José Mourinho doing his normal writing stuff |
Against a bunch of players he claimed had “betrayed” him as the Blues’ manager 12 months ago, his current Manchester United crop produced one of the worst games ever turned in by a team under Mourinho’s charge. By the end, a 4-0 loss was a very generous reflection on what United had offered.
It all started as early as the 30-second mark, with Chris Smalling choosing to let an angled pass towards the area run before realising too late that Daley Blind was not going to meet the ball ahead of Pedro. David de Gea’s reaction to the carnage in front of him was to race out, allowing his Spanish compatriot to round him and slot home with ease.
Thereafter United were opened up with far too much ease to say they often had their wide forwards playing at the same depth as their full-backs. Mourinho had sent them into the game with the intention of causing a similar roadblock to the one erected in front of Liverpool on Monday night, but there was nothing like the same commitment or quality on display.
It seemed only a matter of time before Chelsea got a second, and Gary Cahill duly swept home the loose ball after Smalling again found himself looking over his shoulder in the most rudimentary of defensive situations. The England defender’s stock has been somewhat exaggerated over the course of 2016, with his improved form in late 2015 having somehow bought him extra credit. All his first-half performace at Stamford Bridge did was underline just how weak he often looks when asked significant questions.
It got no better after the interval, with Eden Hazard sweeping home after Antonio Valencia and Juan Mata stood off in the defensive third, then N’Golo Kante walked straight through the heart of United’s defence after Paul Pogba and Ander Herrera had been similarly static as the former Leicester midfielder coasted past them. In all aspects, this was as atrocious a defensive display as Mourinho will ever have witnessed. Yet he cannot claim to be caught be surprise.