Manchester United manager David Moyes arrives before the start of the English Premier League football match between Manchester United and Liverpool at Old Trafford in Manchester, Northwest England, on March 16, 2014. Liverpool won the match 3-0. AFP PHOTO/PAUL ELLIS RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE. NO USE WITH UNAUTHORIZED AUDIO, VIDEO, DATA, FIXTURE LISTS, CLUB/LEAGUE LOGOS OR ?LIVE? SERVICES. ONLINE IN-MATCH USE LIMITED TO 45 IMAGES, NO VIDEO EMULATION. NO USE IN BETTING, GAMES OR SINGLE CLUB/LEAGUE/PLAYER PUBLICATIONS.
WHAT NOW?: Manchester United manager David Moyes can’t believe how difficult it is to manage Manchester United. AFPpic

MANCHESTER UNITED manager David Moyes conceded he was finding his job harder than he could have ever envisaged after a chastening 3-0 home defeat by bitter rivals Liverpool.

The loss on Sunday was United’s ninth of the Premier League campaign – five of which have come at home – and carried echoes of the 4-1 humiliation at Manchester City in September that foreshadowed the club’s current struggles.

The defending champions mustered just one shot on target in the entire game, while Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers claimed with some justification that his side “could have scored five or six”.

In the end the visitors had to content themselves with a brace of Steven Gerrard penalties and a late Luis Suarez strike.

Gerrard squandered a chance to complete a rare hattrick of penalties when he sent a third spot-kick against the post, but the scoreline was still enough for United striker Wayne Rooney to brand it “one of the worst days I’ve ever had in football”.

With United 12 points below the Champions League places, having played two more games than fourth-placed City, their hopes of reserving a berth in Europe’s premier club competition via the league have been all but dashed.

They also trail Greek champions Olympiakos 2-0 ahead of the second leg of their Champions League last 16 tie on Wednesday, making their chances of qualifying by winning the tournament appear almost equally remote.

It is only 10 months since Alex Ferguson stepped down as manager after overseeing the club’s 20th league title triumph, and Moyes admits that the pace of United’s decline has taken him by surprise.

“The job was always going to be hard,” he said. “Is it harder than I thought it would be? Yeah, I would say so.”

United have beaten only one of the teams currently in the Premier League’s top nine – Arsenal, in November – but despite the damning statistical evidence, Moyes played down suggestions of a malaise.

“That tells you we’re not doing as well as we should be,” he said.

“We have to play better and make ourselves harder to beat, harder to play against, and we are also going to have to make sure we are creating and taking more opportunities.”

He insisted his players remain “confident” and “hardworking” and said that they would approach the game against Olympiakos at Old Trafford fully believing in their chances of reaching the quarterfinals.

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