And not down to 10 men either. Unlike Arsenal and Manchester City last week, Manchester United had their full complement on the field. It just didn’t look like it.
They contrived to lose, not to giants, but to one of the also-rans of the competition. Olympiacos are not potential winners.
Chances are they will be removed in the quarter-finals by the first good team they play, if they manage to survive the return leg at Old Trafford. The odds must favour them now.
United pulled the plum tie out of the Champions League draw — and then choked on it.
This may well be the worst performance of David Moyes’s brief time as United manager, the one that really will cause questions to be asked about his suitability.
Scroll down to watch Moyes: I take full responsibility for the defeat
Celebration: Alejandro Dominguez (centre) wheels away after scoring the opener in Greece
Arrival: Joel Campbell slides on his knees in celebration of his goal just after half-time
Outstretched: David De Gea is well beaten by Campbell's shot in the 55th minute to deflate United
Flat out: Robin van Persie lies on the floor after missing United's best chance of the game late on
Home comforts: Olympiacos became the first home side so far to win their first-leg in the last 16
No chance: De Gea sees the ball fly past him in the 37th minute to put the hosts 1-0 up
Down and out? David Moyes slumps back into his seat after Olympiacos score their second goal
Down: United's performance was ordinary in the heated atmosphere of the Karaiskakis Stadium
Match facts
Olympiacos:
Roberto 7; Leandro Salino 6, Manolas 7, Marcano 6.5, Holebas 5;
Maniatis 7, N'Dinga 6.5; Campbell 8 (Fuster 67, 6, Domínguez 7.5
(Machado 76, 6), Perez 5.5 (Valdez 86); Olaitan 6.5
Subs: Megyeri, Samaris, Papadopoulos, Bong
Bookings: None
Goals: Dominguez 38, Campbell 55
Man United: De Gea 6; Smalling 4.5, Ferdinand 5, Vidic 6.5, Evra 6.5; Valencia 5 (Welbeck 60, 6), Carrick 6, Cleverley 5.5 (Kagawa 61, 5.5), Young 5.5; Rooney 6, Van Persie 5.
Subs: Lindegaard, Büttner, Fellaini, Giggs, Hernandez.
Bookings: Ferdinand
*Ratings from Chris Wheeler at the Karaiskakis Stadium
Subs: Megyeri, Samaris, Papadopoulos, Bong
Bookings: None
Goals: Dominguez 38, Campbell 55
Man United: De Gea 6; Smalling 4.5, Ferdinand 5, Vidic 6.5, Evra 6.5; Valencia 5 (Welbeck 60, 6), Carrick 6, Cleverley 5.5 (Kagawa 61, 5.5), Young 5.5; Rooney 6, Van Persie 5.
Subs: Lindegaard, Büttner, Fellaini, Giggs, Hernandez.
Bookings: Ferdinand
*Ratings from Chris Wheeler at the Karaiskakis Stadium
‘Can they score? They always score.’ Those were the words that summed up the old United. Here they did not even manage a shot on target, let alone a goal.
Until now, the performances in Europe have been the saving grace for Moyes. Emphatic against Bayer Leverkusen, gutsy in Donetsk.
This, however, was the kind of display that gets a manager the sack — one that brings into dispute matters of selection, direction and inspiration.
Until Tuesday night, Manchester United were the only team in the tournament who had not trailed in any match. Hard to believe on this evidence.
The defensive reaction for both goals revealed a lethargy that would have mystified heroes past. Maybe television analyst Roy Keane should have delivered the half-time team talk. Or played.
Not happy: Wayne Rooney reacts to the referee early on after not being given a free-kick
Clueless: United players look frustrated as Dominguez runs away in celebration at the first goal
Golazo: Campbell wheels away with his team-mates as Olympiacos took an unprecedented 2-0 lead
Desperate: Moyes' last hope of silverware this season is in Europe, but they have an uphill task
50/50: Olympiacos' Leadro Salino (left) fights with United's Ashley Young
Not happy: Rooney discusses another matter with referee Gianluca Rocchi after the second goal
Nowhere to be seen: United were outplayed in every area in Greece on Tuesday night
Elated: The win means Olympiacos should be favourites to win the tie going into the second-leg
Contribution: Olympiacos' Giannis Maniatis had the original shot for the first goal
This was a United seldom seen. Timid, inadequate, uninspired. They were not unfortunate or hard done by. THEY'VE DONE IT BEFORE...
Manchester United last overturned a two goal deficit from a first leg in 1984, versus Barcelona in the Cup Winners’ Cup.
The goals came from Dominguez, an Argentine without a senior cap to his name, and Joel Campbell, an Arsenal loanee whom Arsene Wenger has shown scant inclination to take back.
The other end: Olympiacos' goalkeeper Roberto celebrates the opening goal
Concentrate: Michael Carrick heads the ball to a team-mate under pressure from Delvin Ndinga
Nowhere near: United forward Van Persie (left) was starved of any service in Greece
Helpless: Olympiacos' Michael Olaitan skips past Nemanja Vidic as the Serbian looks on
Yet
they deserved it. United will no doubt make a trademark heroic effort
to reclaim the tie at Old Trafford — but do they have it in them any
more? Not on this showing. Under the pressure of knockout competition,
they seem to have forgotten how to win.Players on whom Moyes gambles his reputation — Tom Cleverley, Antonio Valencia, Chris Smalling — were ordinary. Rocks of old are now crumbling relics.
Wayne Rooney spent more time slapping the pitch in frustration than he did near goal. Robin van Persie took a heavy hit from goalkeeper Roberto in the first half but it failed to wake him.
Struggle: Olympiacos' Jose Holebas fights for the ball with Rooney
Last chance saloon: United manager Moyes looks on before the match in Greece
Cauldron: Passionate Olympiacos fans created a heated atmosphere inside the Karaiskaki Stadium
Constant: Alejandro Dominguez was a threat all night for the hosts, and United struggled to deal with him
When
Smalling crossed from the right with nine minutes remaining, the
striker ballooned an excellent chance over the bar. Here was everything
that has been wrong with United this season, encapsulated as if in a
highlights reel.The goals told the story. For the first, United failed to close Olympiacos down and were punished with a shot from Giannis Maniatis that could have been stopped by any team with enough will.
Instead it travelled low into the penalty area where Dominguez diverted it deliberately with a back heel.
Holding off: Joel Cambell is closed down by Tom Cleverley (left) and Michael Carrick
No room: Rio Ferdinand is monitored closely by two Olympiacos players as United started slowly
Away from home: Campbell (centre) has been on loan at the club from Arsenal
A touch of the Denis Laws, although United are not facing relegation.
Just elimination. With perhaps a sprinkling of humiliation. A second-half revival? Not these days. Instead, Michael Carrick went meekly into a tackle that should have cleaned out his opponent, and Campbell came through with the ball, keeping his balance and curling a fine shot round Rio Ferdinand with David de Gea stranded.
There were similar instances of weakness all over the field. Sloppiness has crept into United’s play that — whisper it — Sir Alex Ferguson would never have tolerated.
Bite you back: Ferdinand Tweeted on deadline day
that he was glad to see Olympiacos' main striker Kostas Mitroglou leave
the club for Fulham, but he may now be eating his words
Getting up: Manchester United's Rio Ferdinand shoots for goal in the first-half in Athens
Sliding in: Olympiacos' Dominguez is tackled by Antonio Valencia during a nervy first-half
Within
a minute of the second-half restart, Cleverley played a wayward pass
across the face of his defence that was so lackadaisical it almost
arrived half an hour late, with its tie off, a hangover and a bad excuse
about leaves on the line.
Soon after, Ashley Young attempted the blind back-heel of a ball that was already rolling close to the touchline.
You can imagine where it went. It wouldn’t have happened on Ferguson’s watch and it shouldn’t happen on Moyes’s either. He’s new; he’s not a patsy.
This is a team that is not so much in need of support as underpinning, and it showed in a litany of first-half mistakes.
Soon after, Ashley Young attempted the blind back-heel of a ball that was already rolling close to the touchline.
You can imagine where it went. It wouldn’t have happened on Ferguson’s watch and it shouldn’t happen on Moyes’s either. He’s new; he’s not a patsy.
This is a team that is not so much in need of support as underpinning, and it showed in a litany of first-half mistakes.
Occasionally, in times of crisis, a player sends up a distress signal
and that is what appeared to have happened after 29 minutes when
Ferdinand, under little real pressure, launched an aimless hoof
downfield.
This is his last season at United, though, and times have changed. Where once a back line of Ferdinand and Nemanja Vidic would offer encouragement, now it causes concern.
The next generation, represented by Smalling to Ferdinand’s right, hardly bred confidence either.
The
game was six minutes old when, trying to knock the ball around casually
at the back, Ferdinand sold Smalling short, forcing a hasty rearguard
action. It was no temporary lapse. Defensive frailties were constant.
Time was, United would have taken this Olympiacos team apart. Now, they are vulnerable and opponents sense it. They pull strokes, they try it on, they get away with murder. That is what Dominguez did after eight minutes. He took a right liberty.
Drowned: United brought a good following, but the atmosphere was dominated by the hosts
Shoulder: United and England defender Chris Smalling (left) vies with Hernan Perez in the first-half
Ferdinand
doesn’t do that; or rather, he didn’t. Ferdinand grew up idolising the
likes of Matthias Sammer and the great German sweepers.This is his last season at United, though, and times have changed. Where once a back line of Ferdinand and Nemanja Vidic would offer encouragement, now it causes concern.
The next generation, represented by Smalling to Ferdinand’s right, hardly bred confidence either.
Time was, United would have taken this Olympiacos team apart. Now, they are vulnerable and opponents sense it. They pull strokes, they try it on, they get away with murder. That is what Dominguez did after eight minutes. He took a right liberty.
Not going anywhere: United's Antonio Valencia (front) is monitored closely by Jose Holebas
Jump! Olympiacos' Joel Campbell gets up for a header with Ashley Young
Dispossessing
Smalling just inside Olympiacos’s half was fair enough. He was asking
for it. But Dominguez then went on a dribble, probably the longest run
attempted by a slightly overweight Argentine since Diego Maradona
retired. Ferdinand was among those who couldn’t get near enough to put a challenge in and by the time Dominguez was stopped he was inside the United area and had unleashed a shot, which Vidic charged down.
Moyes’s reputation as a defensive mastermind dwindled with each passing stride. Some people don’t travel as far as that on their holidays. These are strange and desperate times indeed for United.
Under the cosh: Moyes has a lot to ponder after another horrific performance from his side
Battle: Olympiacos' Dominguez (left) fights for the ball with Carrick
Lining up: United had won the last four meetings between the two sides before Tuesday
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