Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho blamed "individual and
collective mistakes" and was critical of referee Michael Oliver after
his side suffered a third successive defeat.
United's 3-1 loss at Watford on Sunday followed defeat against Manchester City in the Premier League and Feyenoord in the Europa League.
With the game goalless, Anthony Martial lost possession leading to
Etienne Capoue scoring the opening goal and Mourinho felt a foul should
have been given for Miguel Britos' challenge. Although Marcus Rashford
eventually equalised, Watford went on to win through a goal from
substitute Camilo Zuniga and then a Troy Deeney penalty.
Mourinho told BT Sport: "There's no debate, no controversy. It's an
obvious situation, like last week against Manchester City, but it's
something I cannot control or be critical with. In the first half, for
the first 25 or 30 minutes, we didn't play well. That's something we can
control and improve, then the referee and linesman's mistake is not
under my control. I can do nothing to improve it.
"The second half was much better, we got the draw [equalising at 1-1]
then, after that, we were the team [who looked likelier to win].
[Heurelho] Gomes made a phenomenal save [from a Zlatan Ibrahimovic
header]. Luck is not something we can control. What we can control is
individual and collective mistakes. The second goal is an individual
mistake. We know we have to press the wing backs outside the box. Then,
another individual mistake [for the third goal]."
When asked if he was concerned, Mourinho replied: "I'm always
concerned when we don't get results we want. That's an obvious
situation."
Mourinho continued on his theme of the players' errors in his
post-match news conference, and said it is his job to ensure they are
cut out in future.
"I feel that some individuals probably feel the pressure and
responsibility too much," he said. "But from a collective point of view,
I only have good things to say about them. At 1-1 everyone thinks we
are going to win the game. We were showing complete control, intensity,
creation.
"But their second goal is a mistake that goes against our plan and
our training, because our intention was for their wing-backs to be
pressed and not let them progress. And what happened was the guy gets
the ball 20-25 metres away from our box and instead of being pressed, we
give him the space to progress. [Nordin] Amrabat receives the ball and
our left-back [Shaw] is 25 metres from him instead of five.
"But even at 25 you have to jump and go and press, but no, we wait.
This is a tactical but also a mental attitude. It's something that
doesn't become perfect in a couple of weeks. So we have to improve, no
doubt, individually and collectively. And that's my job.
"We started the season very well with [winning] the Community Shield
and three victories in a row in the Premier League, the best start that a
new manager has had at Manchester United I think. But was I thinking
that my team was ready, perfect, unbeatable? Not at all.
"I was completely aware that we were not perfect, with lots of
players who are not end products and can make their own mistakes."
Asked if he felt referee Oliver should have penalised Miguel Britos'
tackle on Martial in the build-up to Watford's opening goal was a foul,
Mourinho said: "When you come with that question it's because you know.
You don't ask me about that if you think that nothing happened. The
reason you asked the question is my answer.
"The referee's crucial mistakes are not in my control, there is
nothing I can do about that. That is not under my control. But against
Man City you know what happened in minute 55 [when Mourinho felt United
should have had a penalty for a challenge by Manchester City goalkeeper
Claudio Bravo on Rooney], today you know that happened for the first
goal, against Feyenoord there was the offside goal. So we were punished
by these mistakes and I can't do anything about it."
Looking ahead, Mourinho told MUTV: "Tomorrow, we have a training
session at 10.30 in the morning and we have to be there and we have to
work, but they have to show a certain attitude towards the negative
moment.
"We need positive people to give us positivity because obviously, the
next time that these guys go on to a football pitch, they're going to
feel -- as a normal human being -- the weight of the defeat."
Watford captain Deeney felt that his team deserved credit for how
they stifled United, saying: "I am not surprised by how we played. We
should take a bit more credit, we pressed well, condensed the space and
were tough in the tackle. We need to be against teams like Manchester
United who have high quality players and spend a lot of money."