Football
Kevin Palmer 9y

Paul Scholes: Angel Di Maria red card helped Manchester United

Angel Di Maria's red card against Arsenal was the turning point in Manchester United's season, Paul Scholes has said. 

United lost last month's FA Cup quarterfinal 2-1 to the Gunners, but Di Maria's subsequent suspension gave manager Louis van Gaal the opportunity to reshape his team without the Argentine, who arrived from Real Madrid for £57.9 million in the summer.

In his absence, Juan Mata has established himself in the side and helped United to victories over Tottenham, Liverpool, Aston Villa and Manchester City to cement a position in the Champions League qualifying positions.

Former United midfielder Scholes, who had been part of the United coaching team during Ryan Giggs' brief spell in charge at the end of last season, wrote in his column for The Independent: "I feel that Angel Di Maria's red card against Arsenal was critical in allowing Van Gaal to build this new-look team.

"Looking at the side it seems to me to be a triumph of the underdog. Juan Mata, Marouane Fellaini, Ashley Young, all of whom looked like they could be out the picture at the start of the season, are now having a big impact.

"I have been critical of my old club Manchester United under Louis van Gaal this season and I have to say that I did not see this change in fortune coming. To the extent that when they go to Chelsea this weekend, I think they have a good chance of winning the game."

On the 4-3-3 tactics Van Gaal is now employing, he said: "The formation is bold. It is much more attacking and more what I expected of Van Gaal when he arrived. There is a spine of four players -- Michael Carrick, Ander Herrera, Fellaini and Wayne Rooney -- that runs through the middle, then Young and Mata wide.

"I wonder whether Carrick will be fit to start against Chelsea, which might mean Daley Blind moving back into midfield [if he is not].

"For all the attention after the derby win over Manchester City on Fellaini and Young, a lot of the credit has to go to Mata. He has given United such composure. He is not a winger, in the conventional sense, but he comes inside and gets involved in the game. He always passes to a red shirt and he is so cool, as you saw with his finish against City."

Fellaini has also found form this season, having struggled to make an impression at Old Trafford after following David Moyes from Everton in the summer of 2013.

Scholes said: "When I was coaching under Ryan Giggs at the end of last season, we always felt that Fellaini's best position was as an unorthodox No. 10 -- the role he is playing now.

"When he first joined United, David Moyes had played him as a central midfielder, but I don't think controlling the game from there is Fellaini's biggest strength.

"When I played against him when he was at Everton, he was just a giant nuisance: elbows up, big and strong, and always liable to peel off and take up a position at the back post.

"That is how Van Gaal is playing him now and not asking Fellaini to do the things he finds more difficult. I do wonder whether Fellaini has the quality to win games in the Champions League latter stages, but that is for another day. I always found him a good, committed player who trained hard."

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