Ruben Amorim and Manchester United arrived in Grimsby keen to start winning again. Instead, they made history with their latest low point.
Mark OgdenAug 28, 2025, 04:10 AM
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Mark Ogden is a senior soccer writer for ESPN.com. Read his archive here and follow him on Twitter: @MarkOgden_.
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GRIMSBY, England -- Ruben Amorim will never forget his trip to Grimsby. He certainly won't want to go back. A 12-11 penalty shootout defeat Wednesday against a side from EFL League Two after a 2-2 draw in regulation was a new low for Manchester United and their beleaguered coach, and it might just prove to be the night when his grip on his job started to unravel.
Make no mistake, losing to Grimsby Town is a humiliation for Amorim and United. Never before had United lost to a team from England's fourth tier in this competition -- they had won their 11 previous ties against teams from that division -- but it was the manner of the second-round exit that could put Amorim in peril.
United had trailed 2-0, almost going three down before Cameron Gardner's second-half goal was ruled out for offside, but a late rally saw them haul themselves back to 2-2 with goals from Bryan Mbeumo and Harry Maguire. Before a chaotic shootout, marked by misses by strikers Matheus Cunha and Mbeumo, £74 million summer signing Benjamin Sesko shot over from six yards with the last kick of the game. That should have been an omen for what was to come next.
After witnessing his side lose on penalties, Amorim gave a cryptic assessment by saying his players "spoke loud for me." It didn't sound like a compliment.
"When you play against a fourth-division team, it's not the goalkeeper [that costs you the win], it's everything." Amorim said. "It's the environment, it's the way we face the competition. We know that we are in a moment when people will pay attention to everything.
"It's going to be massive, every detail, and we show that performance today. So my players spoke for me really loud."
A penalty shootout loss to fourth-tier Grimsby Town marked a historic new low for Bryan Mbeumo and Manchester United. George Wood/Getty Images
But a combination of the home team's spirit and organization and Amorim's refusal to accept that his favored 3-4-3 system does not suit his players led to United suffering their worst cup defeat in memory.
There were so many side stories in this game -- the poor defending by Diogo Dalot and Tyler Fredricson, goalkeeper André Onana's hopeless attempt at dealing with the corner that led to Grimsby's second goal, the inability of midfielders Kobbie Mainoo and Manuel Ugarte to control the game and dominate the central third of the pitch and the careless penalty taken and missed by Cunha that would have won the shootout for United.