Don’t blame Mourinho for Man United’s current woes, says Neville

(FILES) in this March 17, 2018 file photo, Manchester United's Portuguese manager Jose Mourinho (R) and French midfielder Paul Pogba leave after the English FA Cup quarter-final football match between Manchester United and Brighton and Hove Albion at Old Trafford in Manchester, north west England. Paul Pogba has been told by Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho he will never captain the club again while the Portuguese remains in charge, according to reports on September 25, 2018, as tensions between United's star midfielder and manager continue to rise. / AFP PHOTO / Oli SCARFF /

Manchester United’s Portuguese manager Jose Mourinho gestures on the touchline during the English Premier League football match between West Ham United and Manchester United at The London Stadium, in east London on September 29, 2018. Ian KINGTON / AFP
Former Manchester United captain Gary Neville defended the club’s beleaguered manager Jose Mourinho yesterday but accused those above him of having no long-term plan to restore former glories.

Defeat at West Ham United on Saturday meant United have won only three of their opening seven Premier League games in their worst start to a season since 1989-90 and now sit 10th in the table.

They are already nine points behind crosstown rivals and league champions Manchester City, who went top this weekend when Chelsea and Liverpool drew 1-1 at Stamford Bridge.

By winning the Europa League and the League Cup in his first season, then finishing second in the Premier League last time, Mourinho improved on the unsuccessful managerial regimes of David Moyes and Louis van Gaal that followed Alex Ferguson’s retirement in 2013.

Supporters have not appreciated the more pragmatic style of football, however, and tensions have been apparent with players such as the record £89-million signing Paul Pogba.

Yet Neville believes the board panicked in sacking Moyes after less than a year and must back Mourinho now.

“This mess started when United sacked David Moyes after eight months and we lost all sense of the values that the club had been built on for 100 years,” he said on Twitter to his four million followers.

“It went into pinball, reactive mode and chasing it. No plan!

“It’s not the manager it’s the lack of football leadership above him. They are bouncing all over the place with no plan!”
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