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Serie A leaders “exploring” the possibility of landing struggling Ten Hag signing in January with United open to exit – report

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    Manchester United slumped to their fifth defeat of December on Thursday with Wolverhampton Wanderers emerging 2-0 winners at the Molineux Stadium.

    Ruben Amorim has managed to win only seven points from a possible 21 in the Premier League since his arrival, with former boss Erik ten Hag accruing more points in his final seven games.

    It is a concern and currently, the squad looks ill-equipped to deal with the Portuguese’s demands and unless he compromises to some extent, a relegation scrap could be on the cards.

    The head coach has promised to carry on in the same vein regardless and tough times lie ahead for United supporters worldwide. All they can do is trust in Amorim and hope he can turn the tide.

    Zirkzee has struggled at United

    It looks extremely difficult, especially with the lack of firepower up front. Rasmus Hojlund, who started the game against Wolves, does not look ready to lead the line for the Red Devils.

    Substitute Joshua Zirkzee has fared even worse since his summer arrival and continues to get linked with an exit in January with Juventus interested in his services.

    As per Sport Mediaset, the Turin-based club are not the only Italian club looking at the Dutch star with current Serie A leaders Atalanta also eyeing the United No 11.

    Mateo Retegui suffered an injury in their game against Empoli while Gianluca Scamacca is yet to regain fitness after a long-term injury and as a result, manager Gian Piero Gasperini wants more cover up front.

    The Bergamo-based outfit are leading Serie A and among the options they have identified to strengthen their forward line, Zirkzee’s name also features.

    Atalanta are looking at the possible of a direct loan as well as a loan with an option to make it permanent next summer should the Netherlands international impress at the Stadium Athletes Azzurri d’Italia.

    “Atalanta is exploring the January market in search of a striker and there are many names on the notebook and with very different characteristics.

    Atalanta want Zirkzee

    “It will depend above all on Gasperini’s approval and the opportunities that the market can offer, but in Bergamo several names are starting to circulate including that of Joshua Zirkzee.

    “He hasn’t started off on the right foot at United and would be a dry loan operation, perhaps with the possibility of negotiating a transfer in June.”

    The 23-year-old has managed only four goals in red since his summer arrival and has looked more like a link-up player than a ruthless finisher which is the need of the hour in Manchester.

    The Red Devils are open to a loan exit in the winter and it seems Juventus will have a fight on their hands to land Thiago Motta’s desired star.


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    Ayantan has worked for 10 years in the Indian sports media industry, writing for the biggest newspapers and websites but his heart was always set on writing about his favourite club. Currently an editor at The Peoples Person. You can follow him on X: @ayantanc_25

    Man Utd: ‘Furious’ Amorim ‘completely blanked’ one ‘desolate’ star in repeat of Rashford ‘strong message’

      man-utd:-‘furious’-amorim-‘completely-blanked’-one-‘desolate’-star-in-repeat-of-rashford-‘strong-message’

      According to reports, Ruben Amorim ‘completely blanked’ Bruno Fernandes after he was sent off during Manchester United’s 2-0 loss against Wolves.

      Amorim has endured a rough start at Man Utd since replacing former head coach Erik ten Hag as he’s lost five of his ten games in charge across all competitions.

      The Red Devils hit a new low on Boxing Day as they suffered a 2-0 loss against relegation candidates Wolves at Molineux. Matheus Cunha was the start of the show as he grabbed a goal and an assist, while Bruno Fernandes was sent off for two bookings.

      Man Utd are only eight points adrift of the relegation places following this latest setback as they sit 14th in the Premier League.

      READ: Premier League Boxing Day Winners and Losers: Liverpool cruise on; City, United, Spurs battle for banter supremacy

      When addressing Fernandes’ red card, Amorim insisted they “tried” but the sending off was “really hard” for his side to deal with.

      “Of course, when you lose, when we don’t win, it’s a step back. It was really hard with the sending off. The goal was similar against Tottenham,” Amorim said.

      “Then, we tried. Even with one less guy we tried to and I think we were near something but then Wolves scored the second one. Then, in the end, we tried everything and the transition was 2-0. For us, let’s continue.

      “It’s so tough to win games in this league with 11 men. With 10 men, it’s more difficult. We have to focus on that.”

      “We have to improve the relationships, but we have some moments. We lack a little bit of aggression, but we don’t train. We just play and try to find a better way to win games and that’s it.

      “We can’t control the games like the other ones that we lost. I think we were always in control of the game, not always dominating, but in control of some things, some set-pieces. The sending off was really hard for us.”

      MORE MAN UTD COVERAGE ON F365…
      👉 Ruben Amorim predicted Manchester United ‘storm’ but should have known shower of sh*te was coming
      👉 Man Utd exit was ‘nonsensical decision’; sack the coaches responsible
      👉 Man Utd ‘going down’ and Ruben Amorim could be sacked before summer

      A piece in Manchester Evening News points out ‘moments you might have missed’ during Wolves vs Man Utd and it’s claimed that Amorim ‘ignored’ Fernandes.

      The report explained:

      ‘Just minutes into the second half, Fernandes was shown a second yellow for a high challenge on Nelson Semedo and he could have no complaints when he was given his marching orders by the referee, who refused to listen to his protests as VAR approved the decision.

      ‘Fernandes handed over the captain’s armband to Lisandro Martinez, trudged off the pitch and the reaction from a furious and disappointed Amorim on the touchline said it all.

      ‘United’s head coach completely blanked a desolate Fernandes and he shook his head as he walked straight down the tunnel.

      ‘Amorim blanked Marcus Rashford when he was substituted n his last appearance for the club and the 39-year-old isn’t afraid of sending a strong message.’

      “I wouldn’t be surprised…”: United fans set for bitter disappointment as Sky Sports journalist makes brutal January claim

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        Manchester United fans are set for further disappointment as there is reportedly not expected to be much activity in the January transfer window.

        The Red Devils have spent lavishly for seasons with little obvious long-term benefit.

        This summer alone they spent €214.5 million on five players but have seen the club slip down the Premier League table.

        New manager Ruben Amorim finds himself in 14th place and shockingly admitted after his side’s latest defeat that the club may find themselves in a relegation battle.

        Many supporters have charged Ineos with backing their new coach in the winter market by buying a much-needed left wing back and an experienced striker but these appear to be pipe dreams.

        Sky Sports reporter Dharmesh Sheth has told GIVEMESPORT that, “January is notoriously a difficult time to do business, both ins and outs, especially because if they’re trying to buy top, top-level players.”

        The reporter’s reasoning is that United would need to extract said players from top clubs and this would cost them even more money in the winter market.

        He went on to state, “So I wouldn’t be surprised if we don’t see much activity in the transfer window for Manchester United, which is Ruben Amorim’s first window in charge. I think the focus predominantly would be in the summer.”

        United reportedly owe £317.8million in transfer debt and had to pay out large amounts of compensation to sack Erik ten Hag and his staff, as well as bringing in Ruben Amorim and most of his staff at Sporting Lisbon.

        There is always the option of player sales to boost potential income for transfers but United may not find many takers.

        Casemiro, Christian Eriksen and Marcus Rashford all seem very much on the chopping block if a suitable offer were to come in but the club might just have to bite the bullet and accept less than they would like to generate.

        Should the club not be able to carry out any significant business in the January window, it would certainly spread a tidal wave of resentment from the fanbase towards the Ineos ownership as the club have arguably never needed winter investment more than they do right now.

        Feature image Naomi Baker via Getty Images


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        Alex is a huge Manchester United fan, inspired by greats of his homeland such as George Best, Harry Gregg and Norman Whiteside. Proud owner of such niche shirts such as Kleberson, Eric Djemba-Djemba and Gary Neville. Grew up pretending to be Ruud van Nistelrooy and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer in the back garden, with little success.

        “He has to be able to…”: Ex-England man tells United exactly what must happen to get over their current woes

          “he-has-to-be-able-to…”:-ex-england-man-tells-united-exactly-what-must-happen-to-get-over-their-current-woes

          Legendary Premier League striker Alan Shearer has indicated that Manchester United boss Ruben Amorim must be permitted to get rid of several underperforming stars in his squad, in order to get the club back on track.

          United suffered an eighth Premier League defeat of the season on Thursday evening as Wolverhampton Wanderers beat them 2-0 at Molineux.

          Matheus Cunha and Hwang Hee-chan both scored in the second half to pile further misery on the Red Devils, who have lost three of their last matches across all competitions.

          The result has left them languishing in 14th place in the top-flight standings and Amorim admitted his side must enter into “survival” mode to avoid being dragged into a relegation scrap.

          On Match of the Day, Shearer was asked about the mammoth task ahead for Amorim.

          The former England international said [via The Mirror[, “Results, issues off the field, Rashford.”

          “He [Amorim] said it himself, they’re going to have to suffer for a while. And they are, because clearly a lot of the players at that football club are not good enough.”

          “He has to be able to get rid of players and be allowed to bring players in who he feels can suit his system.”

          Shearer added, “But they are miles off it.”

          However, it’s understood that Amorim will not have the funds needed to spend massively during the upcoming January transfer window.

          United are walking a fine line with the Premier League’s Profit and Sustainability Rules, making a costly spending spree unlikely.

          Amorim’s side must sell before the buy and unfortunately for them, they don’t have a lot of sellable assets within their ranks.

          Featured Image Naomi Baker via Getty Images


          Follow us on Bluesky: @peoplesperson.bsky.social

          Derick Kinoti is a football writer at The Peoples Person who has covered Manchester United and the game extensively for many years. He is a keen analyst with expertise in SEO and journalism standards. Derick is convinced Wayne Rooney is the true GOAT and won’t hear otherwise!

          0 shots, 11x possession lost, 29% duels won: United starlet continues to look like a fish out of water in Amorim’s system

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            Manchester United midfielder Kobbie Mainoo’s struggles continued in a lacklustre 0-2 loss against Wolverhampton Wanderers on Thursday.

            The 19-year-old was one of the few bright spots from a dismal previous season and announced himself to the football world with numerous top notch performances.

            Mainoo put his name up in lights last season when he scored a sensational solo goal to give his side a 4-3 win late on in February at Molineux. At the same venue yesterday, things could not have gone more differently.

            United slipped to their fourth Premier League defeat in five games and there does not seem an obvious way out of the slump with Newcastle and Liverpool the team’s next two league fixtures.

            Mainoo started alongside Manuel Ugarte in the centre of the park but put in a poor performance as he lived on the periphery of the game for the 63 minutes he was on the pitch.

            He only had 37 touches of the ball and completed just 20 out of 29 passes.

            The 19 year old also had no shots on goal and failed in his only dribble attempt.

            Mainoo was no more effective defensively, as he only won two out of his seven ground duels and lost his only aerial battle.

            He also lost the ball eleven times as he failed once again to stamp his authority on the game.

            Mainoo is still clearly a top talent and will undoubtedly return to form but there is no arguing with the fact that he is yet to find his place in Ruben Amorim’s system.

            Whilst Manuel Ugarte looks very much at home in the Portuguese’s system, Mainoo is somewhat caught in no-man’s land as fans can’t work out what type of midfielder he is supposed to be.

            The second season was always going to be a learning curve and it was never going to run as smoothly as his outstanding debut campaign.

            Nonetheless, his poor form and apparent lack of suitability to Amorim’s style of football is becoming a greater concern for fans with every passing game.

            Feature image Shaun Botterill via Getty Images


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            Alex is a huge Manchester United fan, inspired by greats of his homeland such as George Best, Harry Gregg and Norman Whiteside. Proud owner of such niche shirts such as Kleberson, Eric Djemba-Djemba and Gary Neville. Grew up pretending to be Ruud van Nistelrooy and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer in the back garden, with little success.

            Man Utd sent me to sleep; it’s no Lowland League – the football week in TV

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              John Nicholson watches a whole lot of football on TV; thankfully there was a whole lot of football on TV this week, particularly on Amazon Prime.

              For last week’s praise of Roy Keane and MOTD, come this way…

              Here’s his pick of the highlights and lowlights from Christmas week:

              Scottish Championship: BBC Scotland
              If you miss the Scottish fitba on a Friday night in favour of some Sky hyperventilation, you are missing Proper Football presented by Shetlander Jonathan Sutherland (who seems to have oversized feet) and Leanne Crichton (usually buried under a big coat) and this time, former goalkeeper for 10 clubs, Cammy Bell, a kind of Scottish Rob Green.

              It’s quite an old-fashioned title sequence with synthy theme music and comes this week from Hampden Park, to see Queen’s Park play Raith to about 1,000 punters in a 50,000 vast echoing stadium. Usually it comes from an intimate lovely ground with adjacent houses with the lights on; everyone usually looks suitably cold and the bosses tend to look like they manage the bar at their local social club. More Mini Metro than metrosexual.

              It’s all pleasingly parochial with adverts around the pitch for the likes of Turban Tandoori in Giffnock and The Barnyard Bar in Coatbridge. The players, when interviewed, are not media trained, often look terrified, and are gauche and unassuming. Leanne has a massive set of bright white teeth and was previously somewhat parodied for having a massive bun of hair, but now wears it down and is always a knowledgeable, enthusiastic and cheerful presence.

              Everyone’s Scottishness is unreconstructed, pal. There’s none of the seriousness we usually see in English football. Cheerfulness is undervalued in broadcasting.

              James McFadden is usually around and is the co-comm alongside Al Lamont this week, though it’s often Michael Stewart, who does look like he might fight you for the last battered sausage of the night. The league is tremendously competitive, the football usually hugely entertaining, refereeing often questionable and is great unpretentious Friday evening entertainment as long as you appreciate real football not the plastic, autocratic-monied version which is negative about positive football.

              Shaved hair above the ears is de rigueur for the vast majority of players, making it look like there’s an outbreak of head lice in a prison. It’s often so quiet that the bad language, if you can understand it, often has to be rather pointlessly apologised for.

              Billy Gilmour and Scott McTominay of Napoli feature in a half-time film; the takeaway point about football in Italy is the unsurprising view that it is much better than in England – unless you work for Sky, obviously, and never actually watch Italian football. Then ‘Our League’ is the best in the world, which it will not surprise you to know few in Scotland believe.

              Queen’s Park contrive to lose a game they dominated 2-1. If you wouldn’t normally watch it, do yourself a favour and do so, preferably with a nip of the uisge beatha in your blood.

              EFLing with Sky Sports
              You can feel like a bit of an extremist watching a League One game two days before Xmas. God knows there can’t have been many watching Crawley v Birmingham from a misty, atmospheric, pleasingly packed Broadfield Stadium, but I will watch any football given the opportunity and here the pundits were rocker Gareth Ainsworth and battered pizza connoisseur and legendarily angry Scotsman, Steve Evans.

              No grandstanding against a big screen because this is the third tier and it’s hard not to think Sky was admitting this game doesn’t really matter to them. It was a pleasure to see Steve, a large man, whose trousers were worn like a rope tied around a water bed, as blessed relief from the tyranny of the athletic body of the ex-pro. He didn’t go radge sadly but I enjoyed Andy Hinchcliffe’s all-in enthusiasm co-comm for this game. He kept my attention and he really earned his corn. The low-key vibe was a nice release from the febrile default.

              Italian stallions
              If you watched Monza v Juventus on the 22nd, yes, I was the other viewer on TNT. It was better to watch than any Manchester United game. Actually they do a good job of Serie A coverage to an audience of literally some. Pleasingly, it’s a stripped broadcast that starts and ends with the whistle.

              And if you were wondering what had happened to Nigel Spackman, he’s often here, as is sometimes Clive Allen. The lesson is that football trimmed of an hour’s punditry and slo-mo Photoshopped packages either side of the game is no worse and markedly less annoying. Also the idea that the PL is somehow better is obviously unsustainable. TNT’s Italian football is deliciously romantic and it deserves praise for delivering the game efficiently for those of us who know oranges are not the only fruit.

              Boxing Day Football Feast 1: Hearts v Hibernian
              The 26th used to pull big crowds as people used football as an excuse to avoid grandma’s sprout wind for an afternoon, until watching a repeat of The Great Escape, while eating a hundredweight of After Eight Mints and Newberry Fruits before you went to bed in a diabetic coma. These days it’s a festival of TV football, lots of games to be watched, which is ideal if your legs refuse to work properly like mine.

              It starts with Hearts v Hibs, which turns out to be the best game of the day, Premier League be damned. It’s a fierce derby, without the added toxic tang of witless sectarianism. Kris Boyd is at Hearts and he always looks narrow-eyed and suspicious and also too big for his seat. A touch of the elephant in a Mini about it. Eilidh Barbour is a comfortable, intelligent presenter.

              Two co-comms unusually accompany regular fitba commentator, Ian ‘Crocks’ Crocker. Stuart Lovell and Greenock man Neil McCann are an Aussie and a Scot working well together and delivering textured, varied work, providing a constant stream of passion and insight. Better than is typical. A tremendous game.

              Boxing Day Football Feast 2: Manchester City v Everton
              City’s latest failure v Everton was on Prime with the pleasingly relaxed Dan Walker, Stuart Pearce, Phil Jagielka and Rachel Brown-Finnis. I caught it post-game. They talk about Haaland without confronting the fact that their goal average is less with the terrible gurning haircut than without. Doesn’t seem to occur to anyone that City’s reason for failure might be hiding in plain sight.

              Pep looks like he’s got PTSD and has been held hostage in an underground Syrian jail. Still, Sean Dyche does sound like that ‘That’s Life’ dog saying “sausages” and he carries himself like every bouncer you’ve ever encountered in the last 40 years. I half expect him to say “sorry, no trainers mate”.

              READ NEXT: Premier League Boxing Day Winners and Losers: Liverpool cruise on; City, United, Spurs battle for banter supremacy

              Boxing Day Football Feast 3: Newcastle United v Villa
              Then it’s onto the Newcastle game on Prime with Guy Mowbray and Michael Brown doing co-comms for an uneventful broadcast, distinguished by Thomas Hitzelberger bringing some welcome beta male vibes to the punditry and a strangely swaying Shay Given with presenter Marcus Buckland, whose appearance looks constructed out of three other presenters.

              Boxing Day Football Feast Tedium 4: Wolves v Manchester United
              This featured a rare appearance by a very Mancunian ‘call the cops’ Wes Brown, now 45. Feel old? And a puppyish Matt Murray. Presenter Manish Bhasin is also greying. Time’s winged chariot, I guess. The mill worker-voiced Lucy Ward is Jim Proudfoot’s co-comm. It’s awful, much worse than a Lowland League game, so awful that the mist seemed to be trying to obscure our sight of it. I fell asleep, as you do watching the best league in the world. Of course United lost. They are a special flavour of laughable, with players who are stealing a living and taking the pish.

              READ: Ruben Amorim predicted Manchester United ‘storm’ but should have known shower of sh*te was coming

              Boxing Day Football Feast 5: Liverpool v Leicester City
              By the time Gabby, Emile, Jon Arne Riise and Roberto Martinez turn up on Prime in the fog, the United game has drained me of the will to live, like a footballing succubus. Jon Champion and Andy Townsend are doing commentary, which feels very 1990s. The endless Van Dijk, Trent and Salah hagiography which precedes the game is a sickeningly rich pudding of slaver, grease and deification.

              Martinez is a good half-time dissector and Leicester are at least better than Manchester United to watch. VAR sucked out all the atmosphere and joy to get to the same call as the original decision. So not correcting mistakes then. Pfft. But Liverpool won, as Prime guessed they would, which – in a ratings chase – is surely why it was selected to be the last match on in the first place.

              Man Utd transfer: Amorim ‘urgently requests’ Arsenal target as January signing with INEOS ‘leading race’

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                According to reports, Manchester United head coach Ruben Amorim has made an ‘urgent request’ for a new signing as they ‘lead the race’.

                Man Utd’s struggles have continued under Amorim as they have lost three games in a row across all competitions.

                The Red Devils – who finished the game with ten men – suffered a disappointing 2-0 loss against fellow Premier League strugglers Wolves on Boxing Day. They are only eight points clear of the relegation places.

                Matheus Cunha was the star of the show as he grabbed a goal and an assist for his side. He has ten goals and four assists in his 18 Premier League outings this term.

                The Brazil international’s form has not gone unnoticed as a report from The Telegraph claims Bukayo Saka’s injury has ‘sparked’ Arsenal’s ‘interest’ in the talented forward.

                READ: Man Utd ‘going down’ and Ruben Amorim could be sacked before summer

                The report explained:

                ‘Arsenal hold an interest in Wolves forward Matheus Cunha but would face a huge battle landing him during the transfer window while the Brazilian is involved in a fight for survival at Molineux.

                ‘It is understood that Arsenal’s interest in the 25-year-old was sparked before the injury of Bukayo Saka, who will be out for “many weeks” with a hamstring problem suffered against Crystal Palace.’

                ‘Wolves are fighting to preserve their top-flight status for an eighth successive season and are thought to be extremely reluctant to let one of their key players leave in January.

                ‘Wolves will be braced for bids in the next windows for the Brazil international, regardless of their fate this season and would be in line to make a healthy profit on their investment in 2023.’

                MORE MAN UTD COVERAGE ON F365…
                👉 Former Man Utd winger slams Amorim, names alternative manager INEOS should’ve appointed
                👉 Ruben Amorim predicted Manchester United ‘storm’ but should have known shower of sh*te was coming
                👉 Man Utd ‘set Rashford price’ as ‘problem’ identified with ‘no sign’ of club meeting Ratcliffe demands

                Arsenal are not alone in targeting Cunha as a report in Spain claims Amorim has ‘urgently requested’ the Wolves star to be signed in January as he could ‘save their season’.

                ‘Manchester United manager Ruben Amorim has asked for a signing to save the Red Devils’ season

                ‘Matheus Cunha has caught the attention of Manchester United after his outstanding performance in recent months in the Premier League. His performances has not gone unnoticed by Ruben Amorim who has requested his incorporation for the January transfer market.

                ‘His growing role has sparked interest from bigger clubs, with Manchester United leading the race for his services.

                ‘Amorim, aware of his team’s need to strengthen their attacking side, sees Cunha as the ideal option to boost the Red Devils’ attack.

                ‘The Brazilian’s qualities fit perfectly with the Portuguese coach’s playing philosophy, who looks for players with dynamism and the ability to create imbalances.

                ‘Wolverhampton, for their part, could be willing to negotiate for a figure that reflects the impact and importance of the striker in their squad.’

                “I understand the concern…”: United summer signing yet to make his debut addresses his slow start to life at the club

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                  Manchester United youngster Sekou Kone has insisted he is not at all worried about the fact he has not made his senior debut for the club.

                  United warded off significant competition from other top European clubs to land Kone in the summer from Malian side Guidars FC.

                  It’s thought that an agreement was struck at around the £1.2 million mark, with several other performance-related bonuses also included.

                  United had been scouting Kone heavily before they finally decided to make a move for him. While he is seen as a future first-team player, the Red Devils are eager to afford him sufficient time to get acclimated to life in a new country.

                  Kone has already featured for United’s Under-21s, where he has shown promising glimpses of the player he can develop into if well-nurtured.

                  The 18-year-old spoke to Africafoot and discussed his transfer to United and life so far at the club.

                  The midfield prodigy remarked, “At first, I didn’t expect to sign for Manchester United. When I was presented with the offer, I was on cloud nine.”

                  “Manchester United is a great institution in world football and I can only be delighted with this choice which will allow me to climb the ladder.”

                  “It’s a demanding club that has won the championship 20 times. It’s also a club that knows how to spot good opportunities. They made a big offer for a kid from Mali, even though I had everything to prove. And to be honest, Manchester United is not something you can refuse. I always told myself that it was a choice of the heart, because I’ve loved Manchester United since I was little.”

                  Kone added, “I understand the concern about my short-term future but I’m not worried about it at all.”

                  “A lot of youngsters have been launched like CR7, Rashford and most recently Mainoo and the new manager is a believer in the beautiful game, he loves youngsters too.”

                  He explained that all he needs to do is work hard and take his chance when it arrives.


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                  Derick Kinoti is a football writer at The Peoples Person who has covered Manchester United and the game extensively for many years. He is a keen analyst with expertise in SEO and journalism standards. Derick is convinced Wayne Rooney is the true GOAT and won’t hear otherwise!

                  United star sparks injury fears after defeat to Wolves, it could be more bad news for Amorim – report

                    united-star-sparks-injury-fears-after-defeat-to-wolves,-it-could-be-more-bad-news-for-amorim-–-report

                    Manchester United boss Ruben Amorim may have been handed another potential injury blow as Kobbie Mainoo was spotted limping after last night’s defeat to Wolverhampton Wanderers.

                    United suffered a third consecutive loss across all competitions as Wolves beat them 2-0 at Molineux.

                    The hosts’ goals were grabbed by Matheus Cunha and substitute Hwang Hee-chan. The result left the Red Devils in 14th position in the Premier League table and just eight points above the relegation zone.

                    In his post-match presser, Amorim admitted that his side must enter into “survival” mode to ensure they’re not dragged into a relegation scrap.

                    Like many of his teammates, Mainoo didn’t have the best performance against Vitor Pereira’s men.

                    The England international was handed another start in the midfield alongside Manuel Ugarte.

                    During the 63 minutes he was on the pitch before being replaced by Casemiro, Mainoo won just two of the seven ground duels he delved into and was dribbled past twice.

                    He successfully delivered 20 of the 29 passes he attempted. Three of these were key passes.

                    (Stats obtained from Sofascore)

                    While many assumed that Mainoo’s substitution was due to his poor display or a reaction to Bruno Fernandes’ red card, it has now emerged that there is a chance the change could have been due to injury.

                    This is because according to Manchester Evening News reporter Steven Railston, he spotted Mainoo after the game and the midfielder was not moving too comfortably.

                    Railston wrote on X, “Kobbie Mainoo was limping as he walked through the mixed zone. Hopefully it’s just fatigue.”

                    Kobbie Mainoo was limping as he walked through the mixed zone. Hopefully it’s just fatigue #mufc

                    — Steven Railston (@StevenRailston) December 26, 2024

                    Mainoo made his return from an eight-week injury in mid-November and has accumulated 364 minutes of playing time across six appearances since then.

                    If there is any issue with the 19-year-old’s fitness, then Amorim or the club will issue an update very soon.

                    Mainoo being injured is the last thing Amorim needs, with Fernandes and Manuel Ugarte both ruled out of Monday’s meeting with Newcastle at Old Trafford.

                    Featured Image Shaun Botterill via Getty Images


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                    Derick Kinoti is a football writer at The Peoples Person who has covered Manchester United and the game extensively for many years. He is a keen analyst with expertise in SEO and journalism standards. Derick is convinced Wayne Rooney is the true GOAT and won’t hear otherwise!

                    Premier League Boxing Day Winners and Losers: Liverpool cruise on; City, United, Spurs battle for banter supremacy

                      premier-league-boxing-day-winners-and-losers:-liverpool-cruise-on;-city,-united,-spurs-battle-for-banter-supremacy

                      A typically brilliant day of Boxing Day action saw Liverpool take a decisive step towards the Premier League title, but the banter club title remains locked in a magnificent three-way battle between the Manchester clubs and Spurs from which it remains impossible to pick a winner. Or loser.

                      Winners

                      Liverpool
                      They’re going to win it, and they clearly absolutely know they’re going to win it. A home victory over Leicester isn’t particularly compelling evidence of anything much on its own, but the serenity is. Even after going a goal down early on there seemed little genuine reason to suppose something out of the ordinary might occur, that Liverpool might not solve this little puzzle they’d set themselves.

                      Those mildly irritating draws against Newcastle and Fulham have been forgotten in a flurry of goals this week, with Mo Salah’s late points-sealer making Liverpool the first team to reach 40 this season.

                      But the best result of the day for Liverpool was perhaps not even their own, but Chelsea’s late and unexpected collapse at home against Fulham. It was a reminder that Enzo Maresca’s side are – entirely understandably – not yet truly ready for a title challenge.

                      Liverpool’s main and possibly only rivals for the title are currently, therefore, to be found in fourth place and nine points off the pace.

                      Having started the season as a forgotten third wheel expected to need time to adjust post-Klopp, they will end the first half of the season as overwhelming favourites for their second Premier League title. It’s not been a bad few months.

                      Mo Salah
                      And while the reasons for Liverpool’s excellence are many and varied and layered, there’s no point being too clever about identifying the main one.

                      Whatever Mo Salah’s future may hold, his present involves being better than he has ever been for Liverpool, which is really quite startlingly good indeed.

                      His late goal against Leicester takes him three clear in the race for the Golden Boot with a game in hand, while across just his last 10 Premier League games he’s contributed 12 goals and seven assists. Or, you know, a pretty solid whole season’s contribution for a normal wide forward. Salah, as absolutely nobody needs telling, is not a normal wide forward.

                      Nottingham Forest
                      Just a thrillingly wonderful time to be alive. Fears that the utter mortifying embarrassment of contriving to lose a game of association football against Manchester City might derail their hitherto excellent season have proved unfounded, with the response being a four-match winning run in which they’ve seen off Manchester United, Aston Villa and Tottenham while perhaps genuinely most impressively of all also coming away from Brentford with all three points, an achievement football scientists had long considered impossible.

                      Nobody should get over-excited by a win against silly old Spurs, of course, and nor should there be undue praise for adopting the very obvious tactics that make it so very easy to first stifle and then punish this profoundly idiotic football team. But few have done it so efficiently and unfussily as Forest, who happily allowed Spurs to have two-thirds of the possession while backing themselves to ensure that got the visitors precisely nowhere while also knowing they would never be more than a few seconds and a few crisp passes away from that soft, soft underbelly.

                      The goal that would turn out to be Forest’s winner was the perfect microcosm of a flawlessly executed 90-minute plan.

                      They will surely fall back below Arsenal tonight, but even that is a sentence that feels absurd to write. It is very real, though, as is the five-point cushion Forest now enjoy over fifth place.

                      Forest could also now lose all 20 remaining games this season and very probably not get relegated. We don’t think they will or should do that, but it’s still nice to be that certain of avoiding relegation with half a season still to play, and also it would be funny if they did now go ‘Well that’s our season’s goal achieved’ and just down tools for the next six months.

                      Fulham
                      A huge bonus win at a ground where Fulham rarely thrive sees them eighth in the table and very much above the cut line just beginning to develop among all that mid-table shod.

                      After the disappointment of the goalless draw with Southampton, here was a win to have Fulham once again looking up and dreaming big. There is already a very strong likelihood that fifth place will deliver a Champions League place this season and the delicious prospect of a mass scramble to claim it.

                      Fulham have currently positioned themselves in that scramble, which is more than can be said for Tottenham or Manchester United.

                      Wolves
                      Back-to-back wins under Vitor Pereira to lift themselves out of the relegation zone for the first time this season. And also for the first time this season just generally having the look and feel of a team that is going to be okay. It’s not just that the table now shows them to be better than Leicester as well as Ipswich and Southampton, it’s that you know the truth of it deep in your bones.

                      Manchester United were yet again willing participants in their own downfall, of course, but few could argue Wolves were not deserving of the three points that eventually came their way after Bruno Fernandes’ red card. They were the better team against 11 and compellingly so against 10.

                      And talking of taking your chance to inflict further misery on a very silly Big Six club in the midst of a full-blown panic attack, Wolves’ next task is a trip to Spurs to take on their literally, metaphorically and philosophically non-existent defence.

                      Vitor Pereira
                      Easy game, this Premier League management lark. Don’t know why others continue to shamble around making it look so difficult, to be honest.

                      Matheus Cunha
                      Legitimate questions remain around the vaguely farcical way he remains available for some really quite significant matches when a ban for the Ipswich shenanigans is so obviously in the offing, but here is a man making the best of the situation as it appears before him.

                      With Arsenal’s latest INJURY CRISIS seeing not just one but a genuinely unthinkable two players out for a little while, they are already casting eyes in Cunha’s direction and he did nothing to take himself out of the shop window with his all-round starring display against United.

                      Do still wonder about the long-term repercussions for his future from that ridiculous reaction at Ipswich, though.

                      West Ham
                      Not the most convincing of wins against Southampton, but a powerfully useful one. For a while now, West Ham have been an interesting team, one whose place was not yet certain. Were they in the relegation picture, or were they just another one of those teams in the vast mid-table morass between about fifth and 14th? Two wins and two draws in the last four appear to have answered the question decisively for a side that now sits three points closer to the top six than they do the bottom three.

                      Newcastle
                      Have spent large parts of this season looking wildly unconvincing and there’s little doubt they are the grateful beneficiaries of three Big Six teams descending into genuine farce, but clear signs now that Newcastle have emerged from their stumbles to place themselves perfectly to cash in on all the nonsense going off elsewhere.

                      Okay, fine, they like the rest of us didn’t quite account for Nottingham Forest doing what they’re doing but a serene victory over fellow contenders Aston Villa makes it three wins from three games with 11 goals scored and none conceded to leave them in prime position for at least fifth and the already seemingly near-certain Champions League place that will bring this season.

                      And their current form means they can approach the next week with its games against Man United and Spurs as one of huge potential opportunity to consolidate that status rather than one that jeopardises it.

                      Alexander Isak
                      A tricky start to the season riddled with doubts over form and fitness has been swept away by a run of 10 goals in 10 games that have lifted him to fourth on the Premier League goalscoring chart. Some effort for a player who didn’t score his second goal of the season until the final weekend of October.

                      Sean Dyche
                      Absolutely in his element, isn’t he? Arsenal, Chelsea and now Man City all brought to heel and unable to find a compelling answer to the Dycheball puzzle.

                      We must admit we wondered what the actual point of having Sean Dyche as your manager was if you’re just going to concede goals all the time as Everton did so dreadfully at the start of the season.

                      But a side that conceded 13 goals in its first four games has shipped only a further nine in the subsequent 13, four of which came so bafflingly at Old Trafford.

                      Sure, nobody in the entire division has scored fewer goals than Everton and all this effort has still only dragged them three points clear of the bottom three, but say what you like about the tenets of Dycheball at least it’s an ethos.

                      Losers

                      Manchester United
                      It’s been a mess of a year on and off the field for Manchester United and all the indications are that it may yet get worse before it gets better in 2025.

                      Off the pitch, we can only hope that Jim Ratcliffe was visited by three spirits on Christmas Eve. Otherwise it seems safe to assume his reign of cartoonishly petty terror will continue unabated, with nasty pointless little swipes in every direction that always, always, always by some unfortunate coincidence target the little guy.

                      We do understand why at the time United fans were so keen to welcome Ratcliffe as neither Glazer nor Qatari but the idea of some benevolent billionaire was always far-fetched. Although we must surely all admit none of us predicted he would be quite such a cliched megarich super-villain.

                      On the field, it’s been one chaotic disaster after another. Even the FA Cup win is tainted by the long-term problems it’s caused by earning Erik Ten Hag an unjustified and unjustifiable stay of execution that was a) never going to last long and b) always likely to f*** things right up.

                      And now we are where we are. United have brought in one of the best young coaches in Europe but in the worst possible circumstances. Everyone knew Ruben Amorim was a coach who likes to do things a certain way. Everyone knew United didn’t possess a squad anywhere close to being capable of doing things that way. To bring him in at the busiest time of the season was a dereliction of duty from the club’s new and already fracturing brains trust.

                      Ruben Amorim
                      We like him a lot and do think he can make this work if given the time and backing required. But it’s increasingly clear that it’s going to be a lot of time and a lot of backing. We’re really not at all sure any longer that United will be able to ride out the storm to get the potential benefits. They’ve f***ed this so badly.

                      But while Amorim has been dealt a bad hand he hasn’t played it flawlessly either. He’s been impressive with his handling and understanding of the scale of the job in his off-field duties; he doesn’t – like so many United managers before him – appear simply too small for so large a job. That gives hope for the future if meaning little in the present.

                      He knew what he’d inherited and had this squad’s number from the start – that ‘storm coming’ line after a superficially impressive win over Everton was not some vague expectation-checking cliché but a precise prediction based on known and understood factors. Nevertheless, one does wonder whether an absolute rigid insistence on cramming assorted sh*tty square pegs into his predetermined round holes isn’t making things even worse at a time when things are already bad.

                      They are miserably underpowered as an attacking force; all 13 of the teams above them and two of the five below have scored more goals than United this season, and that’s a problem when you also have a defence that can’t be relied upon to avoid conceding two direct corners in the space of a week.

                      Bruno Fernandes
                      Man United’s captain and talisman continues to define their 2024 in almost absurdly perfect fashion. Talented but vulnerable, completely unsure of himself in the new system and so desperate to show how much he cares that he frequently makes a bad situation worse.

                      His first yellow card was soft, but his second – so early in the second half too – was brainless. Two red cards in two painfully damaging defeats before the season is halfway done isn’t ideal captaincy, it has to be said.

                      READ: Man Utd joke pair in worst Premier League XI of Boxing Day

                      Chelsea
                      No need to panic, no need to go overboard. Missteps in the Enzo Maresca era have been few and far between. But failing to secure even a point at home to Fulham having led with 81 minutes on the clock is a major stumble at a wholly inopportune time.

                      A victory that appeared for so long to be on the cards would have consolidated second place and put pressure on leaders Liverpool in the late game. As it is, Chelsea may have proven Maresca right about where they fit into a title race (i.e. not at all).

                      It’s not all bad, of course. Chelsea’s own competence and the nonsense going off elsewhere means they still find themselves well placed in the scrap for third place with Nottingham Forest that we all definitely expected at the start of the season.

                      Enzo Maresca
                      Don’t want to go in two-footed here on a manager who has exceeded all reasonable expectations at a club bedevilled by nonsense in recent years, but what doubts there have been about him have centred on the management of his defenders’ workload, and the game management across the last two games has left much to be desired.

                      Maresca has been adamant all along that his team and squad is not yet ready for a title challenge, and that’s fair enough. But maybe there was a bit of self-reflection in that assessment too.

                      Tottenham
                      Yet another defeat and a timely, perhaps vividly necessary reminder that not all their losses are the carefree wild ‘entertaining’ ‘fun’ of the Liverpool or Chelsea or Brighton games.

                      Throw this miserable effort into a big bowl of sh*t alongside the performances in defeat against Ipswich and Palace and Newcastle and Bournemouth and Arsenal, as well as in the draws against Leicester and Fulham.

                      That adds up to nine league defeats already – only three teams have suffered more this season – and the vast majority of them not some heroic ‘glory, glory’ nonsense but just a team that is a bit crap.

                      The mitigation that undoubtedly exists in their defensive injury crisis is more than outweighed by the sheer paucity of their full-strength attacking endeavours here. And again, it’s no one-off.

                      There are several myths and delusions around this Spurs side that need nipping in the bud, and the idea that even in defeat they are always thrillingly entertaining is right at the top of the pile.

                      However brilliant their very best football is – and it is absolutely brilliant – that really is not their default level. And nor even is thrillingly excitingly vulnerable. Their default, standard level of performance based on straightforward frequency of occurrence is Quite Boringly Drearily Sh*t. For a team that so proudly sets out to win every game, they don’t half lose an awful lot of them.

                      Ange Postecoglou
                      He’s finished. Firmly in when-not-if territory now, and it would be a major surprise if he sees out the season. This was the worst kind of defeat for him to suffer against the worst kind of opponent on the back of the wild win over Man United and the ludicrous thrashing from Liverpool.

                      This was both a stark reminder of just how drab and lifeless so many of Postecoglou’s many, many, many Spurs losses have been, while also the most pointed of all possible rejoinders to the increasingly unhinged idea put forward by fans and rivals alike that Postecoglou cannot be expected to deliver any more than mid-table irrelevance at a club that for all its penchant for nonsense has finished outside the top six only twice in the last 15 years. Spurs are Spurs and the club is run by fools appeared to be the main reasons Ange should be spared any blame.

                      This is now guaranteed to be Tottenham’s worst first half of a Premier League season since 2008/09 with its infamous two-points-from-eight-games start and subsequent Harry Redknapp rescue job.

                      It was always ridiculous to let the manager off so easily for a run of form worse than those that saw any of his predecessors up to and including Mauricio Pochettino sacked, but even more so when you lose meekly at Evangelos Marinakis-owned Nottingham Forest, for whom victory lifts them above Arsenal into third. Is it still a resigned shrug of the shoulders and ‘Can’t expect any better than this while Daniel Levy remains?’ Will it take Spurs being dragged into an actual relegation fight for some to wake from their deluded slumber?

                      Tottenham’s defence against Wolves
                      Radu Dragusin limped off injured and Djed Spence got himself sent off late on to leave Spurs’ already threadbare defence looking actually non-existent for the weekend’s clash with an improving Wolves side who beat them home and away last season.

                      That pair join Guglielmo Vicario, Cristian Romero, Micky van de Ven, Ben Davies on the list of confirmed absentees, while Destiny Udogie continues to struggle with both form and fitness.

                      Quite who joins the suddenly untouchable and vital Archie Gray in that Tottenham defence on Sunday is now a complete mystery.

                      Manchester City
                      Just not even remotely a surprise now to see Manchester City fail to beat Everton at home, and the fact Sean Dyche’s side are in the middle of one of those gloriously stubborn spells they enjoy from time to time in which they simply refuse to lose to good teams having spent much of the season losing spectacularly to bad ones like Spurs or Man United provides only the flimsiest of silver linings.

                      The stark overall picture is now one win from the last 13 games for a manager and group of players who genuinely appear to have no explanation for what’s happening or any answers for how to solve it.

                      Pep Guardiola
                      This is a run that would have seen any other Premier League manager sacked, make no mistake about that. Mikel Arteta could not have survived a drop-off this bad. Everything Guardiola’s achieved at City understandably makes things different, as does that increasingly awkward and desperate-looking – from club and manager – new contract he recently signed.

                      But there’s a reason why a run this bad with no obvious solution at hand would in almost all other imaginable scenarios lead to the manager being replaced. City won’t sack Guardiola and fair enough, but we surely can’t be far from the point where he decides he’s just lost the strength and stomach for the fight. Does he really have the energy for the rebuild City need in both the immediate short-term and more importantly over the next couple of years?

                      Guardiola’s preference for a small squad is a big factor in what’s been allowed to happen to a group that leans too heavily on too few old warhorses who are no longer able to do what they once did. For multiple reasons both on-pitch and off, change is coming one way or another for City. And never has it looked more likely that this will also involve a new manager.

                      He’s been absurdly sensational for an absurdly long time, but he and his ageing team look totally, utterly done.

                      Erling Haaland
                      After 10 goals in his first five Premier League games of the season it’s now three in the subsequent 13 and a missed penalty for a player struggling desperately to get himself involved at all now City’s all-round play has so thoroughly collapsed.

                      Even in his goal-laden first season the lack of touches Haaland had in general play became a running joke, with one hat-trick coming from a total of 16 touches in the match seeing Haaland seemingly perfect the role of goalscorer, distilling the job to its very purest form.

                      That was fine when City were playing well and the chances were coming. In a struggling team, Haaland becomes the ultimate luxury passenger.

                      Early in City’s current run of woe, Haaland was at least still getting shots away. They weren’t going in, but they still happened. He had seven attempts on goal in the defeats against Brighton and Spurs, but since then hasn’t managed more than three shots in any of his last six Premier League games.

                      With his wider contribution as negligible as ever – his combined total of passes across those six games is 84, 33 fewer than Mateo Kovacic made against Everton alone – you do start to wonder at the wisdom of City deciding they didn’t need any competition or back-up at all for the big man.

                      Aston Villa
                      Sort of sums up Villa’s season in many ways that their own Boxing Day struggle was masked by the graver calamities befalling the more conspicuously ridiculous Spurs and Manchester United.

                      But it’s been a largely unconvincing league season when compared to last year’s ruthlessly efficient one. The fixture list has been kind to Villa recently which has helped them along with straightforward wins over the away version of Brentford as well as the contrasting but enormous struggles going off at Southampton and Man City, but the brutal truth is that Villa have now lost to two direct rivals in the Champions League chase in the space of 12 days.

                      It may well be that fifth is enough for Champions League qualification this season, and Villa may now have condemned themselves to a place in the large group targeting such a finish; by this evening it’s highly likely the top four will be six points away.

                      Leicester
                      We’re really not at all convinced Ruud van Nistelrooy was the right answer for a relegation scrap, and while defeat at Liverpool itself is of no great concern in isolation the fact it represents three consecutive compelling defeats at a time Wolves, Palace and Everton all appear to be getting their acts together to a greater or lesser degree is a concern.

                      Leicester have suffered a six-point swing compared to Wolves over the last two games to drop into a bottom three that starts to have a compelling look to it, containing as it now does all three of last year’s promoted clubs.