The Peoples Person
·1 November 2025
Man United vs Nottingham Forest: three things we learned

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Yahoo sportsThe Peoples Person
·1 November 2025

Manchester United fought back from 2-1 down to secure a draw at Nottingham Forest.
Casemiro headed the Red Devils into a first-half lead, but a quickfire double from the hosts turned the match on its head in the first few minutes of the second half.
United were up against it for large parts of the game, but Amad volleyed home an equaliser to earn his side a valuable point. Here are three things we learned from the draw.
For the first time since his arrival exactly one year ago, Ruben Amorim fielded a team entirely unchanged from his side’s last match.
It was the clearest indication yet that, for the Portuguese tactician, his squad is starting to respond to and deliver on the methods he has been pushing for the past 12 months, and that he feels comfortable in identifying his best starting eleven.
As usual he tinkered with his backline during the game, hooking Leny Yoro with 15 minutes to go and switching Diogo Dalot for Patrick Dorgu halfway through the second half.
But with his side chasing first an equaliser and then a winner, keeping the likes of Joshua Zirkzee and Mason Mount on the bench feels like a missed opportunity, particularly given Benjamin Sesko’s difficult day at the office.
United took some huge steps forward from their dire start to the season with statement wins against historic rivals Liverpool and notorious bogey side Brighton, but showed today that they still have the self-destructive tendency that has come to characterise Amorim’s time at the club.
Forest had been knocking at the door before the interval, but United ignored the first-half signs and allowed their hosts to pick up right where they left off.
Morgan Gibbs-White’s equaliser was disappointingly predictable, but Nicolo Savona putting Forest ahead 39 seconds after the ensuing restart was the kind of footballing farce that feels like something only United could manage.
The Red Devils did rally themselves for an equaliser and had a good crack at finding a winner, which it’s hard to imagine happening from a similar position last season, but it was still a reminder of the squad’s flaws.
Amorim might have felt like his players had turned a corner but their ability to let that lead slip so easily indicates their mentality may have snapped back to square one, leaving the head coach with a lot of work to do and redo.









































