Louis van Gaal warns Manchester United fans to expect nothing for three month as players adapt his philosophy

The new manager has admitted he is asking his squad to change to his more technical, tactical game

Ian Herbert
Thursday 31 July 2014 07:33 BST
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Louis van Gaal has endured slow starts at previous clubs Ajax, Barcelona and Bayern Munich
Louis van Gaal has endured slow starts at previous clubs Ajax, Barcelona and Bayern Munich (Getty Images)

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The new Manchester United manager, Louis van Gaal, has warned supporters not to expect an immediate turnaround in the wake of David Moyes’ departure, because it will take his players three months to adapt to his new philosophy.

United need a rapid boost in confidence to put last season behind them and, though Van Gaal is blessed with a relatively straightforward early fixture list, he admitted he was asking the players to change to his more technical, tactical game. “It is difficult at first [for players to learn my philosophy] and in the first three months it takes time,” he said. “When we survive the first three months, it will be the same as for me at it was at Bayern in 2009-10. After the first three months there, we were seventh and we were third in the Champions League [group].”

Van Gaal’s Barcelona team were second and 10th after 14 games in his first two seasons there from 1997 and the Ajax team he took over in 1991 secured only 20 points from 16 games. But the Spanish sides won the titles in those seasons, as did Bayern, who also reached the 2009-10 Champions League final.

United play all three promoted sides, Burnley, Queen’s Park Rangers and Leicester City, as well as Swansea City and Sunderland, in the first month of the season and the going only gets tough in October, when the top sides are in Europe. But Van Gaal’s slow starts to campaigns have also brought him sackings in the past – in the first season of his second Barcelona spell in 2002-03 and his second season at Bayern in 2010-11.

Van Gaal said that Manchester City rising from their position as a small club to Premier League champions would help United. “Their success does not bother me,” he said. “Whether they are 10 metres away or 30km away. What they have done is amazing because they were not a big club and now already champions.

“They are knocking at the door but that is good for Manchester United also, because where there is competition you can be proud when you are the champion at the end – and maybe we will be the champions.”

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