Various soccer commentators predicted a narrow win for the Red Devils against Liverpool last Monday night at Old Trafford, but after the game, they were stunned by how Erik Ten Hag outran his colleague Jürgen Klopp tactically.
Manchester United outran and outworked their hated opponent, playing with the kind of intensity and effort that Jürgen Klopp loves to see from his team and Erik ten Hag has yet to extract from theirs.
According to a piece of trustworthy information obtained by www.atspo.com, Erik ten Hag earned the respect of his Manchester United teammates when he joined them for their arduous run in the sun following the defeat against Brentford. Erik ten Hag cancelled a day off and instead made his team run 13.8km because that was the distance Brentford ran more than United the day before.
Ten Hag demonstrated to worldwide players such as Cristiano Ronaldo and Bruno Fernandez that he was willing to accept some of the blame for the Gtech Community Stadium disaster by matching them step-for-step over the entire 8.5-mile journey.
The guys were impressed when they saw how physically exhausted Ten Hag was from joining the team in the sweltering Carrington weather, and Manchester United ran their socks off to defeat Liverpool 2-1 in the Premier League thanks to this choice and directive.
Manchester United’s victory allowed them to revive their campaign and put pressure on its fiercest rivals, who are currently sitting in 16th place in the standings with a total of two points from three games.
Just a few days after receiving criticism, the Dutchman is now universally lauded as a master man-manager due to his ability to tactically hold his own against Jürgen Klopp, who is considered a very accomplished tactician.
The win against Liverpool has been credited to the decision by the Dutchman gaffer when a Carrington source disclosed, “The players were raging when they discovered their punishment for the no-show at Brentford would be an 8.5-mile run. But the moans ceased when it became clear that the manager was planning to do the same as the players. “