Manchester United manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer stopped short of saying his side were Premier League title contenders after a hard-fought 2-1 home win over Aston Villa put them level on points with champions and leaders Liverpool.
Liverpool visit Southampton and United travel to Burnley before a mouth-watering clash at Anfield on Jan. 17, albeit in front of eerily empty terraces due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
United look capable of mounting their first real Premier League title challenge since 2013, when they won their record-extending 20th crown in Alex Ferguson’s last season in charge, but his former protégé Solskjaer refused to get carried away.
“Of course we are happy with what we are doing,” Solskjaer told the BBC. “We have shown we have improved a lot in a year. We are getting fitter and fitter and stronger and stronger.
“These players have a great age. They are learning and are hungry to learn which is important. They come in every day with a hunger and desire to be the best on match day. They have been focused.”
But Solskjaer also criticised his team for trying too many audacious passes instead of simple ones against a stubborn Villa side who came close to snatching a draw after being subdued by aggressive United pressure in the first half.
“It was maybe a little too open and we wasted chances. We tried to play the Hollywood pass instead of securing the first one and using the space that was there,” he said.
“You are always delighted with three points. We had a good save at the end and Eric Bailly made a fantastic block so that probably saved two points for us.”
Aston Villa boss Dean Smith backed referee Michael Oilver’s decision to award United a game-winning penalty converted by Bruno Fernandes, given after a VAR check as Paul Pogba went down under a challenge from Douglas Luiz.
“My view was it was a penalty from where I was stood,” said Smith.
“I thought Douglas Luiz got too tight with Paul Pogba but then I’ve just gone in and seen it back and I think he’s just tripped himself up. I think there’s enough doubt there to send the referee over to the screen.
“I wasn’t happy with the first half. We were miles off the levels where we have been. It felt like a testimonial pace then they deservedly had the lead at half time. I told the players we needed to be upping our levels.”
More Stories
Deadly Haaland Strikes Twice To Give Man City Win At West Ham
Dasilva Scores Late As Brentford Rally For Draw At Leicester
Ten Hag Era At United Begins With Defeat To Brighton
Manchester United Must Let Ronaldo Leave – Rooney
England’s Moeen Fears Losing 50-Over Cricket Due To Unsustainable Schedule
City Stay Will Not Be Determined By European Success – Guardiola
Magnificent Messi Inspires PSG Win Over Clermont
Medvedev Ends Losing Streak In finals With Los Cabos Title
Jorginho Penalty Earns Chelsea Narrow Opening-Day Win At Everton
Dominant Newcastle Spoil Forest’s Top-Flight Return
Brilliant Boks bag biggest win over All Blacks in 94 years
Tottenham Crush Southampton For Impressive Opening Win