After suffering their fourth defeat in their past six contests across all competitions, Manchester United will celebrate Christmas in a way they haven’t done since the 1980s — and no, we don’t mean by blaring Wham!’s “Last Christmas” at Carrington.
In Spain, we have new league leaders. While Real Madrid have been chasing down Barcelona in recent weeks, it’s Atlético Madrid who now sit top of the table after engineering a comeback win over the Catalans on Saturday.
And in the Bundesliga, while Bayern Munich have been shaky in recent weeks, they dusted themselves off when RB Leipzig came to the Allianz Arena on Friday. The Bavarians restored their self belief by demolishing their nearest title rivals.
What else did you miss around Europe this weekend? ESPN’s Sam Tighe, Alex Kirkland and Constantin Eckner recap all the action in this edition of Weekend Review.
Top takeaway: A historic Christmas for Man United
Manchester United made history on Sunday — just not for the right reasons. Their 3-0 loss at home to AFC Bournemouth condemned them to spending Christmas in the bottom half of the Premier League; it’s the first time since 1989 — before the inception of the Premier League — that this has happened.
It was a terrible afternoon filled with all-too-familiar issues: They conceded from a set piece again, their ninth of the season (only Wolves (14) have conceded more from these situations), they missed four big chances and slipped into negative goal difference for the campaign (-1).
The Ruben Amorim revolution has had the odd positive early moment, but four losses from six — and more alarmingly, 14 goals conceded in six — confirms there’s copious work to be done to turn things around.
It’s absolutely crucial that work begins with defensive set pieces. When Dean Huijsen rose to nod home the Cherries’ opener, a knowing groan swept around Old Trafford in response. It seems unlikely that United can make great strides forward under their new manager while presenting such an Achilles heel to opponents.
When is the best match not at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium? A nine-goal thriller went end to end and back again, without pause, as Mohamed Salah, Luis Díaz & Co. ran riot. They took advantage of a makeshift defence and terribly bold Spurs strategy to score and score — then had to fend off a late flurry to ensure the points.