Belief Amid The Challenge
When the stakes are this high, belief becomes everything.
Marc Skinner knows his Manchester United Women side face a mountain to climb against Bayern Munich Women — but he’s not backing down.
A 3-2 first-leg defeat in the UEFA Women’s Champions League quarter-final has set up a tense second leg in Germany.
And according to Skinner, it’s far from over.
Not Naive — Just Learning
Some critics suggested United were naive, failing to manage the game after fighting back twice.
Skinner disagrees.
For him, this is part of growth at the highest level.
Facing elite opposition in a Champions League quarter-final comes with lessons — and he believes his team will respond.
Still, he didn’t hide his frustration.
All three goals conceded? Avoidable.
And at this level, small mistakes come with big consequences.
Bayern’s Ruthless Execution
Let’s give credit where it’s due.
Pernille Harder punished United early and again later, showing her experience and clinical edge.
Then came the decisive moment.
Momoko Tanikawa stepped up late in the game — assisting and scoring — to tilt the tie in Bayern’s favour.
It was a perfect example of impact from the bench.
The Tactical Battle
Bayern boss Jose Barcala expected United to press high — and planned accordingly.
His side exploited the space behind United’s defence with precision, executing their game plan to near perfection.
Skinner, however, believes the solution is simple:
Stop the passes. Apply pressure earlier.
Cut off the danger before it develops.
Easy to say… much harder to execute.
Squad Depth Tells The Story
One of the biggest differences on the night?
Depth.
Take Hinata Miyazawa — fresh from international duty, yet straight into the starting lineup for United.
Now compare that to Bayern’s approach.
They managed Tanikawa carefully, bringing her on at the right moment — and she changed the game.
That’s the luxury of rotation.
And right now, United don’t quite have it.
A Brutal Schedule Ahead
It doesn’t get any easier.
United face Manchester City Women in the league before heading to Germany for the decisive second leg.
Fatigue. Pressure. Limited squad options.
This is where mentality is tested.
Final Whistle
Marc Skinner knows the challenge ahead.
It’s tough. It’s demanding. It may even push his team to their limits.
But the belief is still alive.
And in football, sometimes that’s all you need to start a comeback story.
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