Manchester United head coach Ruben Amorim has labelled his team "maybe the worst" in the 147-year history of the club.
United's 3-1 home defeat by Brighton was their fourth loss in five home Premier League games.
They have collected 11 points in 11 league games since Amorim replaced Erik ten Hag in November.
United are 13th in the table, 10 points clear of the relegation zone but seven behind 10th-placed Fulham.
"In [the last] ten games in Premier League, we won two," said Amorim. "Imagine what this is for a fan of Manchester United. Imagine what this is for me.
"We are getting a new coach who is losing more than the last coach. I have full knowledge of that.
"We are the worst team maybe in the history of Manchester United. I know you [media] want headlines but I am saying that because we have to acknowledge that and to change that. Here you go: your headlines."
United did equalise after conceding an early goal against Brighton.
However, rather than Bruno Fernandes' penalty becoming a springboard for a better display than what had gone before, they were badly outplayed.
Kaoru Mitoma put the visitors back in front before a horrendous mistake from goalkeeper Andre Onana gifted Georginio Rutter Brighton's third.
When you look at the stats, Amorim was slightly exaggerating when he called his team "maybe the worst" in the club's history. But not by a lot.
At this stage of the season, only 13 United teams have had a lower points tally in the history of the club - the last time being in 1986-87.
Manchester United suffered their sixth home Premier League defeat of the season, their most from their opening 12 home matches of a league season since 1893-94
They have conceded the first goal in each of their last five Premier League games at Old Trafford, their joint-longest such run in the competition, also doing so five times in a row from August to October 2023
United have lost 10 of their 22 Premier League games this season, the earliest into a league campaign that they have hit double figures for defeats since 1989-90 under Alex Ferguson
They have been relegated five times, most recently in 1974, something still highly unlikely to be repeated this season
Amorim had a lengthy chat with Sir Alex Ferguson before the game.
Ferguson was coming off the pitch after taking part in the pre-match tribute to legendary striker Denis Law, who died on Friday.
Referee Peter Bankes had to wait for Ferguson to finish before he could start the game. Amorim told BBC Radio 5 Live afterwards Ferguson had told him to "keep positive".
On some days that is much easier than others.
As the losses stack up - United's only recent Old Trafford success came against bottom club Southampton on Thursday, and even then they had been trailing until Amad Diallo's late hat-trick - more and more questions are being raised about whether they are on the right path.
Amorim says he is not "naive" and understands the pressure he is under.
The former Sporting boss is adamant he will not change his 3-4-3 formation which brought him such success in Portugal but he admits United's players are struggling to adapt.
"I knew that was going to be hard to put a completely new idea in the moment, but when you lose games and don't win three games in a row it becomes really hard," he said.
"Everybody here is underperforming and we have to accept that. It is unacceptable to lose so many games. The opponents are better than us in many details.
"We cannot be consistent and I'm not helping my players in the moment. You have to acknowledge we are in a very difficult situation, with all the bad records, as losing games at home, losing games in the Premier League.
"I know we can succeed but I am not naive. We need to survive this moment. But I am not going to change, no matter what."