Thursday 31 October 2019 14:33, UK
Jose Mourinho is refusing to panic after watching his Manchester United side fall to their third straight defeat with a 3-1 loss to Watford on Sunday.
Despite Marcus Rashford's second-half equaliser, United left Vicarage Road empty-handed after goals from substitute Juan Camilo Zuniga and Troy Deeney sealed all three points for the Hornets.
The loss capped off eight days for United that began with a 2-1 derby loss to Manchester City and also saw them beaten by Feyenoord in the Europa League on Thursday.
It is the first time Mourinho has lost three consecutive games in a season since February 2002, when he was Porto boss.
Mourinho is refusing to get carried away by the highs and lows of United's season and says the only way his team will improve is through hard work on the training ground.
"I have this capacity of balance," Mourinho told MUTV. "Balance is, for me, not running around the pitch when we were winning a couple of matches and nobody sees now me being too depressed.
"I'm sad. Obviously, I'm sad but, as I was telling the players, there is only one way.
"At 10:30 in the morning, we have a training session and we have to be there. They have to work, they have to show themselves with a certain kind of attitude towards negative moments."
United will have two chances to get back in the win column this week as they take on Northampton on Wednesday in the EFL Cup and then host Leicester City in the Premier League on Saturday, with both games live on Sky Sports 1 HD.
One man who appears to have earned himself more playing time is winger Ashley Young, who came on as a substitute for Anthony Martial in the 38th minute against Watford.
It was Young's first Premier League appearance of the season and Mourinho was impressed with the desire the 31-year-old showed to succeed.
Mourinho said: "I show them, as an example, Ashley Young who was, in my opinion, phenomenal with his attitude, positivity and determination.
"We need positive people to give us a positive feeling because, next time these boys are going onto a football pitch, they are going to feel, obviously as normal human beings, the weight of the defeats."