Cristiano Ronaldo marked yet another stunning individual achievement with his goal against Chelsea on Thursday night.
The Portugal superstar salvaged a point for the underwhelming Red Devils, cancelling out Marcos Alonso's strike for the visitors to secure a 1-1 draw.
Ronaldo showed Chelsea's forwards how to finish
His return has been United's only success this season
In a match devoid of chances for Ronaldo and United, the 37-year-old took his one opportunity with a beautiful touch and volley beyond Edouard Mendy.
Until that moment, football's all-time leading goalscorer had an unusual drought against Chelsea.
He netted in the 2008 Champions League final, but could not muster a Premier League goal against the Blues in 12 previous attempts.
As a result of his strike, Ronaldo has now scored against every single top-flight team he has played four times or more, another outstanding achievement in an almost never-ending list.
And when Man United's post-season inquest begins, questions will surely be asked where the club would be without him this season.
Ralf Rangnick's men are languishing in seventh, with their hopes of qualifying for the Champions League all-but over.
Ronaldo will have one year left on his contract this summer
Even still, only Liverpool's Mohamed Salah has more goals than Ronaldo's 17 in the top-flight this season.
In fact, the United star has scored eight of his side's last nine goals in the competition, including each of the last five.
Rangnick admits the club rely on Ronaldo right now, and with uncertainty over the striker's future, attacking reinforcements will be a priority for incoming manager Erik ten Hag.
The interim boss said: "We had quite a few other players scoring goals, I remember, in my first 10 games, we had 10 different goalscorers. It is how many opportunities can we create and how many goalscorers.
"Right now, we very much rely on Cristiano, he also showed a good performance when Chelsea were in possession. But there has to be a focus on bringing in a couple of new strikers for sure."
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