United are stepping up this year from a lazy season of involvement in (effectively) just one competition to running the gauntlet of five, including CL and Prem. I won't trundle on too much about my theory of Atlantean and Mediterrannean footie, but I did ask at the end of the Arsenal game, has LVG a major flaw in his armoury, that of the energy demanded to play a kind of hybrid of the two, with a possession-based high pressing, high energy, choke? (I wrote this before I read some similar points being made by
@TheRedDevil'sAdvocate). This was bound to be an uneven gear change but is the squad equipped, long term, for these demands?
The English set up, lacking a winter break, makes this approach even more rigorous, and it is here that the Caftards who have been bemoaning a lack of squad depth may be shown to be right. As regards the result, it is not the response of the players (which was decent in the second half) but the puzzlement of the manager which concerns me more. I would agree with basically everyone in here who didn't want Carrick and Bastian in at the same time; to LVG it may be his dream midfield, but I think they are best alternated; its not even a question of speed or youth, but their style is too similar, and Schneiderlin is a better foil for both with his running, aggression and ball-winning skills.
All in all not too concerned about this loss except regarding our ability to last the pace into December. In a positive sense, you don't sharpen without being tempered and the intensity of that Arsenal opening 20 minutes show us what we should be aiming for. They won't be able to keep that up either, and it was definitely a bit of game-raising by them. They will trip up again. I don't even think that Arsenal are Kryptonite to the LVG style as
@berbatrick says in another thread (great line though). I was at last years home fixture against them, and we could easily have won that. I had this down as a draw, but they played brilliantly and losing away to them is no disgrace. The second half showed us figuring out how to play them, we should have scored at least once. It was gutsy and deserves praise rather than puzzlement. Hopefully when the manager reflects he may blame himself (and the club planners) more than the players, if anyone is to be blamed. The LVG project has another hiccup to puzzle over, and I do think that you need a stronger squad to play like this, right now we have the makings of a first team, but we need effectively two teams. I suspect that if the Glazers want silverware they will be going to the shop for more cogs, to make the whole thing purr.
Did LVG's fatigue specialist feck up? Maybe the true identity of the fatigue specialist is Giggs, which would be a disaster; he is wired like the battery bunny.