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Analysis

Erik ten Hag's arduous task: Manchester United hit rock bottom in the Premier League but is it too early to judge?

Erik ten Hag's reign is off to the worst possible start, but it is not the first time Man Utd have lost their opening two Premier League games; watch Man Utd vs Liverpool live on Sky Sports from 6.30pm on Monday Night Football (August 22); kick-off 8pm

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Image: Erik ten Hag's Manchester United were blown away by Brentford in the first half on Saturday

Manchester United's embarrassing 4-0 defeat at Brentford reiterated the arduous task facing Erik ten Hag. United are bottom of the Premier League, but they have been here before. Is it too early to judge?

Ten Hag's hardest test just got harder

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FREE TO WATCH: Highlights of Brentford's win over Manchester United in the Premier League

Criticising Manchester United has become a weekly occurrence. There's no denying they have been bad for a while, but just when it seemed they could not get any worse, along came Brentford.

Ole Gunnar Solskjaer was apparently the problem. Then it was Ralf Rangnick. Now Ten Hag is under the spotlight. The Dutchman faces his most challenging task.

The former Ajax boss is undoubtedly an excellent coach given his success in recent years, but his tactics have already faced criticism following Saturday's humiliation in west London.

Against a tall and physical Brentford side, his decision to drop 6ft 4in Scott McTominay and deploy Christian Eriksen in a deeper midfield role was a bold one. So too was sticking with 5ft 9in Lisandro Martinez at centre-back while 6ft 3in Raphael Varane started on the bench. Neither paid off.

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Manchester United manager Erik ten Hag says his players didn't play with belief or responsibility in the defeat by Brentford
Will De Gea adapt to Ten Hag's style?
Will De Gea adapt to Ten Hag's style?

David de Gea's mistakes cost Manchester United at Brentford but there are also doubts about whether he is a good fit for Erik ten Hag's style of play.

Brentford may have only had four shots on target in the first half - all of which went in - but it could have easily been more. The hosts outworked, outmuscled and outclassed their opponents, but mistakes such as the ones David de Gea made for the first and second goals are something Ten Hag can do nothing about.

Brentford ran 13.8km more than United on Saturday. Ten Hag's response? To make his players run the same distance during training the very next day. United supporters are confident he is the man to turn their side's fortunes around, but the mess he has inherited since taking charge this summer has never been clearer.

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United have lost four consecutive league matches for the first time since February 1979. They have also fallen to seven consecutive away league defeats for the first time since losing 10 on the bounce between September and December 1936.

There have been embarrassing results before - Brighton away last season under Rangnick springs to mind - but Saturday's felt the worst of the lot.

"I'm convinced I'll get it done - I did it everywhere," Ten Hag told Sky Sports on Friday when asked how long he needs to bring the glory days back to Old Trafford.

But the 52-year-old has become the first manager to lose each of his first two games in charge of United since John Chapman in November 1921.

The intensity and physicality of the Premier League have given him no time to settle. It is clear he requires time to mould a team in his image. He needs more signings, though, and there's no guarantee he'll get them. The future of Cristiano Ronaldo continues to be an unwelcome distraction too.

The club requires "open-heart surgery". Those were the words of Ten Hag's predecessor Rangnick back in April. It looks like he was right.

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Gary Neville and Jamie Redknapp passionately discuss what has gone wrong for Manchester United

Man Utd bottom but is it too early to judge?

Manchester United last began a top-flight campaign with back-to-back defeats in the Premier League's inaugural season in 1992/93.

Thirty years ago, Sir Alex Ferguson's side lost 2-1 at Sheffield United on the opening day - with Brian Deane scoring the competition's first goal - and followed that up with a 3-0 home defeat by Everton.

That left United bottom for three days from August 19 to 21, but a 1-1 home draw against Ipswich on August 22 was enough to lift them off the foot of the table and they never looked back, losing just four matches out of their remaining 39 to become the first Premier League champions. They won the title with 84 points from 42 games - 10 points clear of second-placed Aston Villa.

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The Athletic's Laurie Whitwell described Manchester United's performance against Brentford as 'pathetic'

Three years later in 1995, an opening-day defeat by Villa on August 19 saw them sit 19th out of 20 teams for three days until Bolton slipped below them.

The loss to Villa prompted Match of the Day pundit Alan Hansen to declare that "you don't win anything with kids", but their stay in the relegation zone was short-lived as a run of five wins followed and they ended up winning the league and FA Cup double that season.

Fast forward to August 25, 2007 when a three-match winless start - draws against Reading and Portsmouth before a 1-0 defeat in the Manchester derby - left them 19th again.

That was the catalyst for an eight-match winning run and the season ended with United as both Premier League and Champions League winners.

Is this Man Utd's lowest moment?

Sky Sports' Zinny Boswell:

A reminder then, perhaps, that there were bad times under Ferguson, too. Remember the 6-1 hammering by noisy neighbours Manchester City in 2011? The 6-3 defeat at Southampton just a week on from the 5-0 thrashing to Newcastle in October 1996? Or maybe the 5-0 loss to Chelsea in 1999?

It's important to remember that it wasn't all Fergie-time winners, trophy lifts and trebles before the legendary manager retired.

The difference? Those were blips. This is now a reality.

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Sam Allardyce believes Erik ten Hag now understands how big the Manchester United job is after Saturday's 4-0 loss

In the past 12 months, United have been thrashed 5-0 by Liverpool at Old Trafford, thumped 4-1 by Watford and demolished 4-0 by Brighton. That's forgetting the 6-1 drubbing by Tottenham at home a season prior and the 4-0 hammering by Everton in 2019.

What makes Saturday at Brentford worse than those moments? This is supposed to be the good bit.

Ten Hag is meant to be in the honeymoon phase. A ponderous transfer window has left him with his second-choice centre-back target, free-agent signing Christian Eriksen and a left-back that is yet to start. Otherwise, this is the same squad that produced United's worst Premier League season.

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Darren Lewis and Henry Winter look at how the Sunday papers reacted to another shocking defeat for Manchester United

There are two weeks left of the transfer window, giving United the opportunity to right their wrongs and back their manager.

The sense of hope and optimism that Ten Hag's arrival brought is gone. Suddenly, 36 Premier League games feels like an awfully long road ahead. Up next, just the small matter of Liverpool on Monday Night Football.

Watch Manchester United vs Liverpool live on Sky Sports Premier League & Main Event from 6.30pm on Monday Night Football (August 22); kick-off 8pm.

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