FIRST, the easy part — Erik ten Hag must go and Erik ten Hag WILL go before long.
Perhaps as soon as Sunday’s visit to Aston Villa and probably at some point during October.
The home thumping by Tottenham was the TENTH time Manchester United have been thrashed by three goals or more in just over two years of the Dutchman’s reign.
Ten Hag’s United don’t just lose consistently, they are thrashed consistently.
Crystal Palace, Bournemouth, Brighton and Brentford are among the teams to have demolished his outfit.
Sir Alex Ferguson’s most famous three-word team talk — “Lads, it’s Tottenham” — could now be turned on its head by Ange Postecoglou or several other Premier League bosses.
“Lads, it’s Man United.”
Facing United hasn’t held a fear factor for many years. Now, it is a fixture openly relished by many — a big-name scalp which is relatively easy to come by. There has been a regular cycle of doom around Old Trafford for the last 11 years, under six different managers.
United are trounced on a Sunday afternoon, Gary Neville and Roy Keane rant on the telly, everyone speculates on the manager’s future on a Monday. Managers come and go, many players linger for too long, and United continue to be largely terrible.
Yet under Ten Hag — who offers little as a coach or man-manager — the bad days are even worse. It was the wrong decision for Sir Jim Ratcliffe and his Ineos crew to keep faith with the former Ajax boss after last season’s FA Cup win.
And then to have signed another tranche of overpriced Dutch players.
Ratcliffe will realise that by now, and it is only a matter of time before Ten Hag is gone.
So now for the hard part. Who, realistically, takes over?
And, more pertinently, who would want to?
This is a mid-table squad at an underachieving club, with a lot of unwanted players on big money. And Ratcliffe is an instinctive cost-cutter who may not pay top dollar to the next manager.
If this club wasn’t called ‘Manchester United’, it wouldn’t be an especially desirable job.
The good news for United is that their new sporting director, Dan Ashworth, is a very decent judge of a manager.
He has been instrumental in three previous managerial appointments — Gareth Southgate for England, Graham Potter for Brighton and Eddie Howe for Newcastle.
None were wildly popular at the time, all were conspicuous successes.
Interestingly, Ashworth’s No 1 choice for the Newcastle job was Unai Emery, who turned him down to stay at Villarreal but has since proved that judgment right by excelling at Aston Villa.
Not many options
Emery may well deliver the coup de grace to Ten Hag on Sunday — especially with Bruno Fernandes suspended and Kobbie Mainoo an injury doubt.
And the Spaniard would be an excellent fit for United — yet there is next to no chance that he would abandon Villa’s Champions League campaign to take the Old Trafford job, not least because he isn’t a stark raving madman.
Howe would be another good candidate to succeed Ten Hag but, although he has become frustrated on Tyneside, the Saudis would surely not allow Ratcliffe to poach Howe, as they reluctantly did with Ashworth.
Potter is available but his Chelsea experience and lack of charisma would make him a tough sell. Which brings us to Southgate, who remains close with Ashworth and is an excellent man-manager who was seriously considered by United last spring.
Gareth Southgate concern
Yet, despite having led England to two of their three major finals, Southgate’s reputation for over-caution was only enhanced during the Euros. — Sun.




