The fact that the club's strategic review took more than a year to be resolved has also played into Ten Hag's hands. Although it emerged that Sir Jim Ratcliffe's INEOS had agreed to buy a 25% stake in the club in exchange for managing the football affairs, beating Sheikh Jassim Bin Hamad Al Thani in the takeover bid, the deal took more than two months to be confirmed by the club, with it eventually being announced on Christmas Eve.
The petrochemicals tycoon and his team are still not in the building, however, as the deal needs to receive regulatory approvals, including from the Premier League. So despite the relief at the deal finally being confirmed, the club still remains in a state of limbo until it gets the green light.
Jean-Claude Blanc, the CEO of INEOS Sport who has been described as "the Lionel Messi of sport business", and director of sport Sir Dave Brailsford are due to join United's executive board and when they do, Ten Hag's position will be more at risk.
Interim CEO Patrick Stewart did not have the authority to sack a manager but Brailsford and Blanc will, and INEOS have been known to be rather trigger happy in the past with Nice, sacking four managers after taking over the Ligue 1 club in 2019. They will not stand for continued decline.
However, it has been reported that Ratcliffe and his INEOS colleagues largely respect Ten Hag, who they met when they visited the club in March. That perception may have been altered by the drab results and, according to reports, they would consider appointing Graham Potter or Julen Lopetegui if results continue to spiral. Even so, they are unlikely to sack Ten Hag as soon as they get the keys to the club.
As United found out when they sacked Solskjaer in November 2021 and ended up appointing Ralf Rangnick as interim boss, finding a top-level coach in the middle of a season leaves you short on options compared to in the summer.
In the long run INEOS may want a manager who they have hand-picked themselves, and Ten Hag's recent steering of the team will certainly not help his cause, but it seems unlikely that sacking him will be top of their to-do list.