Swansea fight back to beat Man United Bafetimbi Gomis (centre) slots the ball under the body of Sergio Romero to secure Swansea's comeback win against Manchester United
Bafetimbi Gomis (centre) slots the ball under the body of Sergio Romero to secure Swansea's comeback win against Manchester United

Bafetimbi Gomis (centre) slots the ball under the body of Sergio Romero to secure Swansea’s comeback win against Manchester United

LONDON. — Louis van Gaal’s 50th game in charge of Manchester United proved to be much like his first. Much like his 31st, too, for that matter, as Van Gaal watched his team lose 2-1 against Swansea for the third time in little more than a year. Andre Ayew and Bafetimbi Gomis scored the goals which turned the game after Juan Mata had fired the visitors ahead, early in the second half.

By the end, the crowd in south Wales felt confident enough to jeer United stars who ran out of ideas and hit pass after pass into touch. The thing for Van Gaal is that you take the thrill and flair from Manchester United at your peril. Without the thrill and flair, you have to win, which they did against Tottenham and Aston Villa in the Barclays Premier League, and against FC Bruges, in Europe. But which they did not against Newcastle.

Against Swansea, they neither won nor drew not entertained and functioned like two disconnected units — a solid back six and four up front, who were able to create very little against a well-organised Swansea side. By way of an escape plan, Van Gaal resorted once against to sending on Marouane Fellaini at centre-forward and launching it long.

Javier Hernandez did not come off the bench and, with the transfer market closing soon, there must be concern at Old Trafford. Fellaini had the usual unsettling effect, but Swansea held out without too much fuss, but for one wonderful recovery tackle by Ashley Williams on Wayne Rooney.

Captain Rooney was isolated and frustrated for most of the game. He scored a hat-trick in Bruges but has now gone 10 games without a Premier League goal for the first time as a United player. Schweinsteiger was dispossessed in midfield before Ayew released Gomis, who missed the target. He ought to have done better, as should Gylfi Sigurdsson when he failed to test Sergio Romero followed an effective quick free-kick taken by Shelvey.

He had not conceded a Premier League goal when he arrived in Wales but Romero does not ooze calm and authority. His distribution was erratic and was almost made to pay when one clearance landed at the feet of Shelvey. The Swansea midfielder quickly manufactured a long-range effort on goal but the Argentina goalkeeper had recovered to save on his line. He was beaten when Gomis hit a post after rolling clear from Daley Blind and Chris Smalling.

The home team were on top. Rooney smouldered up front, disconnected for long periods and yet, when Herrera found him before the interval, the United captain could produce nothing more than a tame stab at goal with the outside of his boot. Another glimpse of goal vanished with a poor touch volleyed over by Rooney, but Mata eased some of the tension soon after the restart.

Luke Shaw’s powerful run down the left created the chance. Both Rooney and Neil Taylor missed Shaw’s cross at the near post and Mata beat Williams at the back-post to fire the ball high into the net. Williams almost sliced into his own goal to make it two, moments later, but Fabianski was alert to the danger.

Shaw, who has had his problems with fitness and form since moving to Old Trafford, looked much more comfortable in this solid and unspectacular system and yet the goals conceded by United came from his area. The young left back was trailing back from an overlap when Swansea levelled from a cross delivered by Sigurdsson.

Garry Monk deserves credit, too, responding to Mata’s goal by replacing Wayne Routledge with Ki Sung-yeung and giving Sigurdsson more freedom. Almost immediately, the Icelander had created an equaliser for Ayew, who arrived late to convert with a header. It was Ayew on the right who supplied the second for Gomis, four minutes later, shaping a low pass towards the near post which took Shaw and Blind out of the game.

Gomis beat Smalling across the ground to finish his fourth in four this season. It was his ninth in his last 10 Premier League appearances, a contrasting number to Rooney’s last 10. — MailOnline.

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