Key events
Whatever the injury situation is, itâs a sad state of affairs for United fans to have Casemiro and Evans at centre back. Ten Hag has spent over £400m since coming in, and this squad has cost £1.2bn â¦
Interesting comments from Ten Hag. Itâs not clear who will lead the line for Manchester United tonight, probably Bruno Fernandes as a false nine. The Portuguese missed the defeats to Crystal Palace and Arsenal, remember.
Marcus Rashford hasnât played since the FA Cup semi-final against Coventry on 21 April and he makes the bench tonight. Lisandro MartÃnez also is in reserve, the Argentinian has played just one match since 4 February. He has been a big miss and part of the reason that Casemiro partners Evans tonight again at centre back. Have to say Iâm surprised to see the Brazilian back there again after the shambles against Arsenal. Isak, Gordon and Murphy will be licking their lips.
Erik ten Hag speaks:
You have seen, the last games, we have academy players on the bench. Now we have players that can make the difference if they come on. They want to fight for this club.
On Hojlund being rested
We want to keep him fresh. Itâs a long season for the young players. We have Brighton, we have a cup final.
Who will play up front instead?
You will see. Everything is possible [he says coyly with a smile]
On Casemiro starting at centre back.
He played some good games, some downfalls. Obviously in the last game [against Arsenal] there was a bad moment. We know he can do the job, so he has to do the job.
The teams!
Manchester United: Onana, Wan-Bissaka, Casemiro, Evans, Dalot, Mainoo, Amrabat, Diallo, McTominay, Garnacho, Bruno Fernandes.
Subs: Bayindir, Martinez, Rashford, Hojlund, Eriksen, Antony, Kambwala, Forson, Collyer.
Newcastle: Dubravka, Trippier, Krafth, Burn, Hall, Longstaff, Bruno Guimaraes, Anderson, Jacob Murphy, Isak, Gordon.
Subs: Dummett, Schar, Joelinton, Ritchie, Barnes, Pope, Almiron, White, Alex Murphy.
Referee: Robert Jones (Merseyside)
Preamble
What a funny predicament. Neither Manchester United (8th) nor Newcastle (6th) can reach the top four. Both would, one suspects, quite like to be in the Europa League (in which they need to finish 5th or 6th) â with the shiny prizes of European silverware and Champions League qualification for next seasonâs victors â but a spot in the Conference League (7th) is probably too much of a hassle. Thereâs not much grandeur in Europeâs third-tier competition, even for the two Uniteds, and thereâs a good chance that a superfluous European campaign could (further?!) derail next seasonâs Premier League campaign. Newcastle will guarantee European football of some sort with a win tonight. Should Manchester United fail to win, they are almost certainly out of contention for any European qualification.
But as Spurs learned last night, rather than try to manoeuvre around the many permutations that may or may not be in your hands, the best move is simply to try and win all of your games, see what happens and live with the hand you are dealt.
Erik ten Hag is walking a very fine line indeed, and needs all the good PR he can get. A win for the Reds tonight would certainly help.
So, there isnât much on the line tonight, apart from European qualification and potentially someoneâs job, but Iâm pleased you are here regardless.
Kick-off: 7pm BST.