Crystal Palace 0 Man Utd 0: Was Ten Hag right to leave out Rashford? Dalot key, Onana's wonder save

21 September 2024Last Update :
Crystal Palace 0 Man Utd 0: Was Ten Hag right to leave out Rashford? Dalot key, Onana's wonder save

Are these the games Manchester United need to be winning? Having dominated for long spells they just could not find a goal at Selhurst Park and it took a stunning save from Andre Onana to ensure the point.

Having lost 4-0 to Crystal Palace last season, when Casemiro and veteran Jonny Evans started at centre-back, Erik ten Hag left out the in-form Marcus Rashford this time.

His team responded with a strong first-half performance. Former United goalkeeper Dean Henderson pulled off three smart saves to deny Alejandro Garnacho, Matthijs De Ligt and Lisandro Martinez. Garnacho and Bruno Fernandes also hit the bar before the break.

Lisandro Martinez was perhaps fortunate to escape a red card in the second half after a two-footed lunge in a challenge with Daichi Kamada. The Premier League match centre deemed it reckless rather than dangerous after it was reviewed by VAR — and the booking stood.

Rashford came off the bench in the 61st minute before Onana produced a stunning double save to keep out Eddie Nketiah and Ismaila Sarr and United had to settle for a draw. United have now not won at Palace in their last five attempts.

Carl Anka and Laurie Whitwell analyse the action.


Should Rashford have started?

The pre-match debate among fans was whether Alejandro Garnacho or Amad would get the start on the opposite flank to Rashford. Instead, Ten Hag dropped Rashford to the bench, a surprising move given the player’s return to scoring form with three goals in two games against Southampton and Barnsley.

In his pre-match press conference, Ten Hag had explained that backing Rashford by selecting him despite his barren stretch of 12 matches was key to him improving his performances. So this appeared to run counter to that, a case of Ten Hag putting the lid back on the ketchup bottle (to use his analogy).

Ten Hag also spoke about Rashford knowing he needs to live life right, in response to a question about his indiscretions last season, but United sources insist the call to remove him from the line-up was purely tactical.

Ten Hag said: “Not a difficult decision because we have to rotate, so many games to cover, and we have to give Alejandro games, as we have seen he has such a lot of end products, goals and assists, as a sub. He started only one time this season.”

This is where United need to get to regularly, having a group of players who are competing for selection. Manchester City and Liverpool have established this for years.

Rashford looked disappointed on the bench, with the television cameras regularly cutting to him biting his fingernails, but he did have fun in the warm-up, juggling the ball with Antony as they walked down the tunnel afterwards.

Rashford arrived as a replacement for Joshua Zirkzee on the hour, going on up front as he did against Barnsley.

Rashford shifted to his favoured spot on the left wing with 15 minutes to go when Rasmus Hojlund was sent on, but neither player could produce anything meaningful. 

Laurie Whitwell


Why Dalot has become a key figure

Ten Hag surprised many by selecting Christian Eriksen in midfield for the third time in a week. The advantages of playing the 32-year-old are known at this point. As are his weaknesses.

Luckily the United manager has found a way to get the most out of Eriksen and to stop his midfield from being overrun — Diogo Dalot inverting from left-back into midfield.

The Portgual international picked up where he left off against Southampton, regularly moving into central areas to sit alongside Kobbie Mainoo and give United some extra heft.

On more than one occasion Dalot could be seen in central midfield, urging centre-backs Lisandro Martinez and Matthijs de Ligt to play the ball around Palace’s stubborn defensive shape, rather than attempt risky passes through it.

United dominated Palace for the entirety of the first half (they enjoyed 67 per cent possession) and part of that was down to Dalot keeping things ticking, both in attack and defence. He has become a key player for Ten Hag.

Carl Anka


Onana in fine form

Concentration is an important skill for goalkeepers to have. A No 1 on a top team can spend upwards of an hour doing very little in a game, only to be asked to spring into action to make a key save and stop momentum swinging in the opposite direction.

Crystal Palace had zero touches in United’s penalty box in the first 30 minutes at Selhurst Park. They went in at half-time with an expected goals (xG) total of 0.0. For the majority of Saturday’s game, Onana had to make do with goal kicks and helping his back four in build-up play.

But as Palace slowly mounted in the second half, his other qualities came to the fore. In the 65th minute, Onana made a brilliant double save to stop his team going 1-0 down. He worked well to parry Nketiah’s left-footed strike from 18 yards out, and showed brilliant awareness to get up and launch himself towards the far post to stop Sarr from tapping in the rebound from close range.

It was another double save to sit alongside his penalty-stopping efforts against Southampton last week. Onana’s unorthodox positioning isn’t for everyone, but he’s building a catalogue of important saves for United (he is especially good at stopping shots aimed centrally). With a more settled back four in front of him, fans may soon see the best out of his passing range too.

For UK readers:

For US readers:

Carl Anka


What did Erik ten Hag say?

We will bring you this after he has spoken at the post-match press conference.


What next for Manchester United?

Wednesday, September 25: FC Twente (H), Europa League, 8pm BST, 3pm ET

Sunday, September 29: Tottenham Hotspur (H), Premier League, 4.30pm BST, 11.30am ET


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  • Facing Barnsley on Champions League’s opening night a reminder of where United must get back to
  • Gary Neville on Old Trafford plans: ‘I want to see a world of Manchester United around that stadium’
  • The debate: After Rodri’s comments, should top footballers go on strike over their workload?

(Top photo: Garnacho after hitting the bar. IAN KINGTON/AFP via Getty Images)