Ruben Amorim may have only been half-joking when he claimed the strains of managing Manchester United were already showing on his youthful features.
Before his first visit to Anfield, the 39-year-old had not so much had a new head-coach bounce as a flatline of failure, with five defeats in eight Premier League games since he succeeded Erik ten Hag at Old Trafford in November.
And Amorim’s message before Sunday’s visit to rampant Liverpool was hardly a rallying cry to fire up the troops as he claimed United’s players were “anxious – sometimes afraid”.
Not exactly fighting talk for what is, arguably, currently the European game’s toughest assignment, a meeting with a Liverpool side racing clear at the top of the Premier League and carrying all before them in the Champions League.
And yet, against all odds and in the teeth of a Merseyside blizzard, United showed all the qualities Amorim claimed they had been missing to deliver the finest performance of his short reign to earn a 2-2 draw.
Yes, the derby win at Manchester City may be United’s best result under the Portuguese, but this was the most complete display.
There was a freakish element to that win at Etihad Stadium, two late goals pinching the points at the end of a dreadful game.
Here, with the Kop expecting Liverpool to over-run this United side in reduced circumstances, Amorim’s men stood up to be counted.
No fear. No anxiety.
Lisandro Martinez gave them the lead but, even after Cody Gakpo’s angled strike and Mohamed Salah’s penalty left them chasing, United never gave up hope or took a backward step as Amad Diallo’s late equaliser shared the points.
And it could have been more. Much more.
If Harry Maguire had not shot over the top of an open goal with seconds of seven added minutes left, Amorim and United could have been celebrating a landmark first win at Anfield since Wayne Rooney struck in 2016.
For all that, this was the biggest indication yet that Amorim is having an impact, that his messages are finally getting across.
His Manchester United, at last, showed signs of life. The ‘Ruben Interim’ jibes can be silenced for now, along with the alarmist relegation talk, because this was a performance where Amorim’s side played for their manager and themselves.
Isak has always dealt with the pressure of potential. As a 16-year-old he became the youngest scorer in local club AIK's league history, and quickly established
The top stories and transfer rumours from Tuesday's newspapers...THE SUN Crystal Palace are poised to reject a 'silly' offer from
New research has revealed a sharp decline in the number of female coaches across the UK at all levels.Research conducted by YouGov
British number two Cameron Norrie accidentally hit a spectator with his racket during his defeat in the opening round of the ASB Classic in Auckland.Norrie was