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Gary Neville has described Manchester United's 4-1 defeat to rivals Manchester City as a "fitting memorial" to Ed Woodward's reign at the battling Premier League club.
The Red Devils had an afternoon to forget at the Eithad on Sunday, as they collapsed to their seventh league defeat of the season.
The result leaves Ralf Rangnick's side fifth in the Premier League, one point behind Arsenal in fourth having played three games more.
Woodward left his role as United's executive vice-chairman - the top operational role - last month after nine years at the helm. Richard Arnold has succeeded him as CEO.
The administrator was heavily criticised during his time in charge, as United won just three major trophies: the FA Cup, EFL Cup and Europa League.
Woodward oversaw the appointment of four uninspiring managers - David Moyes, Louis van Gaal, Jose Mourinho and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer - and interim boss Rangnick.
But his biggest failure was United's attempt to join the failed European Super League, a closed shop of 12 European clubs that was heavily criticised by the likes of Neville.
And the United icon has pinned Sunday's performance on Woodward's time in charge, also blaming the club's controversial owners the Glazers.
"Still can't get my head around that!" tweeted Neville, refencing a statistic that showed City enjoying 92 per cent possession of the ball at


