
Manchester United confirmed a dreadful start to the 2018/19 Premier League season with a 3-0 defeat at Old Trafford against Tottenham. Having already lost at the AMEX Stadium against Brighton & Hove Albion and scraped an opening day win against Leicester City, this is the worst start to a league season for the Red Devils in recent memory.
Firstly, and most importantly, the Premier League season is a marathon and not a sprint. The title has never been decided at the end of August and there remain 35 games in which anything can happen. Sure, United’s performances to date do not inspire confidence in even the most optimistic fan, but fortunes can change very quickly in football.
In August 1992, the maiden Premier League season kicked off. Alex Ferguson’s Manchester United had something bubbling under the surface but had yet to truly fulfill their potential domestically. The season before, Leeds United had pipped them to the last ever Football League Division One title.
United began the season with a poor 2-1 defeat away to Sheffield United. The Blades were an obscure midtable team at the time and the nature of the defeat could draw parallels with United’s recent 3-2 loss against Brighton.
The third game of the season saw an insipid performance by Ferguson’s men as they drew 1-1 with Ipswich Town again at Old Trafford. Ipswich was another lower- to mid-table team who the Red Devils would have expected to beat comfortably at the time.

While times have changed and the Premier League is a different beast when compared to its 1992/93 incarnation, it worth taking a step back and remembering that only three games have been played in this Premier League season so far.
If history is anything to go by, this campaign is far from a foregone conclusion for Manchester United yet.