Manchester United manager David Moyes once again called on the club's supporters to show patience after his side fell to a sixth home defeat of the campaign against Manchester City on Tuesday.
While City's 3-0 win took it to within touching distance of the Premier League summit, United's defeat left it 12 points below the Champions League places with only seven games of the season remaining.
United has fallen a long way since romping to last season's league title by 11 points, but Moyes rejected suggestions the rebuilding process at Old Trafford will take longer than anticipated.
"It is underway in its own way," he told a post-match media conference.
"You don't just suddenly change things around. As I said the other day, a lot of other clubs have had to change and they have had to do rebuilding jobs and look at the time it has taken them to do that or get to a level of competing.
"We hope it won't take us as long as some of those clubs have taken. I think we have got a period of time where we are going to have to make sure we get to that level, which we are not at just now.
"Everyone knows this is going to be a job which is going to take a little bit of time to get the way we would like it, but that is the job and I recognize that."
City took the lead after just 43 seconds via Edin Dzeko, who added a second goal early in the second half before Yaya Toure sealed the visitor's third successive win at Old Trafford in the 90th minute.
United went into the game on the back of morale-boosting wins over Olympiakos and West Ham United, and Moyes was at a loss to account for his team's limp start to the match.
"I just think we never came out of the blocks," said the Scot, whose side hosts newly-recrowned German champion Bayern Munich in the Champions League quarterfinals next week.
"You prepare the players, you warm them up, you do all the things to have them ready, but we just never started. It gave them (City) a real big lift to get a goal so early on."
United director Bobby Charlton confirmed the board's backing for Moyes in an interview with the BBC published earlier on Tuesday, declaring he was "absolutely certain" the former Everton manager was "the right man" for the job.
For his part, Moyes was prepared to accept the blame for his side's latest setback and dismissed the notion the title-winning squad he inherited from Alex Ferguson was not up to scratch.
"I take responsibility; I have to be the one who plays them, picks them, and that is what it is," Moyes said.
"I think there are a lot of really good players there."
City now trails Chelsea by only three points and has two games in hand - at home to Aston Villa and Sunderland --but manager Manuel Pellegrini said it was inaccurate to suggest that the title was theirs to lose.
(China Daily 03/27/2014 page23)