The French youngster has been in and out of Jose Mourinho's starting XI this season, scoring only two times.
French forward Anthony Martial risks slipping from the first-team picture at Manchester United if he does not start making more of his opportunities, manager Jose Mourinho has warned.
Martial, 20, impressed in
his first United season after his move from Monaco for an initial fee of
36 million pounds ($44.9 million, 42.4 million euros), scoring 17 goals
to finish as the club's top scorer.
But
he has scored only twice this season, has been in and out of the
starting XI and was left out of the match-day squad entirely for
Thursday's 4-0 Europa League win over Feyenoord.
"First of all, the teams are very different," Mourinho said in reference to the changes he has enacted since succeeding Louis van Gaal as manager.
"The
way the team played last season -- I'm not saying better or worse, I'm
saying just different. So please write properly my words. Different
teams and probably more adapted to Anthony (last season).
"Probably
he was feeling more comfortable playing that way, at that intensity, at
that rhythm, with the ball possession and ball circulation. So probably
he needs also some time.
"But
in our squad, especially for these positions, we have (Henrikh)
Mkhitaryan, (Jesse) Lingard, (Memphis) Depay, (Juan) Mata, (Marcus)
Rashford, Martial.
"It's
probably the positions where we have more options. You have one
opportunity, you have two, you have three -- if you don't bite, somebody
comes and takes the meat."
Mkhitaryan
made his first start since September 10 against Feyenoord, playing in
Martial's usual left-sided role, and was named man of the match after a
display brimming with attacking endeavour.
United's
win left them one point from the Europa League knockout phase and they
now turn their attentions back to the Premier League, with West Ham United due to visit Old Trafford on Sunday.
United are sixth in the table, a sizeable nine points below leaders Chelsea, Mourinho's former club.
But
Mourinho cited the example of Chelsea's 2014-15 title-winning season --
which he feels has been overlooked amid criticism of his mixed start at
United -- as a reason for optimism.
"We go match after match," Mourinho told reporters after Thursday's win over Feyenoord.
"When
I won the last title, 18 years ago -- sorry, 18 months ago -- I had 10
points' advantage and then in one month I had the same points as Man
City. We lost 10 points in one month.
"Then
we recovered and won the title 18 years ago -- sorry, 18 months ago. So
you can recover points. Other teams can lose points.
"During
the season there are moments where everything goes against you. There
are moments where everything goes in your favour. So we know the game is
not over."
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