But Fernandes’s impact has a second layer, too, one a little less tangible. It was there in that moment when the first goal should have come, when Martial should have passed: there is a player here, now, that United’s fans want to see on the ball. They want to see what he can do. They have seen enough — but not too much — of him to think he can do anything.
It was after that moment that United found its voice: the team, the fans. Martial scored; Old Trafford exulted. City, for the first time in some time, was silenced. Guardiola’s team still played the pretty patterns, but United growled and gnarled and clawed them away. For the first time in some time, it was for them to believe anything was possible.
Ninety-six minutes in, as Old Trafford waited for the final whistle, for confirmation that there was something to celebrate, Ederson scuffed a clearance straight to Scott McTominay, who had come on as a late substitute, there to shore things up, to keep City at bay. McTominay was some distance out: 40 yards or so, at an angle. He shot first time. It curled in. Sometimes, Manchester United remembered, good things happen too.