely grooved Aston Villa team, and at best this felt like a timely pitch for a little new investment; at worst like an act of self-immolation, United’s players trailing about the pitch like unwanted chattels, like a hastily scribbled redundancy list, like the Roy brothers trying to tank a takeover deal.
More Stories
Lawrence ‘grateful’ of Jones’s tough love amid criticism of toxic England regime
Judy Murray ‘sick of listening to talk’ in battle for equal sport funding
Premier League to proceed with vote on APT rules despite Villa’s call for delay