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NEWS: Solskjaer insists he thrives on criticism

Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has told detractors to keep it coming as the under-fire Manchester United manager heads to Italy

Image copyright - Steve Haag Sports

Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has told detractors to keep it coming as the under-fire Manchester United manager heads to Italy looking to build on much-needed Tottenham win.

Two women looking excitedly at cellphone

The 1999 treble hero was in the eye of a storm this time last week after arch rivals Liverpool ran amok at Old Trafford and secured their biggest ever victory on enemy territory.

The 5-0 loss will live long in the memory and could have brought the end to Solskjaer’s reign, yet the United hierarchy stuck with him and were rewarded with a 3-0 win at Tottenham on Sunday.

But the Norwegian knows there can be no let-up amid continuing scrutiny and pressure, with Manchester City coming to town this weekend hot on the heels of Tuesday’s Champions League group clash against Atalanta.

“Criticism can make you doubt yourself or you can stand up for yourself and I’ve always enjoyed criticism,” Solskjaer said ahead of the flight to Italy. “Just keep that coming, that’s fine.

“You know, journalists, pundits, experts, we’ve all got different jobs and it’s their job to give their opinion.

“That’s their job. I’m not here to fight with them, I don’t need a spat with anyone.”

Asked if United had turned a corner by beating Spurs, he retorted: “Next one is the one that matters.

“We’ve been looking and working to get consistency and we know that when we get that consistency we’ll get results and performances.

“As I said, one swallow doesn’t make a summer and it’s important that we just keep focusing on what we did well in that game but improve on what we didn’t do as well.

“It’s relentless, it’s games every three days, it’s a chance tomorrow to prove that we can go again.”

Saturday’s game had been dubbed ‘El Sackico’ by some given how precarious both managers’ jobs looked heading into the Premier League clash.

It lived up to the billing as Nuno Espirito Santo was sacked just four months into his Spurs reign, with ex-Chelsea boss Antonio Conte tipped to replace him.

“Of course (I have sympathy with Nuno),” Solskjaer said of the Portuguese’s departure.

“It’s never nice to see men, good men, lose their jobs. He’s been working hard.

“I don’t know what the situation has been or is at Tottenham so I can’t comment too much, but as a colleague you’re never happy when that happens – you try to get in touch with him and tell him your feelings.”

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