The Carrick era hits its first wall, and Manchester United have six games to climb over it
There is a version of tonight that makes complete sense in retrospect: Manchester United had not played a competitive match in 24 days.
No match rhythm, no momentum to carry, no opponent to react against — just three weeks of training-ground work and the weight of expectation at Old Trafford, facing a side fighting for their lives.
That context does not excuse what happened, but it does explain it.
Noah Okafor scored twice in the first half, while Casemiro’s header offered United hope that ultimately amounted to nothing.
By the time the final whistle blew, Leeds had beaten Manchester United at Old Trafford for the first time in 45 years. The long hiatus did not cause that, but it stripped away the one thing that had sustained Michael Carrick’s impressive run — momentum.
Every managerial record looks different when you interrogate the circumstances. Carrick has excelled in reactive situations: inheriting a dressing room low on confidence, winning back-to-back games, and building belief through results rather than philosophy.
His record since January is genuinely impressive. The Old Trafford atmosphere has changed. Players who looked broken under Amorim appear liberated under Carrick, but tonight was the first true test of a different skill — manufacturing competitive intensity from nothing.
No recent game to reference, no crowd expectation built on recent wins, and a squad that had spent three weeks in training without the sharpness that only competition provides.
Leeds had more shots than United, pressed with greater urgency, and were already two goals up before Lisandro Martinez’s controversial red card changed the numerical equation.
A team with three weeks of uninterrupted preparation was outworked in the first half by a side that had played an FA Cup quarter-final win at West Ham just days earlier