Rúben Amorim's reversion to a 3-4-2-1 formation marred Manchester United's 1-1 draw with Wolverhampton Wanderers at Old Trafford, amplifying squad depth issues from injuries and AFCON call-ups. Pundits and fans questioned his adaptability amid dismal home form.
The 1-1 draw—Joshua Zirkzee's goal, assisted by standout Ayden Heaven, canceled by Ladislav Krejci's headed equalizer—exposed deeper problems for Amorim's Manchester United. Despite success with a back four against Newcastle United, Amorim controversially switched back to 3-4-2-1, defying his own words: 'I think we are going to become a better team.' United lacked intensity against Wolves' resilient low block, a chronic flaw.
A depleted attack missed Bruno Fernandes, Kobbie Mainoo, Mason Mount (injured), and Amad Diallo (AFCON). Patrick Dorgu was shifted left despite right-wing promise, and substitutions failed to spark change—pundit Gary Neville slammed them as 'the baddest of the bad.'
Home woes persist: just three points from games vs. Everton, West Ham, Bournemouth, and Wolves, jeopardizing Europa League hopes, let alone Champions League. Reports surfaced of Manuel Ugarte eyeing a Galatasaray loan for Champions League exposure after a subpar outing. With no wins in five of their last seven goal-scoring matches, United require composure through this injury crisis.