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Dan BurkeĀ·16 January 2021
š” Hot Take: Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has made us all look rather foolish

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Dan BurkeĀ·16 January 2021
Remember back in December 2018, when Manchester United sacked JosƩ Mourinho and put Ole Gunnar Solskjaer in caretaker charge?
Even as an interim appointment, it seemed pretty ludicrous.
Solskjaer may have been a United legend but as a manager heād been relegated with Cardiff City and hadnāt done a particularly brilliant job with Norwegian side Molde.
āWhatās he gonna do!? Show the players a video of the 1999 Champions League final!?ā we laughed and wasnāt it funny?
But the the joke was on us when Solskjaer made us look a bit silly by winning his first 11 games in charge.
āYeah, itās just the new manager bounce though isnāt it?ā we said, and we were proved right on 12 February 2019, when Paris Saint-Germain schooled United at Old Trafford to put one foot in the Champions League quarter-final.
But then Solskjaer made us look rather foolish again when United not only went unbeaten in the next five games but also turned the tie with PSG on its head and won 3-1 at the Parc des Princes in the second leg.
A couple of weeks later, Solskjaer was given the job on a full-time basis and this Sunday against Liverpool, he will take charge of his 100th game since taking over permanently.
United head to Anfield with the chance to go six points clear at the top of the Premier League. If they win, it will be Solskjaerās 68th victory in 119 matches as United manager.
That would put him on 1.92 points-per-match (PPM) during his time in charge. For comparison, Jürgen Klopp is currently on 2.04 PPM at Liverpool, while Pep Guardiola is on 2.33 at Manchester City.
Solskjaer may not be on the same level as those two but the stats suggest he isnāt far off.
āYes but United are getting results in spite of their manager. Imagine how good theyād be with someone competent in charge?ā
Thatās a fair question, but we may never truly know whether someone like Mauricio Pochettino or Massimiliano Allegri really would have done a better job than Solskjaer.
His predecessors didnāt exactly set the world alight, although JosĆ© Mourinho can at least boast a slightly better PPM (1.97) at United than Solskjaer. He doesnāt call himself The Special One for nothing.
The big problem Solskjaer has is that even though you might really want to give him credit, itās difficult to pinpoint exactly what he deserves credit for.
Points-per-match mean little in an era when United havenāt won a league title for seven years and the closest the Norwegian has come to winning something so far (finishing third doesnāt count) is losing four semi-finals.
Is he tactically or stylistically innovative? Not particularly.
Has he worked wonders on a low budget? Nope.
Has he even improved United since taking over? Possibly, but itās debatable.
Maybe he does deserve some credit for salvaging a decent team from the wreckage of Mourinhoās Old Trafford tenure. Heās instilled belief in players like Paul Pogba, Marcus Rashford and Anthony Martial, while also identifying influential signings like Bruno Fernandes and Harry Maguire.
(Maybe Ed Woodward also deserves a bit of credit for the squad heās helped build, and maybe he isnāt the devil incarnate after all, but thatās a debate for another day.)
It will be interesting to see how long this current purple patch lasts because weāve seen a few false dawns during Solksjaerās relatively short stint in charge.
United have won nothing yet and it may all end in tears but the very fact theyāre top of the league just over two years since Solskjaer was put in caretaker charge is making those who called him a glorified PE teacher look pretty silly right now.
Itās all gone quiet over there. For the time being, at least.