Manchester United fans divided on Ten Hag but keep the splits hidden
Erik ten Hag, Manchester United manager, leaves the field in the rain following defeat to Arsenal. Pic:Â Stu Forster/Getty Images
At the picnic benches behind the Stretford End where fans enjoy a pre-game bite the atmosphere is as serene as Erik ten Hagâs perma-calm media persona before Manchester Unitedâs kick-off against Arsenal.
The manager has remained unruffled despite the 24/7 speculation about his job, yet in the next few weeks his future will be decided by Jim Ratcliffe, the Ineos chairmanâs key lieutenant, Dave Brailsford, and the acting chief executive, Jean Claude-Blanc.
âDifferent clowns, same circus,â was one senior staff memberâs dismissive take when Ratcliffe swept into United as the minority owner and football policy chief.
Ratcliffe is certainly no clown and as he compiles the pros and cons of whether Ten Hag should be the highest-profile employee to feel his axe he will tune into the mood music of Unitedâs most vital constituency: the supporters.
For Ten Hag the notes are harmonious and discordant â a mix of should-he-stay-or-should-he-go. John is 74, goes to every home match, sits behind the directorsâ seats, and first watched his team in 1960. He has had enough.
âI would let Ten Hag leave at the end of this season because of the performances basically not being good enough,â he says. âThese are probably the worst Iâve ever seen in my lifetime watching United. Weâre going to probably lose 16 games in this league season [13 pre-Arsenal], the worst Premier League performance ever. So that should be just enough for the sack. Weâve sacked [David] Moyes and other managers for far less than this.
âThe footballâs been dreadful â thereâs nothing more to say about that; the tactics seem to be all over the show. Example: why does he allow [Bruno] Fernandes to charge down the goalkeeper when heâs a midfielder, and then wonder why weâre having 16-20 shots against us every game when Fernandes is up the other end chasing down the goalie?
âSometimes weâre long ball â eg, against Burnley â or playing out from the back and losing goals, and I donât see any tactical nous from the guy. He is probably a very nice man, but his personaâs not what he should be for a United manager. Heâs not JosĂ© Mourinho on the line â he doesnât cut a figure that demands respect from other managers.â The nice guy view is borne out by the phone call Ten Hag made recently to an executive in the commercial department to offer thanks for help in a matter, and the sense is that the Dutchman unlike, say, Mourinho during his tenure, is well liked within the club.
Adam Robertson, 42, whose first game at Old Trafford was a 1-1 in 1991 against Liverpool, feels Ten Hag should be given a chance under the new structure headed by Ratcliffe.
âMy view is that we keep him as there are clearly still significant issues that need clearing up before bringing in a new manager,â he says. âI donât feel he is to blame for the current mess and if a new manager comes in the same thing [may] happen.â
After Seb Coe, the head of the taskforce that will regenerate Old Trafford, is given a tour of the stadium, Ten Hag sends out a latest patched-up XI to face Arsenal. Impressive displays follow from Sofyan Amrabat (first league start since 17 December) and Amad Diallo (first league start of the season). Rasmus HĂžjlund misses an early chance created by Scott McTominay (the captain because Fernandes is injured, along with Luke Shaw, Lisandro MartĂnez, Harry Maguire, Victor Lindelöf, and Marcus Rashford), United concede to Leandro Trossard on 20 minutes, and, although they match the Gunners throughout, never look like equalising.
Yet no one turns on Ten Hag. The match-going United enthusiast is, as a rule, loyal and on 57 minutes The Red Army section in the right corner of the Stretford End starts to sing the âgoing on the piss with Georgie Bestâ ditty (to the tune of Spirit in the Sky) which builds in volume and spreads until on the hour the whole stadium (travelling fans apart) are in unison â a heartening show of unity for Ten Hag and his players.
Darren Stannage, 47, whose first trip to United was in Alex Fergusonâs first season in 1986, is one of those in the 3,000-plus Red Army seats. âIâve had a few interesting discussions with lots of United fans and the feeling is that the structureâs got to be right before we look at the manager,â he says. âPeople, for example, would take JosĂ© back under the right structure and right backing. We probably got rid of the managers without the structure being there.
âSo I think most would like to see Ten Hag stay under the new structure because even today itâs not there: [the new sporting director] Dan Ashworthâs not in. So any new manager coming in would quite be working with the structure that Ineos want. It should be say to Ten Hag: âLook, Erik, by Christmas, weâve got to be close to the top four, weâve got to be in the [Carabao Cup] and take it from there.ââ
Towards the end the song has become âWe love United, we doâ and though their team lose the fans, as a mass, have backed Ten Hag throughout. Later, as the Manchester skies open and the leaky Old Trafford roof floods, Stannage is in The Bishop Blaize, a stronghold United hostelry.
âPeople are quite happy,â he says. âWell, not happy with the performance but we arenât very good as a team, the players are not very good. Arsenal were probably there for the taking today but players werenât good enough. Iâve talked to a lot of people, asking: âWhat would you do with the manager?â And many say: âGive him the structure, donât let him buy the players all on his own accord.â âBut [then] again one of my mates looked at the league table [United are eighth] and went: âWell based on that, nine home defeats this season, heâs got to go.â So thereâs such a mix.â




