Jose Mourinho warned of the troubles that could lie ahead for his Manchester United side, but the Portuguese must still accept much of the responsibility from a 2-3 defeat at Brighton that has the Red Devils' season off to a bad start.
The concern for United is now whether Mourinho is capable of stemming the tide to turn things around in a way he wasn't in his third season at Real Madrid or in his second spell at Chelsea.
On those occasions his fall even came from a position of strength he isn't afforded now having won the league in the previous season.
This time round after a trophy-less campaign, Mourinho clashed with the club's board over their failure to significantly strengthen his squad, particularly at centre-back.
Mourinho's point was illustrated in a disastrous defensive display at the Amex in which United conceded three times in the first-half with centre-backs Victor Lindelof and Eric Bailly at fault.
However, the club's executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward could point to the fact that £60 million ($76 million) has been spent on Bailly and Lindelof in the past two seasons since Mourinho took charge as justification for not trusting his manager with more cash to splash.
"The centre backs melted and you can't do that in the Premier League," said former United captain turned TV pundit Gary Neville on Sky Sports.
"When Manchester United are so publicly in the transfer window looking for defenders, what belief does that give them?
"They know they're on borrowed time and I have to say Bailly and Lindelof were poor. They are the ones Jose has signed.
"It has been poor recruitment. That back four aren't good enough to win the title."
Woodward hinted on the final day of the transfer window that the club had to take a more long-term view than Mourinho.
Despite signing a new contract till 2020 in January, the growing feeling is Mourinho will do well just to see out the current campaign.
Woodward's long-term view also included holding on to Paul Pogba and Anthony Martial despite their rifts with Mourinho.
Pogba was again entrusted with the captain's armband at Brighton, but his admission he didn't show the right attitude was hardly one of an inspirational leader.
"They had more hunger than us. I put myself first, that my attitude wasn't right," said the French World Cup winner.
A big response is needed when Tottenham visit Old Trafford next week to avert a crisis spiralling before the opening month of the season is out.