As we travel to Fulham – how have United fared without Ronaldo this season?

Get the latest Fulham v Manchester United report.

As we prepare for Craven Cottage – the scene of one of most disastrous and so nearly detrimental performances last season – I feel it appropriate to reflect on the season so far and discuss how the side has changed from the side Fulham beat in March who consequently recovered brilliantly to win the third title in a row.

More so than any other season, there have been extremely obvious changes made at United. The very same team that excelled and prospered in 2007/2008 and 2008/2009 had been somewhat dismantled.

Change, as is often the case when you have a manager as wise and experienced as Sir Alex, is a good thing and something we should always be open to at United seeing as Ferguson has successfully rebuilt, restructured and redefined several Manchester United sides to triumphant effect.

However, this time, was there any need whatsoever to change our Championship winning formula? This time, has his decision making and complacency in the summer cost us?

Ronaldo’s absence – the main change to our side and consequently playing style – has been highly documented and is unfortunately still being discussed; nearly five months after his departure. The reasons for this? We have clearly failed to replace the pivotal player, instead handing over the much coveted number 7 shirt to an arguably past-it Scouser.

Owen, for the amount of money we spent for him – i.e. nothing – has undoubtedly been excellent value for money. With regards to comparing him to Tevez, whom he directly replaced as our third striker, Owen has done well.

Tevez cost City £25million more than Owen cost us, yet has managed only 1 more goal than him this season. However, as was apparent with the nonchalant impact he made on the fans when arriving at Old Trafford, as well as the general lack of excitement felt towards him on the pitch whenever he receives the ball; he couldn’t be any less Ronaldo-esque.

As the best player in the world and certainly one of the most prolific, eclectic and entertaining, Cristiano has left a deep, underlying void that is now severely felt whenever United are on the attack. Every time we are in an advanced position, there is a sudden, striking loss of pace and finality to our movement.

Of course I am not suggesting that we have struggled to finish – au contraire as we have in fact surprisingly scored more in the league than at this same point last season (although it’s worth remembering Ronnie was injured for the first few months of 2008/09) – however the flair and finesse in our play has gone.

The positive impact of his departure however, to largely contrast my previous statement, is apparent at the range of goalscorers who have netted already; not even halfway through the season. Goals have impressively come from all areas of the pitch, with 13 different scorers in total. It can be argued therefore that the freedom felt by players now has given them a new confidence; a lease of life that was previously absent as all our attacking moves and progressive play went through the direct and often selfish Ronaldo.

The range of names on the score-sheet is most encouraging and can, for now, answer those cynics who have continually wondered where United’s goals will come from this season. Rooney is enjoying his most prolific season at United; Darren Gibson has recently utilised his opportunity and in turn rewarded Sir Alex’s faith in him; and even Anderson, after 78 appearances, has grabbed a goal.

But is this diverse range of inconsistent scorers enough to rely on all season? Results wise, so far it has been; as after 17 games we are only 3 points behind leaders Chelsea.

However will this last? Should we be concerned that, other then Rooney on 12 goals, only Owen, Valencia and Berbatov have scored more than 3 this season? And, most pressingly, will we be alright to do without the creative impetus of Ronaldo, as well as his goals?

Just look at how we’ve faired against the ‘bigger’ teams this season: we’ve lost away to Chelsea and Liverpool and at home to Villa, and struggled at home to City, not to mention Sunderland who have had an impressive start. Apart from the Manc derby, where the inert distain and horror of drawing at home to ‘them’ was enough to see us through to the end, where has been the end product and extra gear we have needed to create and score?

Another huge positive that can be drawn from the season so far is that the other teams battling for the top spot have equally suffered from a lapse in form and general competence. Every time we feel at United that we are struggling and generally not as good anymore, a bad result goes against Chelsea or Arsenal to surprisingly keep us well within reach.

Our poor result at home to Villa was nowhere as detrimental as it would have been had Chelsea beat Everton earlier in the day; and Arsenal must have delighted at beating Liverpool on Sunday, as even after we beat Wolves 3-0 on Tuesday, a win in their next game away to Burnley the day after would have put them 3 points behind with a game in hand. Yet – as was probably to be expected – they dropped two points to remain out of touch.

Remember how people naively wrote the league off as Chelsea’s a few weeks ago after they destroyed Arsenal at the Emirates? In the 4 games subsequent to that game, they drew two and lost two.

So how can we conclude? Well, we ARE struggling without Ronaldo; not in terms of his goals, but his creativity, spark and overall attacking prowess that clearly separated us from other teams in the previous 3 seasons. We have not performed well against tougher opposition, although thankfully, everyone in the top half of the league has managed to appear equally unimpressive at times.

The main factor that has contributed to this slight downfall in quality of the top 4 – and in turn apparent improvement and confidence of the ‘other’ teams in the league – is the amount of goals conceded. The traditional top 4 have conceded 71 goals this season, with the top two Chelsea and United – who both conceded only 24 each last term – each conceding 14 so far. As for Liverpool, they conceded 27 last season; and 24 already this season.

This league is quite clearly anyone’s for the taking; however quality and attractiveness in style is no longer the difference between the title-ambitious teams.

With Ronaldo’s departure to Spain – as well as to a lesser extent Alonso’s from Liverpool – there seems to have been an overall drop in the standards that has, as mentioned, allowed those prospering teams below the top 4 an opportunity to capitalise.

The team who are able to withstand the pressure from the much improved second tier – the Tottenham’s, Villa’s and City’s – and maintain a superior defence will be the team that wins the league.

Skill, flair and beautiful football no longer seems to be the name of the game for the Premiership; as this has disappeared to sunnier (richer) climates to instead leave us relying on the basics and fundamentals of the game.

Hard work, possession and above all, firm defending dominate and override the game-plan of the league’s most wanting teams; and the ones who attempt to deviate from this will ultimately suffer.

Topics: Arsenal, Aston Villa, Carlos Tevez, Chelsea, Cristiano Ronaldo, English Premier League, La Liga, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United, Michael Owen, Real Madrid, Tottenham

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7 Comments

  1. BD Condell

    I’m not sure whether you are lauding Utd or decrying the loss of Ronaldo here but let’s get down to facts!

    Firstly, and I’m tired saying it, Utd are 2 points better off this year after 17 games than last season, Chelsea 1 point.

    Utd have scored 9 more goals this term than at the same point last season. (Ronaldo who?)

    Despite the major defensive injury problems all season Utd have conceded just 4 more goals at this stage than at the same point last year AND, with Villa and Chelsea have the joint best defensive record in the PL.

    As for: ” Just look at how we’ve faired against the ‘bigger’ teams this season: we’ve lost away to Chelsea and Liverpool and at home to Villa, and struggled at home to City”

    We were robbed against Chelsea and were more than a match for them. Fergie got the midfield wrong against Pool, it was their Waterloo game if you remember. Scholes, Giggs, Carrick and Valentia was a disasterous choice for a ‘battle’. If Fletch and Anderson had been in it would have been a different story.

    Fair play to Villa but we came on strong after they scored and were worth at least a point.

    But…’struggled at home to City’….did you actually see the game? An even 1st half in which Utd started the better and City finished the better…Utd totally dominated the 2nd half. It was one of our most dominant half’s of the season. But for the fact that we gifted them 2 goals and Bellamy came-up with a wonder strike we would have won that game 4-0.

    I don’t miss Ronaldo in the slightest but I do think that Fergie needs to get more consistency in the ‘middle 4′ if we are to do 4 in a row. Fletcher and Anderson every time for me.

    After 17 games last season we were W10 D5 L2. this season it’s W12 D1 L4.

    There’s a misplaced perception that losses are the key stat to look at and the press jump all over a loss for a ‘Top 4′ side, increasing that perception. Wrong! Wins are the key stat…that’s why they introduced 3 points for a win….and that’s why Utd are 2 points ahead of last season.

    You worry too much!

    December 18th, 2009 @ 17:30
  2. Kylie Ng

    A Chelsea fan here!
    VERY GLAD Ronaldo has joined Real Madrid!
    Less competition now!

    DROGBA FTW!

    December 18th, 2009 @ 19:07
  3. the-cockney-red

    Hi mate. Firstly, nice one for reading and commenting on my post. Appreciate it.
    And secondly, I’m gonna well and truly defend my post to the death!
    You act like your first couple of points about Ronaldo’s goals last season at this same stage are completely unique, profound proclamations…when I’m pretty sure I’ve addressed those points early on:
    “Of course I am not suggesting that we have struggled to finish – au contraire as we have in fact surprisingly scored more in the league than at this same point last season”
    …PLUS I also address a possible reason for this with regards to Ronaldo:
    “although it’s worth remembering Ronnie was injured for the first few months of 2008/09″, hence a possible reason (although I’m not saying DEFINITE reason) as to why we didn’t score as many goals. Please read more clearly.
    When you say you’re ‘not missing Ronaldo in the slightest’, thats completely fair enough, as I even addressed the new style and array of goalscorers we are supplied with now thanks to – and I quote – a “lease of life that was previously absent as all our attacking moves and progressive play went through the direct and often selfish Ronaldo”.
    How you can honestly sit there and say we are better or not missing the magic Ronaldo provided though is beyond me. We HAVE struggled against big teams this season, but I suppose big teams was probably the wrong way of phrasing seeing as the standards have dropped to include a lot more teams into the ‘Big Team’ tag. What I mean is: a lot more teams are super-confident at attacking United now; they come to Old Trafford and where as before we could show them up and embarrass them for their false sense ambition, they now get rewarded for their attacking play. Sunderland, CSKA, Wolfsburg, Besiktas (oh but let me guess, you’ll blame that one of Fergie’s team selection too?). All these teams have done well, and that’s not even mentioning any of our 4 defeats this season.
    We have changed, that you can’t deny, but I clearly lay out both the ways in which this change has been positive and negative, so don’t claim as though I’m mourning the loss of great Ronaldo when I too can see the good it has had on our squad. I just know, that I watch United play, there is something missing. It’s as straightforward or statistically binding as goals scored, just something special. We have an amazing chance to do it for the 4th year running as every team in this league is slipping up, but we need to find the extra gear to kill games off and competently – and easily – see off opponents again. We need to buy in January. End of.

    And yes I was at the City game. As I have been for every single home game this season.

    December 18th, 2009 @ 21:29
  4. michael

    Ronaldo is not a player you are going to miss in every single game, so stats like we are 9+ on last season don’t prove anything especially since ronaldo missed the first four matches of last season. Not to mention the fact that United only got one penalty between the first and seventeenth league game last season, whilst this season they have had four. But anyway thats not the point.

    When Ronaldo might be missed is in the latter stages of the champions league. When you need that one player to come up with a piece of magic from nowhere. see the dragao, see the emirates. I can’t see any other player doing that. Rooney is a very good player but he is not the kind of player that can come up with a goal from absolutely nowhere when you need him to or that can single handedly (or near enough) destroy a tough european defence when he is playing up front on his own, which is mainly how he will be played away in europe

    December 18th, 2009 @ 22:19
  5. BD Condell

    Ok Pos, fair points! I wasn’t so much having a go at you (yes you did address those points I raised) as getting this off my chest as everywhere I look in the media there seems to be comments suggesting that Utd (and Chelsea) are worse-off than last year at this stage.

    But your wrong aboubt Ronnie last season. He came on against Chelsea in the 55th minute and that was just our 4th league game of the season. He played 13 of the first 17 games (scoring 8 goals) and had 1 sub appearance…so he only missed 3 league games. But that’s good news in the context of the comparison we’re making!

    Last season our 2 losses were to Liverpool and Arsenal at this stage but we’d also drawn 5.
    I thought we were excellent against Chelsea and very unfortunate to lose and stick with my point about the City game.

    I agree that some teams have seemed to ‘get at us’ a bit more this year but consider the state of our defence with injuries!

    The CL games you mention: we beat Wolfsburg twice on a 5-2 aggregate so not sure why that’s raised. The 2nd string I thought played well against Besiktas in a game that meant little.

    Last year in the group stages we drew home and away with Villareal and also drew with Aalborg at home (same reason…Fergie was giving some of the younger players a run-out) and with Celtic.

    My point is that last season (or any previously) was not as rosy as we sometimes think in hindsight.

    You are too selective when talking about killing games off: Wigan 5-0, Spurs 3-1, Stoke 2-0, Blackburnn 2-0, Everton 3-0, Pompey 4-1, West Ham 4-0, Wolves 3-0…..all comfortable wins. There are always games in every season that are close but the fact is we’ve won 12 of 17 so far v 10 of 17 last year.

    Of course Ronnie is a miss and we’ve had to adapt and experiment which takes a bit of time but so far I’ve been happy with how that’s gone.

    For me the main issue is over-rotation in midfield. We need a more settled unit to get continuity into our play.

    December 19th, 2009 @ 02:35
  6. BD Condell

    Don’t disagree with your points on Ronaldo and the CL Michael. I think it will be a big ask for Utd to win it this year and I’m not tipping them to do so.

    But I disagree on the 9 goals point. Ronnie missed 3 1/2 games last season of the first 17…that’s not significant, and he scored 8 in that period. So we’ve covered his 8 goals and weighed in with an additional 9.

    I get your point about sometimes needing a ‘talisman’ to unlock the door in big games but let’s not fool ourselves that Ronnie always did that….he didn’t.

    My point is all thoe talk that went on about how Utd would account for the 40 goals from Ronnie and Tevez…that they couldn’t!

    Whatever issues you consider surround the team at the moment goals aren’t one of them.

    December 19th, 2009 @ 13:58
  7. The Cockney Red

    I would have responded to all your comments had I not just witnessed a shmabolic performance that all by confirms my fears. Please read my blog and comment away at your hearts content if you agree/disagree with what I have to say: http://cockney-red.blogspot.com/2009/12/19th-december-vs-fulham-0-3.html

    December 19th, 2009 @ 18:29