How about you take matches against some other teams ? For instance the game against City where we tactically outthought them completely even though we could have imploded being 1 down? Or this season against Southampton when even though we were poor in the first 20 minutes we slowly got back and took the game to their throats making it impossible for them to even get out of their half till about the 80th minute or so. Or the game against Wolfsburg last week where we conceded in the 4th minute where we got back and scored 2 goals and dominated till about 75th minute or so? I don't understand why you take 2 random games where we lose as if we haven't had any improvement in between?
Maybe because I was replying to a post that commented:
The first 20 minutes were like the last 20 minutes at Leicester where one goal caused insecurity and we were sliced apart.
Which made me link some thoughts from the two games?
The other connection is fairly obvious, the players didn't (or couldn't) follow LvG's instructions - he told us so. The players aren't novices, certainly players like Blind, Carrick, Schweinsteiger and Rooney are LvG's first choices, yet they were part of the problem on Sunday.
I'd also say that loss of concentration following an incident, or a goal, even ones we score, has been a fairly common theme for us. That doesn't make us unique, it happens to lots of teams, but if it does, it normally kills your hopes of winning anything.
Of course we've had some good results this season, in fact we've probably had more good results than good performances. But we've also had matches like Swansea where an opponent did something unexpected (a sub and a formation change). We didn't respond and 10 minutes later we'd gone from winning 1-0 to losing 2-1.
I think that inability to react is a problem, and that our game plans rely too much on perfection in our game, and not enough on players covering for each other. Call me paranoid - I just don't know that many perfect players, especially when there's another team trying to stop them being perfect.