United's demolition man abandons his comfort blanket

Ferguson's latest model blends the best of his previous sides but has yet to
prove it can match them

Kevin McCarra
Saturday September 20, 2003
The Guardian

Managers are depicted as team-builders, but they also have to be demolition
men. With a couple of swings of the wrecking ball, Sir Alex Ferguson knocked
David Beckham and Juan Sebastian Ver�n out of the fabric of Old Trafford.
Anyone who stays in the job for 17 years has to master the art of
redevelopment and the Scot has always set about the work with a provocative
boldness.
The contentious sale of Paul Ince in 1995 helped clear a space for Beckham
and the other youngsters who were instrumental in United's command of
English football and the 1999 triumph in the Champions League. Now the squad
is being put through another transformation and tomorrow's match with
Arsenal will be a guide to the latest phase in Ferguson's restlessly
progressive career. By acting with alacrity, he has again ensured that the
alterations are matters of free choice rather than grim necessity.

Tim Howard, Kleberson, Eric Djemba-Djemba, Cristiano Ronaldo and David
Bellion were all signed this summer while Rio Ferdinand and, in effect, John
O'Shea are just easing themselves into their second season as regulars in
the line-up. This time, however, spectators do not have to familiarise
themselves only with new faces.

Ferguson has been reviewing his own thinking. The manager has strayed
further than ever from that British comfort blanket, the 4-4-2 system. So
committed is he to placing at least two covering players in front of the
defence that Ferguson has the quintet of Roy Keane, Nicky Butt, Phil
Neville, Djemba-Djemba and Kleberson as candidates.

The manager is looking for greater stability, particularly in the Champions
League. It is as if he hopes to merge the best qualities of the two
memorable sides he has so far constructed at Old Trafford. The first of them
had to be hardy to withstand the pressure of securing United's first League
championship for 26 years, in 1993, and completing the double the following
season.

Much as Eric Cantona was adored for his panache, the team was packed with
individuals whose ability was complemented by so great a degree of
aggression that Ferguson had to call a meeting to rage at the squad over its
indiscipline. With Steve Bruce, Ince, Bryan Robson, Mark Hughes and, from
the summer of 1993, Keane in the ranks there was certainly no timidity to
prevent the team from getting into scraps. "The thread that links all of
Ferguson's teams is the strong characters they contain," said Denis Irwin,
the left-back of the side.

Gary Pallister, the centre-back, recalls the combativeness nurtured in the
early 1990s. "If teams wanted to play us at football we could deal with
that," he said, "and if they wanted to test us physically we had more than
enough in our ranks to cope with that. In previous years when we had played
the likes of Wimbledon there had been a bit of a soft underbelly."

Apart from the silverware, United also had stability as a prize for
re-establishing themselves. "Once we had won the title, there was no longer
that pressure on the younger lads," said Pallister. "The standards were
getting higher and higher. They could relate to that. It eased the passage
for Scholes, Butt, the Nevilles and Beckham, although they obviously had a
great amount of ability."

Irwin went on to win the European Cup with the rising generation that
touched new levels from the mid-1990s. "United's teams have got quicker and
technically better since then," said the defender, who is now with Wolves.

With confidence on the rise and youth to the fore, United depended on verve
and energy. Despite the defeat of Bayern Munich in the 1999 final, however,
the side also began to reveal limitations. The club's status will be limited
until, like Real Madrid, they turn themselves into regular winners of the
Champions League.

"The changes have been coming over the past year or two when we've seen
Giggs and Scholes being used somewhere around the centre-forward," said
Gordon McQueen, the former United defender. "Alex has obviously sat down and
thought: 'We've been to one Champions League final and that's it. We're a
big, big club and we should be doing better.' He's trying to rectify the
situation."

Last season's defeat by Real Madrid had a profound effect on Ferguson, who
has reflected on the damage done to his back four by players running from
deep positions. He wants to guard against that while also emulating Real's
attacking methods. In recent seasons the Spanish champions did offset the
flamboyant style with the covering provided by Flavio Conceicao and Claude
Makelele.

Ferguson has something similar in mind. With Ruud van Nistelrooy
intimidating an entire defence by himself, United can use two banks of
midfielders. The Dutchman can therefore benefit from the support of, say,
Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, Scholes and Giggs. "Picking up late runs from midfield
has always been a nightmare for defenders," said McQueen approvingly.

United may previously have been too conventional. "Maybe Sir Alex believes
they were a little bit predictable in a 4-4-2," said Pallister. "The big
weapon was Beckham's crosses from the right and teams were determined to
snuff that out. Sometimes they succeeded. I think the manager wanted a
different plan. He's looking for that little bit of trickery that will make
something happen in a split second."

Having failed to buy the quicksilver Ronaldinho for that purpose Ferguson
must now trust that Cristiano Ronaldo matures rapidly. United's ideas may be
sound, but it remains to be seen whether the sheer technique of Beckham and
Ver�n will be missed. The outcome is uncertain, but Ferguson has never shied
away from a gamble.


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