Jamie Carragher's war of words with Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has continued following Manchester United 's Champions League win against Atalanta on Wednesday.
The Red Devils came from 2-0 down to pick up all three points and go top of Group F, as a late Cristiano Ronaldo header handed them their first win in three games.
United trailed at half-time and boos rang around Old Trafford, with Solskjaer outlining his thoughts that supporters 'know better' than to jeer mid-game.
But Carragher disagreed and believes it was the fans who spurred their beloved side to victory.
"Some supporters maybe felt they wanted to wake up the players but I didn't feel they needed woken up, they needed support," Solskjaer told CBS Sports.
"This crowd should never stop believing in these players.
"You do hear a little bit of grumbling and I've been here at this club for 18 years, more or less, and that hasn't happened often.
"They know they're better than that."

On punditry duty in the CBS studio, Carragher followed up and admitted: "I thought it was a strange interview, that.
"I think the little comment he made about the fans was a silly thing to say. I think the fans I think won them that game in the second half.
"Manchester United, coming in at half-time 2-0 down to Atalanta and I don't think they were that poor, Man United, but you're going to get grumblings, people who are unhappy."
The Liverpool legend continued by saying: "It's not just that game, they're on a really poor run of games and the performance they had at Leicester as well [the Red Devils' 4-2 defeat on Saturday].
"When that ground is rocking, it is difficult to stop.
"I have been there as a player and it's difficult to stop, teams get deeper and deeper.

"And those supporters are as important as Cristiano Ronaldo, or Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, or the changes he made in the second half.
"It was a really silly thing to say that the supporters should know better when they played such a huge part in winning them the game."
He added: "If Man United beat Liverpool on Sunday, it will again be as much because of the supporters as any player on the pitch.
"Because, as you know, United haven't got the players or the team as good as Liverpool, so they're going to need that support."
Fellow pundit Peter Schmeichel said he could "understand" former team-mate Solskjaer's comments, explaining the difficulty of European ties, having won the competition in 1999.
The squabble comes after Solskjaer hit back at Carragher in his pre-match press conference, with the former Anfield defender critical of his coaching, saying both the United boss and the fan base know "they need a better manager" to return to the top.
Do you agree with Carragher? Give us your verdict here.
Carragher stated: "He is not at the level as Jurgen Klopp, Thomas Tuchel or Pep Guardiola, who have got years of experience and have won major trophies.
"Ole hasn't got that. So where he's got them means he's done a really good job. But this team is a good team.
"There is a feeling that if Ole wins a trophy, he should stay in a job.
"United are only going to win the FA Cup or Europa League - if he won one of them, United will still need to have a better manager."
Solskjaer was asked about those comments on Tuesday and responded: "No, it doesn't affect me, but of course you've seen some of the comments once in a while."
"I didn't know what he was saying now but of course we got Liverpool on Sunday as well, so Jamie's always looking at all these little things.
"I've got my values, I've got my way of managing, and I believe in myself.
"As long as the club believes in me, I'm pretty sure that Jamie Carragher’s opinion is not going to change that."
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