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Premier League issues statement on Bruno Fernandes red card - after Man United captain was sent off for lashing out at Spurs star James Maddison in humiliating Old Trafford defeat

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With his side 1-0 down the Portuguese midfielder scraped Maddison on the shin

United went on to lose 3-0 in woeful display to heap pressure on Erik ten Hag

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The Premier League has released a statement explaining Chris Kavanagh's decision to show Manchester United captain Bruno Fernandes a red card in his side's crushing 3-0 home defeat to Tottenham Hotspur.

The midfielder was sent off just before half-time after he lashed out at Spurs star James Maddison following a frustrating first 45 minutes.

The incident, which happened while the away side were leading 1-0, all but settled the result on Sunday afternoon with Ange Postecoglou's outfit later adding two second-half goals.

After the match, Fernandes and his under-pressure manager Erik Ten Hag both slammed the decision with the Portuguese saying that the tackle was 'a clear foul but never a red card'.

Now the Premier League have confirmed the reasoning behind the huge call, which condemns the United man to a spell on the sidelines.

It said: 'The referee issued a red card to Fernandes for a challenge on Maddison. The VAR checked and confirmed the referee's call of serious foul play.'

Finishes from Dejan Kulusevski and Dominic Solanke built on Brennan Johnson's third-minute opener and gave Tottenham their fourth consecutive win in all competitions.

In the aftermath of what proved to be the key incident of the encounter, Fernandes could be seen chatting with Maddison on the pitch. Following the match, the United man revealed what was discussed.

He said: 'I just wanted to come and talk and be myself because my team-mates deserve that for what they have done in the game playing with one man less – particularly as I was the man sent off, the one that let them down.

'I think we struggled a bit and then the red card makes it worse. I have to appreciate all the effort my team-mates have done to try and return to the game, but it wasn't possible. The team showed a lot of character, a lot of resilience, a lot of fight. They tried. It wasn't easy.

'No one likes to be sent off. It's not a good feeling. We end up conceding another two goals.

'I don't go in with the studs, it's a clear foul but never a red card. Maddison said it is a foul but it's not a red card. If this is a red card we have to look at other incidents. I think it's never a red card. It's a foul if he wants to give a yellow. I don't understand why VAR doesn't call the referee to the screen.'

Ten Hag added: 'The red card changes the game. I don't think it was a red card.'

Man United legend and Sky Sports pundit Gary Neville said that Fernandes could have no complaints about the sending off.

'It just sums up Manchester United in this first half, to be fair they've been an absolute disgrace,' he said. 'It's one of the worst performances I've seen in Erik ten Hag's time at Manchester United and that's saying something.

'It's been really bad. And he will not be able to believe what he's watched. I'm not talking patterns of play, I'm talking application to a football match. And now, his captain sent off.

'When players react like that, it means something has gone on that we haven't seen initially. He's gone knee high Bruno Fernandes. I think he slips just before the tackle but he's not going to get away with it.'

Fellow pundit Jamie Redknapp, meanwhile, disagreed with Neville and suggested that the sending off was harsh.

He said: 'He slips as he comes in to try to win the challenge. It's petty, it was a bit petulant. He sticks out his right leg. When you actually see it in slow motion, his feet go under him and he just sticks out his leg, I think it's a yellow card.'

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Tottenham condemn 'abhorrent homophobic chanting' from sections of away support at Old Trafford during 3-0 win over Man United in strongly-worded club statement

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Tottenham have condemned the 'abhorrent homophobic chanting' from sections of the away support during Sunday's 3-0 win at Manchester United.

Spurs issued a statement on Sunday evening vowing to take 'the strongest possible action' over the offensive chants, which the PA news agency understands were allegedly aimed at United's former Chelsea midfielder Mason Mount and Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta.

'The club is aware of abhorrent homophobic chanting from sections of our away support at Old Trafford today,' a Tottenham statement read.

'This is simply unacceptable, hugely offensive and no way to show support for the team.

'The club will be working closely with the police and stewards to identify anyone instigating or joining in with the chanting - we shall take the strongest possible action in accordance with our sanctions and banning policy.

'Supporters in attendance today can report anything they've seen or heard in confidence to supporterservices@tottenhamhotspur.com.

'We shall be continuing our work with our LGBTQ+ supporters' association, Proud Lilywhites, to ensure a welcoming and inclusive environment for all fans on matchdays.

'We are justly proud of our superb and loyal support, home and away. However, we all have a responsibility to act as ambassadors of Tottenham Hotspur and discrimination of any kind has no place at our club.'

Proud Lilywhites, Spurs' LGBTQI+ Supporters' Association, reposted the club's statement on X along with the message: 'Loved what happened on the pitch at Old Trafford; didn't love the homophobic chanting off the pitch.

'We're all Spurs fans just like you. When you sing these songs you're telling us we don't belong; and we do - as much as you do.'

Goals from Brennan Johnson, Dejan Kulusevski and Dominic Solanke secured a convincing away win, with United captain Bruno Fernandes shown a straight red card just before half-time for a challenge on James Maddison.

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THE NOTEBOOK: Brennan Johnson shines on his dad's old patch as Spurs thrash Man United in front of Keely Hodgkinson and Lee Carsley

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Tottenham Hotspur won 3-0 at Manchester United in the Premier League on Sunday thanks to goals from Brennan Johnson, Dejan Kulusevski and Dominic Solanke.

Two of those goals came after United captain Bruno Fernandes had been sent off in the 42nd minute for a foul on James Maddison.

However, the away side had been superior even when it was XI vs XI.

Sunday's result saw Spurs rise up to eighth in the table, while United ended the weekend 12th.

CHRIS WHEELER took his notebook to Old Trafford and he jotted down four observations for Mail Sport.

Proud day for Johnson Snr

It was a proud day for Brennan Johnson's dad David, a former Youth Cup winner at United, who saw his son score at the Stretford End to put Tottenham on course for a comfortable victory.

Johnson Snr didn't make a first-team appearance for the club although he was on the bench for a Champions League tie against Galatasaray 20 years ago in 2004. He went on to play for Ipswich, Nottingham Forest, both Sheffield clubs and Burnley.

The Sky Sports cameras picked him out in the crowd at Old Trafford when Brennan put Spurs ahead in the third minute. The Wales international almost scored another when he hit the post and then had a hand in Dejan Kulusevski's second goal.

One for the family album

Nice touch from Alejandro Garnacho who walked out holding his young son Enzo ahead of his first birthday on Friday, before handing the tot to his partner Eva Garcia on the touchline.

It was one for the family album, even though there was little else Garnacho will want to remember about this game.

At least United fans can cheer for Keely

Britain's 800m Olympic champion Keely Hodgkinson realised her dream of parading a gold medal on the pitch at Old Trafford before kick-off.

Atherton-born Hodgkinson, who got a warm reception from the fans and a light shower from the sprinkler system, said before the Paris Games this summer: 'I live across the road, as well, so I look at this stadium pretty much every morning when I wake up.'

Maddison sharp in front of Carsley

Interim England manager Lee Carsley was in the directors' box as he prepares to name his squad for the Nations League fixtures against Greece and Finland next month.

James Maddison did his hopes of a call-up no harm at all, but those in red didn't fare so well.

Marcus Rashford was taken off and Kobbie Mainoo and Mason Mount were forced off with injuries.

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The bizarre moment that sums up Man United's struggles as they're left with NINE players on the pitch in dreadful 3-0 defeat by Tottenham at Old Trafford

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Manchester United were briefly reduced to nine men during their 3-0 defeat to Tottenham Hotspur thanks to a substitution mishap which summed up a humiliating afternoon at Old Trafford.

The Red Devils crumbled to a miserable loss which piled further pressure on manager Erik Ten Hag as goals from Brennan Johnson, Dejan Kulusevski and Dominic Solanke handed Spurs a fourth consecutive win in all competitions.

With the away side on top just before half-time, Bruno Fernandes was sent off for a tackle on James Maddison which gave United a mountain to climb to get back into the contest.

To make matters worse, England midfielder Kobbie Mainoo hobbled off injured just moments later as the wheels began to fall off for Ten Hag's outfit.

At one point United were reduced to nine men after they appeared to miscue the substitution protocol, leaving replacement Mason Mount stranded on the sidelines.

The play had restarted before the former Chelsea man had a chance to get onto the pitch with the home fans booing in frustration at the farcical mishap.

When the ball finally went dead, Mount entered the fray but the midfielder was later replaced himself after an injury left blood pouring from his head.

The chaotic first-half incident also saw Mainoo appear to complain to substitutes Antony and Casemiro about something with the two men in bibs looking on in bemusement.

The breakthrough in Sunday's clash, which continued a trend of early goals in matches between the two, had come from an unlikely source in the away side's back line.

Picking up the ball inside his own half, Micky van de Ven channelled the spirit of Franz Beckenbauer as he glided unchallenged down the left channel before beating three men as he arrived in the opposition box.

He then fizzed a delivery low across the home side's goal, which was met by a gleeful Johnson who tapped home. The finish continued the former Nottingham Forest man's rich vein of form and gave him a fourth goal in four matches.

He then nearly doubled his tally for the day after being found in bags of space by Kulusevski inside the United box, but the right winger's low strike crashed into the left-hand post.

Alejandro Garnacho then also struck the woodwork but it was all Spurs and the home side ressembled a group of ungelled individuals, as they so often have over the last few seasons and Fernandes's red card summed this up.

But they need not have worried. Just over a minute into the second period, the away side repeated their speedy trick with Kulusevski scoring his first of the season.

Johnson turned provider as he bounded into the United box exploiting the bags of space which had become symptomatic of the home team's chaotic defensive shape.

He found Kulusevski in the area who poked it past Onana at full stretch before wheeling off in manic celebration.

An impressive double save from Onana saw Werner pass the ball straight at the keeper before the Cameroonian pounced to grab it from the feet of Solanke.

But these near-misses served to embolden United who creeped back into the game, backed by defiant fans who had braved the chilly and wet September weather.

Lisandro Martinez was at the centre of the action with the defender shooting wide and having a strike blocked as the Red Devils looked for an unlikely goal to halve the deficit.

Substitute Casemiro then almost silenced the critics of the last few weeks as he laced it past the post on the half volley with Spurs now creaking.

Any vague hopes of a miraculous comeback to save Ten Hag's skin were demolished with 13 minutes left on the clock as new signing Solanke bagged a decisive third.

Pape Sarr flicked on the ball from a corner and it fell into the path of the Englishman who poked home from just four yards out - his third goal against United in three matches.

Ten Hag remained motionless on the touchline as thousands of exasperated Red Devils supporters headed for the exits around him. Another day closer to a long-drawn out departure from the United hotseat.

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Bruno Fernandes reveals what James Maddison told him after he was sent off for foul on Tottenham midfielder in defeat - as Man United captain fronts the media following Old Trafford humiliation

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Bruno Fernandes has revealed that James Maddison told him he did not deserve the red card he received in his side's humiliating 3-0 defeat to Tottenham Hotspur at Old Trafford.

The Manchester United captain was sent off for a tackle which scraped the shin of the Spurs midfielder just before half-time.

With the away side already on top at 1-0, Fernandes's first red card for the club all but settled the result this afternoon with Ange Postecoglou's outfit later adding two second-half goals.

Finishes from Dejan Kulusevski and Dominic Solanke built on Brennan Johnson's third-minute opener and gave Tottenham their fourth consecutive win in all competitions.

In what proved the key incident of the encounter, Fernandes lashed out at Maddison and could be seen chatting with his opponent shortly after. Following the match, the United man revealed what was discussed.

He said: 'I let my team-mates down. I do appreciate everything they do on the pitch. We didn't start the game well. We get the situation with the red card. They did very well. It was difficult to cover all the spaces. I'm proud of the team.

'No one likes to be sent off. It's not a good feeling. We end up conceding another two goals.

'I don't go in with the studs, it's a clear foul but never a red card. Maddison said it is a foul but it's not a red card. If this is a red card we have to look at other incidents. I think it's never a red card. It's a foul if he wants to give a yellow. I don't understand why VAR doesn't call the referee to the screen.

'We find a lot of spaces but we could never connect. It wasn't always like one touch more. We gave the ball away too many times for them to counter.'

On Sky Sports, former Spurs midfielder Jamie Redknapp said: 'They had a couple of chances but they didn't really stir the crowd into life.

'It's tough down to ten men. You can't just switch it on and off. I don't think they were good enough in any capacity.'

Both sides came into the Sunday afternoon clash with the same set of mediocre records - a couple of wins, a couple of draws, and a couple of defeats - and with an urgent need to kickstart their campaign.

Each outfit boasts an array of pacey, attacking talent notwithstanding Heung-Min Son's late withdrawal from the Spurs starting eleven with a suspected hamstring issue.

But the breakthrough, which continued a trend of early goals in matches between the two, came from an unlikely source in the away side's back line.

With statistics often suggesting van de Ven is the league's fastest man, the enterprising centre-back's surging run in the third minute should not have shocked United - yet their defence was statuesque as the Dutchman set up the opener.

Picking up the ball inside his own half, the 23-year-old channelled the spirit of Franz Beckenbauer as he glided unchallenged down the left channel before beating three men as he arrived in the opposition box.

He then fizzed a delivery low across the home side's goal, which was met by a gleeful Johnson who tapped home.

The finish continued the former Nottingham Forest man's rich vein of form and gave him a fourth goal in four matches.

A shocked Old Trafford descended into a hushed murmur - the near silence only broken by the odd, equally muted, flurry of boos as the Red Devils comitted a series of unforced errors, passing the ball out of play and losing challenges.

Johnson then nearly doubled his tally for the day after being found in bags of space by Kulusevski inside the United box, but the right winger's low strike crashed into the left-hand post.

Spurs were almost made to pay for the wastefulness just seconds later as a jinky Kobbie Mainoo run ended with a clever ball to Joshua Zirkzee whose shot from 12 yards out was straight at Guglielmo Vicario.

But the visitors remained on top creating a string of chances. An acrobatic attempt from Cristian Romero had United hearts in mouths before Timo Werner, released into space in the penalty area, struck a weak finish at a grateful Onana.

Alejandro Garnacho hit the post but it was all Spurs and the home side ressembled a group of ungelled individuals as they so often have over the last few seasons.

United's frustration soon boiled over. Captain Fernandes petulantly flicking out a leg to catch James Maddison just below the knee to receive his first red card in a four-year spell at Old Trafford.

United's woes worsened as Mainoo went off injured, with the side briefly reduced to nine men as Mason Mount waited excruciatingly to come on.

Ten Hag's side were now just desperate for half-time to arrive and when it did Spurs walked off the pitch with mixed emotions - a spring in their step after a free-flowing team performance but a sense of ruefulness after a host of missed opportunities.

But they need not have worried. Just over a minute into the second period, the away side repeated their speedy trick with Kulusevski scoring his first of the season.

Johnson turned provider as he bounded into the United box exploiting the bags of space which had become symptomatic of the home team's chaotic defensive shape.

He found Kulusevski in the area who poked it past Onana at full stretch before wheeling off in manic celebration.

The atmosphere at Old Trafford threatened to turn toxic and Spurs wasted more chances to take the game well out of sight as the away fans chanted 'you're getting sacked in the morning' in the direction of Ten Hag.

An impressive double save from Onana saw Werner pass the ball straight at the keeper before the Cameroonian pounced to grab it from the feet of Solanke.

But these near-misses served to embolden United who creeped back into the game, backed by defiant fans who had braved the chilly and wet September weather.

Lisandro Martinez was at the centre of the action with the defender shooting wide and having a strike blocked as the Red Devils looked for an unlikely goal to halve the deficit.

Substitute Casemiro then almost silenced the critics of the last few weeks as he laced it past the post on the half volley with Spurs now creaking.

Any vague hopes of a miraculous comeback to save Ten Hag's skin were demolished with 13 minutes left on the clock as new signing Solanke bagged a decisive third.

Pape Sarr flicked on the ball from a corner and it fell into the path of the Englishman who poked home from just four yards out - his third goal against United in three matches.

Ten Hag remained motionless on the touchline as thousands of exasperated Red Devils supporters headed for the exits around him. Another day closer to a long-drawn out departure from the United hotseat.

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Jamie Redknapp says Man United are 'going backwards' and have hit 'rock bottom' after their dismal display during home defeat by Tottenham

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Jamie Redknapp reckons Manchester United are 'going backwards' after watching them lose 3-0 at home to Tottenham Hotspur on Sunday.

Spurs completely bossed the game at Old Trafford and should have been more than 1-0 in front when United captain Bruno Fernandes was sent off for a foul on James Maddison in the 42nd minute.

Brennan Johnson had fired Spurs ahead in the third minute following a stunning assist by Micky van de Ven.

Dejan Kulusevski and Dominic Solanke then added goals against United's 10 men in the second half but Spurs also missed multiple big chances to score more.

Sunday's result left United with just seven points from their first six games in the Premier League this season.

In his post-game analysis for Sky Sports, former Spurs and Liverpool captain Redknapp tore into Erik ten Hag's United side.

'It gets to a point where you feel almost sorry for the manager, he looks out of his depth,' Redknapp said.

'It was so easy for Tottenham. It feels to me now, £616 million spent, United are going backwards. They are rock bottom right now.

'It's embarrassing. A club of this stature shouldn't be producing performances like that. They don't want it enough.'

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Man United 0-3 Tottenham PLAYER RATINGS: Who was well below par for Man United? Which new Red Devils signing struggled with the pace of the game? And who was Spurs' star man?

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Man United suffered a crushing 3-0 defeat at home by Tottenham on Sunday

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Manchester United's miserable 3-0 defeat at home by Tottenham Hotspur left fans asking tough questions about individual performances. With several players failing to meet expectations, the match exposed weaknesses all over the pitch.

Who were the main culprits in United's collapse, and how did Spurs capitalise so effectively? Some new signings, expected to make an impact, struggled to adapt to the pace and physicality of the Premier League.

One of United's newest additions had a debut to forget. A £50million signing was unable to cope with Spurs' fast tempo, repeatedly caught out of position and overrun in midfield.

Adding to United's misery, captain Bruno Fernandes received a straight red card before half-time after catching James Maddison with a high challenge. Tottenham, meanwhile, were clinical - with one player in particular leading the charge for Ange Postecoglou's men.

Mail Sport's CHRIS WHEELER was in attendance at Old Trafford on Sunday afternoon to reveal how each team got on.

Manchester United (4-2-3-1)

Andre Onana - 7

No chance with the goals but kept United in the game with one-on-one saves from Maddison, Werner twice and Solanke.

Noussair Mazraoui - 4

Struggled against the pace of Werner and Udogie, particularly after he was booked for foul on the latter before half-time.

Matthijs De Ligt - 4.5

Looked shaky but a bit unlucky that the deflection from his challenge on Johnson led to Kulusevski scoring the second.

Lisandro Martinez - 4

Well below par. His slip allowed Spurs to break for the second goal, and booked for a wild challenge on Maddison.

Diogo Dalot - 4

Struggled at left back again and spent more than half the game on a yellow after hauling down Kulusevski.

Manuel Ugarte - 4

First league start and United's new £50m midfielder struggled to adapt to the pace of the game. Caught out time and again.

Kobbie Mainoo - 5

Created a couple of openings in the early stages but limped off injured as Fernandes was being sent off.

Marcus Rashford - 5

His pace was a threat to Spurs' high line but he couldn't make it count with a killer finish or pass.

Bruno Fernandes - 3

Straight red card before half-time seemed harsh but he was nowhere near the ball and caught Maddison under the knee.

Alejandro Garnacho - 5.5

Plenty of effort but lacked an end product. Rattled the post with a fierce effort in the first half.

Joshua Zirkzee - 4

Desperate for a goal but snatched at his best chance in the 22nd minute and was replaced at half-time.

Substitutes

Mason Mount (for Mainoo 45, 5)

Casemiro (for Zirkzee 46, 5.5)

Rasmus Hojlund (for Rashford 72, 5)

Christian Eriksen (Ugarte 72, 5)

Amad Diallo (for Mount 85)

Tottenham (4-1-4-1)

Guglielmo Vicario - 6.5

Would have expected to be tested far more but a routine save from Zirkzee summed up his afternoon's work.

Pedro Porro - 6.5

Had his hands full with Rashford in the first half and Garnacho in the second, but coped well on the whole.

Cristian Romero - 6

Almost scored with a flying volley in the first half, but lucky that a handball in the box was deemed accidental.

Micky van de Ven - 7

Incredible assist for the first goal, winning the ball deep inside own half and then charging clear to set up Johnson.

Destiny Udogie - 6.5

Fired early chance over but was struggling with a knock for much of the first half and replaced at the interval.

Rodrigo Bentancur - 6

Solid display in the middle helped Spurs to control the game and snuff out what little threat United could offer.

Brennan Johnson - 8

A constant threat. Converted the early goal, hit the post with another effort and got forward again to set up the second.

Dejan Kulusevski - 7.5

Showed some lovely touches to create chances for Maddison and Johnson, then claimed the second goal with clever finish.

James Maddison - 7

Missed early chance but full of energy and ideas. Drew a red card from Fernandes and a yellow from Martinez.

Timo Werner - 5

Needs to be more clinical in front of goal. Two more one-on-one chances here but he couldn't convert.

Dominic Solanke - 6.5

He's been a thorn in United's side before and did it again by prodding home the third goal from close range.

Substitutes

Djed Spence (for Udogie 46, 6),

Mikey Moore (for Johnson 76, 6)

Lucas Bergvall (for Lerner 77, 6),

Pape Matar Sarr (for Maddison 77, 6)

Radu Dragusin (for Van de Ven 81)

Referee

Chris Kavanagh - 6.5

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Erik ten Hag is out of excuses. His time is UP. United's attitude stinks of entitlement and the manager cannot eradicate it, writes OLIVER HOLT after their embarrassing 3-0 defeat at home by Tottenham

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A dread of ordinariness, and an even greater dread of losing to ordinariness, had clung grimly to the build-up to this game all week.

For a fallen giant such as Manchester United, a club at a stage in its history when it is caught between hope and fear, there is always escape in losing to a side like Liverpool, as United did heavily on the first day of this month.

But United versus Tottenham is not a match that sells alibis. Not for anyone. Not for the beleaguered Dutchman or for the new Ineos minority ownership group, led by Sir Jim Ratcliffe, that decided, incomprehensibly, to keep him in post this season.

Lose to Spurs, who were only one defeat from a kind of crisis themselves, and Erik ten Hag knew that the emptiness at the core of this United team that he has built would be laid bare. The 3-0 defeat that his side suffered at Old Trafford left no doubt about that emptiness.

The truth is that Ten Hag is out of excuses. His time is up. There is no hiding place for him any more. His boasts about winning minor trophies are worthless when his team plays like this.

Let's be honest about what United stand for as we enter the autumn of the year: no philosophy, no identity, no discipline, no guile, no pattern, no determination, no adventure, no belief, no subtlety, no desire, no intent, no plan. Apart from that, everything's fine.

United's attitude stinks. Entitlement runs through them and Ten Hag simply cannot eradicate it, however big he talks and however tough he acts.

United are a team going backwards and they weren't starting from an advanced position in the first place. Insults are easy to throw but both Ten Hag and his United team were an embarrassment against Tottenham.

Don't be fooled by any suggestions that United lost this because they were reduced to ten men before half time when their captain Bruno Fernandes was shown a straight red. Ten Hag's side were well beaten by then. Spurs were running rings around them.

There have been some dire performances since Sir Alex Ferguson left the club in the summer of 2013 but there are very few that were worse than this. Spurs are far from title contenders and yet they outclassed United in every single department.

That includes the coaching, by the way. In fact, it means the coaching most of all. Ange Postecoglou has his critics but he has built a creative, attacking, technically adept side in north London that is brilliant to watch.

As poor as United were, there was so much to admire about Spurs. James Maddison was at the heart of everything creative Spurs did. United could not get close to Dejan Kulusevski, Brennan Johnson was superb on the right flank. Micky van de Ven was majestic at the back.

Here's the other sobering thing: Spurs were playing without the injured Son Heung-min. If he had been in the starting line-up, this would have been an even greater humiliation for Ten Hag and the rabble he has assembled here.

Manuel Ugarte made his full debut after his move from PSG. He did not have a good afternoon. He looks, in fact, like yet another dud that one of Europe's elite clubs has gratefully unloaded on the gullible paymasters at Old Trafford.

It is hard even to say United tried. Ten Hag and Christian Eriksen admitted United didn't want it enough in their insipid draw with Twente in the Europa League in midweek and this was even worse. United's players look like complacent prima donnas with no steel in their hearts.

The teams had started the match with an identical record, becalmed in mid-table, but after this result it seems clear one of them is heading in the right direction and the other is on the road to hell.

United started sloppily. Fernandes turned into trouble on the edge of his own area, Lisandro Martinez gave the ball away cheaply as United were hurried out of their stride when they tried to play their way out of defence.

Ten Hag's team looked loose and when Marcus Rashford overran the ball inside the first three minutes, Micky van de Ven dispossessed him easily deep inside the Spurs half. Van de Ven is one of the fastest players in the Premier League but when he set off on a forward run, United seemed utterly unprepared for what was coming next.

Van de Ven exposed an old United failing under Ten Hag of being vulnerable to teams counter-attacking them and Van de Ven sliced through them as he sprinted forward. Ugarte, Noussair Mazraoui and Matthijs de Ligt trailed in his wake and when Van de Ven got to the goal line, he crossed it for Brennan Johnson who tapped in for his third goal in four games.

Spurs might have gone further ahead soon afterwards when Maddison played a one-two with Dejan Kulusevski and ran in on goal. Maddison tried to lift the ball over Onana but Onana blocked the ball with his body and it looped away to safety.

When De Ligt dived in on the touchline midway through the half and missed his tackle, Spurs sensed another opportunity. Destiny Udogie fed the ball inside to Kulusevski who helped it on to Johnson. His fierce cross shot beat Onana but cannoned off the face of the post.

United finally fashioned their first chance of the half when Kobbie Mainoo crossed for Joshua Zirkzee. Zirkzee stretched to reach it and diverted it goalwards but it did not quite have enough power or direction to beat Guglielmo Vicario.

'They may as well be statues,' Gary Neville said of United's players on Sky Sports and he was right. United were desperately poor. They were second to everything. They looked semi-detached and semi-interested. They played without guile, without vision and, apparently, without any kind of plan.

Even if he was misfiring, Rashford did at least keep demanding the ball and having the courage to take on his man. It was from his cross eight minutes before half time that Alejandro Garnacho smashed a fierce volley against the post.

A minute after that, though, Spurs missed another golden opportunity to take the lead. Spurs caught United hopelessly open, again, on the counter and Timo Werner ran clean through on goal.

United were lucky the chance fell to the Germany forward who is not known for his clinical finishing. He clipped his shot straight at Onana, who saved it comfortably.

United sought new misfortunes. And found them. A few minutes before half time, Maddison eased past Fernandes, who slipped as he prepared to challenge him. Fernandes raised his studs as he fell, partly as a reaction to losing his balance but partly as an attempt to stop Maddison.

He raked his studs down Maddison's shin and referee Chris Kavanagh showed him a straight red card. It felt harsh but it also felt as if Fernandes brought the decision on himself. He gave Kavanagh a decision to make.

Ten Hag reacted by sending on Mason Mount for Mainoo. Mount had only been on the pitch for a couple of minutes when he scythed needlessly through the back of Maddison and was shown a yellow card.

Ten Hag made another change at half time. He had to. He brought on Casemiro for Zirkzee and switched Rashford to playing down the middle. It didn't make any difference. Two minutes after the break, Spurs doubled their lead.

United looked bland and uncertain in a battle for a second ball near the half way line and Spurs won it. Johnson dashed down the right, unchallenged, and when his cross was deflected, it looped into the path of Kulusevski, who leapt high and flicked the ball past Onana as if he were karate-kicking it.

Spurs should have gone 3-0 up when Kulusevski shrugged off a weak challenge from Ugarte and threaded a ball through to Werner. Faced with only Onana to beat, Werner, once again, was found wanting. Onana saved comfortably. If Son Heung-min had been fit, it would have been a rout.

Martinez, who had had a poor game, did at least show some stomach for the fight. He lofted a clever ball over the top of the Spurs defence for Casemiro and the Brazil midfielder's half volley rolled just wide of Vicario's right-hand post.

But there was no way back for United and 13 minutes from the end, Dominic Solanke, who had had a fine match, put them out of their misery, sticking out a foot to divert a header from Pape Sarr past Onana.

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Amanda Staveley 'lining up sizeable investment in Spurs using Middle East cash' just months on from leaving Newcastle - after financier spotted in the stands for Tottenham's home clash against Brentfo

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Financier Amanda Staveley is 'set to make a sizeable investment in Tottenham Hotspur using Middle Eastern money' just three months after she departed rivals Newcastle United.

The 51-year-old helped push through Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund's £305million takeover of Newcastle in October 2021, with the help of husband Mehrdad Ghodoussi.

The pair handled the day-to-day running of the Premier League club during that time with Staveley maintaining a ten per cent stake.

She left Newcastle in July this year after overseeing a resurgence in the side's fortunes which featured stars such as Bruno Guimaraes arriving at St James's Park. The financier later admitted she was 'devastated' following her exit.

Now Staveley has paved a way back into the Premier League, the Mirror reports, as she lines up a stake in Spurs just days after being spotted in the stands for their 3-1 home win over Brentford.

The north London side are in the hunt for new money as one-time majority stakeholder Joe Lewis's influence at the club declines.

Staveley and Ghodoussi are expected to buy up some of Lewis's shares which are now held in a family trust.

A source close to the deal said: 'Amanda is serious about being involved with Spurs, and is hoping that an initial purchase can be completed within weeks.'

The financier is using Middle East money once more after overseeing the PIF's takeover on Tyneside.

Staveley has been cagey about a return to football and told The Athletic: 'My preference would have been to stay with Newcastle, but life doesn't always work out exactly how you want it to. Nothing is going to replicate that.

'I fell in love with Newcastle, the club and the people and that can't change, but I didn't want to get in Newcastle's way. It's got to be about what's best for Newcastle.

'Mehrdad and I are keen to be hands-on. We're hard-working people, I love to be very busy and to engage and I love football. Very sadly, we have to move on to other projects and that might involve us taking a stake in another club or buying another club and that's difficult. But it's possible.'

Staveley's appearance at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium last week, as a guest of Spurs chairman Daniel Levy, accelerated rumours that she was setting up a 'fresh' consortium of investors and 'hoped to take an initial stake in Spurs'.

Forbes state that Spurs are currently valued at around £2.42billion ($3.2bn). Should Staveley wish to purchase a 25 per cent stake in the club it would cost approximately £605m. The 51-year-old has reportedly already raised £500m through her investment fund PCP Capital Partners.

The outlet adds that the investors will subsequently look to increase their stake in the north London outfit.

Tottenham were purchased by ENIC Group (English National Investment Company), in 2001, with Joe Lewis's family trust becoming the club's new majority owners.

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Harry Maguire MISSES Man United's crunch clash with Tottenham through injury after picking up a knock in training

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Harry Maguire was ruled unfit to play for Man United against Spurs on Sunday

The defender had featured in seven of United's first eight games this season

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Harry Maguire has been left out of Manchester United's squad to face Tottenham Hotspur at Old Trafford.

The 31-year-old defender had featured in seven of United's first eight games of the season in all competitions.

However, Maguire suffered a knock in training and was therefore unavailable to manager Erik ten Hag on Sunday.

Maguire still arrived at Old Trafford on Sunday afternoon despite not being fit to play.

Ten Hag selected Matthijs de Ligt and Lisandro Martinez as his starting centre backs, while Victor Lindelof was on the bench for the first time this season.

Spurs came to Old Trafford without a significant injury absentee of their own after captain Son Heung-min picked up a suspected hamstring issue during Thursday's 3-0 win over Qarabag in the Europa League.

Son was replaced in Tottenham's starting XI by Timo Werner, who was part of a three-man attack with Dominic Solanke and Brennan Johnson.

Spurs boss Ange Postecoglou also named an attack-minded midfield three of Dejan Kulusevski, Rodrigo Bentancur and James Maddison.

Kobbie Mainoo and Manuel Ugarte started at the base of the United midfield.

United and Spurs both went into Sunday's game with seven points from their first five Premier League fixtures.

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