Paul Scholes Mentioned The ‘Real Problem’ Manchester United Face Following West Ham Loss

Scholes reveals man utd problem

Paul Scholes, the Manchester United icon, highlights a significant challenge facing the club after their 13th loss of the season.

United suffered a 2-0 defeat against West Ham at the London Stadium, marking another disappointing display.

Despite having six days of rest before their London visit, West Ham, who were defeated 5-1 by Liverpool just days earlier, managed to secure the win.

However, the Red Devils only managed a solitary notable chance in the first half, squandered when Alejandro Garnacho missed a one-on-one opportunity.

 

Read Also: West Ham vs Man United 2-0 Video Highlights (Download)

 

Paul Scholes said after the match

‘United have got real problems. Goalscoring is a real issue. It’s four games without a goal and without creating really.

Second half I can’t think of a save that the goalkeeper has had to make.’

‘Sometimes you go through seasons where one or two of your forwards are struggling with confidence and can’t score goals but it’s every single one of them.

You talk about McTominay with six goals as your leading goalscorer, he’s a midfield player.

The forward players have got to stand up, find some confidence from somewhere and bring some threat to the team. There’s no threat in the team.

‘You have to say it’s a very patched up team.

I know young Mainoo made the mistake but I thought he was very good throughout the game, very controlled and playing above his years really.

I thought the young centre half didn’t really have too much to do but goalscoring is a real problem, they’ve got to solve that somehow.

‘It sums it up. You spend a lot of money on players and you expect more from them.

You had Marcus Rashford who was brilliant last year but again he can’t find the form or the net.

The easiest thing to coach in football is defending and to get yourselves in shape.

The hardest thing to coach in my opinion is to teach them how to score goals.

You can’t get inside their heads, you can’t pass the ball for them, you can’t make decisions for them.

That has to come from them. In the past that quality has been there but at this moment in time it’s seriously lacking.’

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