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Amorim names side for key Real Sociedad clash

ManUtd.com reporter Adam Marshall at Old Trafford.

Thursday 13 March 2025 18:45

Manchester United’s team to face Real Sociedad in the crucial Europa League tie has been announced.

Head coach Ruben Amorim will look to guide the Reds past the Spanish outfit, with the scores level at 1-1 after the first leg in San Sebastian.

A place in the quarter-finals of the competition is at stake and the boss has made three changes from the weekend.

Ayden Heaven is handed a European debut and a first senior start of his career, stepping into defence with Leny Yoro out injured.

Noussair Mazraoui switches to the back three, enabling Diogo Dalot to play as right wing-back and Patrick Chinazaekpere Dorgu comes in on the left, as his ban only covers domestic matches.

The third change to the XI that started the 1-1 draw with Arsenal sees Rasmus Hojlund restored to the centre-forward position, with Joshua Zirkzee dropping deeper.

Manuel Ugarte is only fit enough to be on the bench, where there is a maiden call-up for Gibraltar international James Scanlon.

As expected, Spain international Martin Zubimendi returns to the visitors’ midfield.

THE TEAMS

United: Onana; Mazraoui, De Ligt, Heaven; Dalot, Casemiro, Fernandes (c), Dorgu; Garnacho, Zirkzee; Hojlund.

Substitutes: Harrison, Mee, Amass, Fredricson, Lindelof, Collyer, Eriksen, J. Fletcher, Ugarte, Scanlon.

Real Sociedad: Remiro; Elustondo, Aguerd, Zubeldia, Munoz; Marin, Zubimendi, Mendez; Becker, Oyarzabal, Kubo.

Substitutes: Martin, Beitia, Barrenetxea, Sergio Gomez, Oskarsson, Marrero, Javi Lopez, Mariezkurrena, Aramburu, Hamari Traore, Turrientes, Olasagasti.

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ManUtd.com reporter Adam Marshall at Old Trafford.

Thursday 13 March 2025 18:45

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Ancelotti to Arsenal, Nagelsmann to Chelsea in Premier League manager predictions

Managers come and go faster than ever these days so we are foolishly going to predict who will be in charge come 2028.

We’ve taken a look at all 20 current Premier League clubs and speculated about who could be the man in charge in three years’ time…

Arsenal

Barring an unlikely Champions League victory, Mikel Arteta is heading for another trophyless season in 2025. Arsenal look set to retain the ‘putting the pressure on’ trophy but with Manchester City crumbling, this was supposed to be their year to win the actual title.

Gooners are mostly behind Arteta for now but with just a single FA Cup, and over £650million spent, the pressure is mounting on the Spaniard.

But who comes in his place? The eyebrow man himself Carlo Ancelotti, of course. The Italian may soon get the chop at Madrid with Xabi Alonso the next in line, so a serial winner with a knowledge of the Premier League would be ideal for the Gunners.

Especially after they inevitably get Real-ed in the Champions League.

Prediction: Carlo Ancelotti

READ: Spanish former midfielders dominate list of contenders to replace Spanish former midfielder Arteta

Aston Villa

Having got his fingers burned with some of the top teams of Europe, Unai Emery has now got a good thing going on at Villa.

With rich owners, Champions League experience, and a fanbase that adores him, it is hard to see why the 53-year-old would be tempted elsewhere, even in three years’ time.

Prediction: Unai Emery

Bournemouth

Andoni Iraola’s impressive work at Bournemouth this season makes him a strong candidate for a move to a bigger club (he is favourite for the Spurs job), but who would come in?

In terms of what the bookies believe, old favourites like Sean Dyche and Chris Wilder are ranked highly, but one name that could be a rogue choice is Bodø/Glimt boss Kjetil Knutsen.

The 56-year-old guided the Norwegian side to the club’s first European competition in 2021, where they put six past Jose Mourinho’s Roma, and Knutsen was named the 2019 Eliteserien coach of the year after finising second.

Would the Premier League be too big a promotion? Possibly, but Bournemouth have shown they are willing to back their manager if they think he will come good.

Prediction: Kjetil Knutsen

Brentford

Thoams Frank’s excellent work at Brentford will surely see him eventually move to a bigger club, but who would replace the Dane at the Bees? Our choice is Sebastian Hoeness.

The German has been doing good work at Stuttgart having taken over with the club with the club bottom of the Bundesliga and taking them to the Champions League in 2024.

With links to Bayern, he was reserve manager from 2019 to 2020, he seems the perfect left-field choice for Brentford.

Prediction: Sebastian Hoeness

Brighton & Hove Albion

By signing 32-year-old Fabian Hurzeler, Brighton made it clear they are in this for the long run.

He has done well at the Amex with the club comfortably top half in the Premier League table and we believe he will still be by the seaside in three years’ time.

Prediction: Fabian Hurzeler

Chelsea

In predicting this, we may as well pin a load of names on a dartboard because frankly, who knows with Chelsea?

Enzo Maresca’s side have been poor of late and like his Leicester side last year, they appear to have been found out. Can he arrest the slide? We very much doubt it.

As to who’s next…inside the mind of Todd Boehly is not somewhere we want to spend too much time and Chelsea have already made their way through a lot of the top managers.

Kieran McKenna was liked in the summer but Ipswich’s performance this season has seen his stock fall while other summer targets like Ruben Amorim and Hansi Flick have gone elsewhere.

Therefore, we are going for Julian Nagelsmann. The 37-year-old is contracted with the German national team until the 2028 Euros, meaning he would be free to take over at Stamford Bridge from that summer.

Prediction: Julian Nagelsmann

Crystal Palace

Having survived a scare earlier this year, Oliver Glasner’s Palace are flying and the Austrian’s job no longer seems under threat.

With that in mind, we reckon he will earn an extension to his current deal which ends in 2026 and will still be there come 2028.

Prediction: Oliver Glasner

Everton

The Mosyesiah returned to Goodison to rescue them for the reaction sinkhole and it is fitting that their long-serving manager of yesteryear will be the man to guide them to a new stadium.

At 61, David Moyes is not the youngest manager in the league but his work at West Ham and now Everton suggests he has plenty in the tank.

The league may have evolved beyond the days of Everton being an outside bet for the Champions League spots but under the Scottish manager, you can see the Toffees being back in the top half after years of slipping down the table.

Prediction: David Moyes

Fulham

Like Emery at Villa, Marco Silva may not find too many better options than his current set-up at Fulham.

He has navigated them back onto the Premier League and the west London club are pushing the top half this season.

His time at Everton may have put off bigger clubs, although he could be tempted for a return home to Portugal if someone comes calling.

For now though, we reckon he stays at Fulham and their jacuzzi-fitted stadium.

Prediction: Marco Silva

Ipswich Town

Ipswich faced a tough job keeping hold of Kieran McKenna last summer with interest from Chelsea and Manchester United but more seriously Brighton, but he chose to stay at Portman Road.

The Northern Irishman’s stock has fallen a little given Ipswich’s struggles this season but the way they dispatched Coventry in the FA Cup would suggest the squad will do very well in next year’s Championship.

Should McKenna stay, he could do a Sean Dyche and bounce straight back into the Premier League.

Prediction: Kieran McKenna

Leicester City

Ruud van Nistelrooy has shown little in his Leicester career so far to suggest he is a long-term appointment, which means there may well be a change in the summer.

Leicester will have ambitions to go straight back up and to achieve that, they could do a lot worse than Sean Dyche.

Whether Dyche wants to drop down to the Championship – a league he has won promotion from twice – is another question, but we’d back him to do like he did at Burnley and get them back up and stay there.

Prediction: Sean Dyche

Liverpool

The easiest prediction on this list. Arne Slot has been the perfect appointment by Liverpool and the Dutchman will not be able to believe just how easy this Premier League lark is.

He joined on a three-year deal in 2024 but there is already talk of an extension on improved terms.

Prediction: Arne Slot

READ: Eight Liverpool players Arne Slot should look to discard this summer

Manchester City

Whether Pep Guardiola makes it to end of his contract in 2027 is another matter but this will almost certainly be his last deal at the Etihad, leaving City with the unenviable task of replacing him.

Bayer Leverkusen boss Xabi Alonso remains a contender but he looks more likely to head for Madrid than Manchester, but there is one potential manager already on the City wage bill: Michel.

The Spanish manager, currently at the City Group’s Girona, has impressed with the Catalan minnows, taking them to a surprise title challenge last season, and could be the man to replace Guardiola.

Or he gets served up as a sacrificial lamb because it is better to be the man after the man after Guardiola rather than his immediate successor.

Prediction: Michel

Manchester United

We are fully expecting this prediction to blow up in our face but stay with us on this: Ruben Amorim will still be boss at Old Trafford in three years’ time.

The Portuguese manager has not made the best of starts in Manchester but he appears to have the backing of the board for now and if United do well in the summer, the former Sporting boss could see some improvement next season.

Will United have won the league in three years’ time? Almost certainly not but Amorim and the United board will hope to have them back in Champions League contention by then.

Prediction: Ruben Amorim

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Newcastle United

For now, Newcastle’s mega-rich owners have given Eddie Howe time despite his recent troubles, but if they do not start getting the Champions League football they crave, he could be set for the sack.

When the new owners appointed Howe, they struggled to get a big name to join their then-relegation-threatened club, but they have come a long way since then and could be an attractive prospect.

Financial backing, if rules let them spend it, and a strong fanbase make Newcastle an appealing project, which is why someone like Massimiliano Allegri may be tempted.

A five-time Serie A winner with Juve and another title-winner with Milan, Allegri knows how to win leagues, but his negative tactics may stifle Newcastle’s best talents. But he is the kind of big-name manager that would cement Newcastle at Europe’s top table.

Prediction: Massimiliano Allegri

Nottingham Forest

With the club currently in the top four, it is hard to see how anyone but Nuno Espirito Santo will be in charge at the City Ground in three years’ time.

Forest may not be able to repeat the success of this year but with Nuno in charge, they look certain to be permanently in the top half. Not bad for a team many thought could go down this year.

Prediction: Nuno Espirito Santo

Southampton

Sotuhampton’s performance in the league this year suggests it may be a while before we see them back in the top flight and with Ivan Juric on a deal until 2026, it is hard to see him staying much longer than that.

The Saints aren’t against a left-field choice having brought Mauricio Pochettino to the league and a character like Liam Rosenior could be on their radar.

Honing his craft at Strasbourg, the 40-year-old is our rogue pick for the job at St Mary’s.

Prediction: Liam Rosenior

Tottenham Hotspur

Ange Postecoglou’s mate-saying days would appear to be numbered with Spurs languishing down in 13th (yes we know about the injuries but come on), but who could Spurs attract to north London?

Antionio Conte’s time in Tottenham plus their strict wage bill may put off the very cream of the crop but what about a man who knows how to win in the Premier League? For that reason, we’re going for Bournemouth’s Andoni Iraola.

We reckon he will get another good season down on the south coast before Spurs plump to bring him in.

Prediction: Andoni Iraola

West Ham United

The managerial situation at West Ham can be a bit volatile but we reckon new boss Graham Potter will be there for the foreseeable.

The objectives are obvious: move them away from the relegation zone and get back challenging for Europe. Simple.

Prediction: Graham Potter

Wolverhampton Wanderers

Vítor Pereira’s greatest asset to his Wolves survival chances is that there will almost certainly be three worst teams going up against them.

The gap between the Championship and the Premier League is only growing and if Wolves can keep hold of Matheus Cunha – and stop him fighting people – they stand a good chance of remaining in England’s top flight.

Pereira has improved the team since arriving, making them more defensively solid than under Gary O’Neil, so we reckon he will be there for a while yet.

Prediction: Vítor Pereira

Arsenal need ‘trophy winner’ as Ange and Amorim also in trouble

The Premier League title race is over for this season but Arsenal have an opportunity in 25/26; Mikel Arteta is under pressure along with Ruben Amorim and Ange Postecoglou.

Send your views to theeditor@football365.com

Arsenal have a massive decision to make as 25/26 opens up
Are the Arsenal board heading towards the biggest decision they’ve made in years? They look like they need to spend upwards of another 150 million this summer on a striker and one or two more positions. Are they going to back Arteta with close to 1 billion in transfers with very little in return?

Next season’s league looks winnable for a team that’s not Man City. If Liverpool don’t sign Salah on for another year or 2, I see them dropping off massively. Without his input this season they would be battling for top four, not strolling to the league title. Even if they sign a player to replace him, they’d be doing well to come anywhere near his 44 (so far!) goal contributions. And this is not the same team that had Mane and Firmino chipping in with a decent amount of goals. All this doesn’t factor in losing Van Dijk’s presence at the back and his long balls forward, as he seems most likely to extend, or Trent leaving.

As for Man City, they have already spent big in January and probably will again in the summer but with all the change it seems next season could be a transition year for them. I don’t see them putting up 90+ points while bedding in so many new players. Rodri is due back but he’s spent a year not playing and who knows what level he will come back at. De Bruyne’s output also needs replacing as this season has shown.

As for the rest, Forest will most likely drop off with Champions League football and I can’t see a title-winning team in that Chelsea squad. Unless a team does a Leicester (technically Spurs and Man United have fallen so far down it could be one of them!), I don’t see any playing squad being prepared well enough to win the league next year bar Arsenal.

Add in a striker and one or 2 other squad players and they should be favourites. And that’s the decision for the Arsenal board. Do they persist with the Arteta project or look to bring in someone to get them over the line? I think, like others have pointed out, Arteta will be Arsenal’s Brendan Rodgers and be their nearly man. This season is a drop-off in performance in a weaker league than before despite the squad at hand.

They need a trophy winner next year. Get Ten Hag on the phone!
David, Ireland

READ: Ancelotti to Arsenal as Premier League managers predicted for 2028

Left-back to the future
Say what you want about Arteta but have you ever known a manager to think so far out of the box and have half the outfield players on the pitch be left-backs (or at least have played a substantial amount of games at left-back)

Left back at left-back, left-back at right centre back, left-back at left centre mid, left-back at right centre mid and left-back on the left wing. 5 left-backs…..5.

Total left back football.
Lee Bristol AFC

Last-chance saloon for Ange at Spurs?
And so, at Spurs, here we are at last chance saloon for Ange, his project and his band of ‘Angeball’ enthusiasts. David Tickner must be pinching himself with glee.

I’ve long been a vocal believer in Ange and all he’s been trying to do at Spurs. I’ve been happily able to ignore the ridicule and the criticism for the past 3 months, on the promise that our woes *were* genuinely down to a devastating injury crisis and a thin squad, and not because of Ange being out of his depth. However, the last 3 games of miserable football have truly put the ‘Ange in’ crowd on the back foot. Worse even than the results, it’s the meek, shapeless, confidence-starved performances that are most damning.

This Thursday in the Europa League against AZ Alkmaar, the Ange project is truly hanging by a final thread.

My faith in Ange was always rooted in 4 things:

1. This was a manager who *wanted* to be at Spurs. Not like Conte or Mourinho who were just gracing us with their presence.

2. He wanted to make us a *winning* team playing the kind of exciting, attacking football we fans craved. He wasn’t just coming to fight for 5th and 6th.

3. The early evidence was beautiful. His first 10 games, and the big wins this season over United, City, Villa showed how good it *could* be.

4. Most importantly, the players. The players visibly and vocally bought into Ange’s vision. Hopefully still true.

After years of pressing the reset button every 18 months at Spurs, the thoughts of a long-term, positive, Ange project was beautiful. I hated the thought at Christmas of pressing the red button once more, bringing in, whoever, Fonseca? Terzic? Iraola?… and then sacking them and doing it all over again 18 months later (Welcome, Kieran McKenna!).

But now, even a staunch Ange fan like me has to admit the risk. Despite the high highs, it’s doubtful whether any manager can have such a damning record of inconsistency, bad losses, and bad performances over 18 months as Ange has had, and survive. Even if he *does* turn things around in the last quarter of the season, that might not be enough. Erik Ten Hag at Man United taught us that. It might be time for any reasonable person to admit defeat, and to start to think about the Iraola, or the Thomas Frank era..

…but since when has football fandom suited reasonable people?

I can’t help but still dream of Ange and this group of players climbing back out of this absolute pit, and bringing Spurs to that sweet, sweet promised land of Trophy glory in the Europa league this season. Can you imagine? Not just months of anguish this season, but years and years of ridicule and ‘Spursiness” swept away in one thrilling cup final night. Incredible. And this win being the launch pad for a beautiful era at Spurs.

But that dream hangs in the balance, and on Thursday night the scales will tip.

Ange in… til it kills me.
Andy, THFC, Eire

READ: Why Manchester United and Spurs are battling to become the new Stoke

Amor-out?
I am going to require some input or feedback from coaches or football analysts for this, but I have come to the conclusion that Rubin Amorin is the wrong coach at the wrong time for the wrong club in the wrong league.

This is not a knee jerk response based on recent results or performances. My conclusion is based on the following assessments:

1 – A 3-5-2 formation relies very heavily on the role of the wing backs. You can see the difference Dorgu makes over Dalot. I doubt there are many two-footed wing backs around let alone one-footed ones, so over a gruelling English Premier League season, you are going to need FOUR wing backs in the squad.

2 – Another fatal flaw is that the high press requires three components which must ALL be present; 1) incredibly fit players, 2) a level of aggressiveness to attack the opposition which is not a quality easily trained, and 3) the ability to then have the talent, both teammate awareness and ball skill, to find the open teammate and that person have the ability to score.

If we take Liverpool as the benchmark (as much as it pains me to admit!), they are probably the closest to the exemplar but it required them to have at least a couple of World Class players which makes it seem like they are playing with more than eleven men (not including the referee!). Take any combination of Alisson, Van Dijk, TAA or Salah out and they become as vulnerable as anyone else.

3 – Such an approach works when you are the 800 lb gorilla of your League as you overpower everyone else. Amorin was able to achieve that quickly in the Portuguese League. The problem is, in the EPL, there are 900 lb and even 1,000 lb gorillas who can afford better players. Even if Amorin could buy his Fantasy XI, it would not be a Liverpool or City in their peak. Bournemouth and Newcastle show that young, hungry and aggressive only get you so far.

4 – The high press is akin to committing all your troops into battle with no reserve – once you get over it, you are in open field. Games where Bournemouth, Newcastle, etc. have lost or played badly is either when this has been exploited or key defenders have been missing. Someone once said “goals win games but defense wins titles.” If you constantly concede from corners and free kicks, it places that much extra pressure on the forwards. It is simple logic that if you have 3 defenders on the halfway line, they are going to be more susceptible to conceding than a 8-man low block. Mourinho’s Chelsea was a team that, if they scored, you might as well have gone home because the opposition was never going to score. Anyone remember “1-0 to the Arsenal”? Boring but absolutely bloody successful. Look at Atletico Madrid.

5 – This seems so obvious to even be saying it but, you cannot score if you do not have the ball. I understand that the chances of scoring improves if you win the ball back 30 yards from goal instead of 60 but it defeats the objective if you give it straight back. The premise is, you win the ball back high up the pitch and, 10 seconds or 3 passes later, goal! Well, MUFC currently can’t string 3 passes together.

This missive is not designed to present a solution but to propose the following – what is the “next big thing” in football tactics?
Adidasmufc (Reminisces for the days of Holland’s “Total Football”)

Finance men have killed Man Utd
So Ben’s looking for a man in finance. Presumably with a trust fund.

It may come as a surprise Ben but the people who have run United up to now did in fact understand finance. Edward Woodward – an accountant and investment banker. Richard Arnold – an accountant. What is clear is that they were hopeless at running a football club.

Unfashionable thought it might be to say football is in fact the business of a football club. The jerseys, the sponsorships, the TV deals – they are ancillary to and consequent of the football. If the football fails ultimately all of it fails. As we are now seeing.

United are in such deep financial distress not because of the tea lady or the canteen. The management of the football was handled by incompetents, the team has plummeted down the league table and there has been a consequent collapse in revenue – primarily champions league related.

Jim’s solution? Fire HR directors and secretaries. Oh and build a vast new stadium which Ben refers to as a ‘masterstroke’. How is this a credible plan? The team, coaching and scouting are in complete disarray. The club cannot afford new high quality players and the scouts are incapable of finding emerging talent (the scouts Jim hasn’t fired that is).

Even if they do happen to find them, top tier emerging talent is increasingly unwilling to join United because in the last decade the club has served only to destroy new players – not improve them.

How does a new stadium in 7 years fix all of that? It won’t fix the playing staff nor the broken culture. It won’t repair a decade of poor scouting and poor coaching. It won’t get the team back in the champions league. (That’s if it is even built – you’ll note they were silent on how exactly this is to be funded. The British government will help apparently! Britain’s economy cannot currently bear that cost.)

What Jim has manifestly failed to articulate is any sort of plan to actually improve how United play football. The evidence thus far is damning – Retaining ETH, buying €200m of ETH players, extending his contract, then firing him. Hiring Ashworth. Firing Ashworth. Hiring a manager totally unsuited to the club at this time and place. All at colossal expense.

Ben there is no evidence whatsoever that Jim Radcliffe has a “realistic strategic vision”. And United, I’m sorry to say, have already lost their position in the top 3 clubs globally.

United have been run by financiers exclusively for a decade with catastrophic results. More than anything United need a team experienced in developing a club’s football from the ground up. Not bankers and cost cutters.
Your old pal Stevo

Not good enough, Football365
Can I just call F365 out for some pretty misleading reporting.

You have multiple articles up saying that Ratcliffe explicitly said Onana, Casemiro, Sancho, Antony and Hojlund were either overpaid or not good enough.

I’ve listened to the interview and that is simply untrue. You’re (I think deliberately) conflating two separate, back-to-back questions.

The first was about the club finances, where he factually made the point that United owe instalments this coming summer on the above-listed players of over £80m, as an example of one of the cost pressures they face – it was not a criticism of the players in question.

The subsequent separate question was about the quality of the squad generally and, when asked if the squad was good enough, he said that some players aren’t good enough and some are overpaid. It was not a comment about those players specifically.

I mean, don’t get me wrong, I’m sure there’s a bloody big overlap on Jim’s Venn diagram between “players we still owe instalments on” and “rubbish and/or overpaid”, but your articles are attributing him as saying something that he simply didn’t.

He was trying to demoralise the whole squad, not just five lucky members!

I mean, question the wisdom of his comments by all means. Coming out one week and saying “our players are awful and overpriced” before a few weeks later saying, presumably, “please buy our players!” doesn’t strike me as a sensible thing to do, but the point stands that he did not say what your reporters keep saying he did.

And while I’m complaining about you… be honest, did you have Sam Cooper’s article slagging United off for their stadium being “worryingly similar to many other new stadiums across European football” pre-written, just bunged in a sentence about the tent and publish anyway?

It’s a bowl design – so what? That’s the most sensible design for a new build sport stadium, that will enable them to maximise attendance and (hopefully) minimise the pressure to increase prices to pay for the thing. I don’t think there’s anything inherent to the bowl shape that makes the atmosphere bad, if anything I imagine that the big top design will be great for the acoustics! You specifically criticise the atmosphere at the Emirates. It’s been a few years but, if memory serves, the old stadium had a famous, poor atmosphere-related, nickname – maybe it isn’t really to do with stands versus bowls?

There’s plenty to say about the design United released yesterday but “identical-looking” to other European stadiums is not one of them…

I bet you had an equally negative article about redeveloping OT ready to upload.
Andy (MUFC)

Who will Tuchel pick for England?
Given Tuchel’s first squad is imminent, it would be a great time for 365 to predict his picks in your Famous England Ladder feature.

I didn’t have time to do a full 50 but here is my prediction for his first squad. I have not included anyone who is currently injured.

Pickford, Henderson, Pope

Alexander-Arnold, Livramento, Lewis-Skelly, Guehi, Branthwaite, Colwill, Konsa

Wharton, Cook, Rice, Bellingham, Palmer, Gibbs-White

Foden, Bowen, Hudson-Odoi, Gordon, Kane, Watkins, Delap

Just outside;

R James, Wan Bissaka, Maguire, Mainoo, Lewis, Gomes, C Jones, Smith-Rowe, Rogers, Eze, Nwaneri, P Neville

Probably forgot loads of players but there we are.

Cheers
J-Dog

Man Utd: Keane hits out at Ratcliffe hypocrisy as Neville votes for ‘ownership change’ after interview

Roy Keane says Sir Jim Ratcliffe “lost” him when he started talking about football and claimed hypocrisy over the Manchester United co-owner’s “money saving” spiel.

Ratcliffe conducted a number of interviews this week in which he claimed several United players were “overpaid or not good enough”, hailed the “excellent job” Ruben Amorim is doing and engaged in some easily debunked player salary whataboutery along with a lot of other nonsense. 

Keane said he was “lost” when Ratcliffe spoke out on the “football side of things”.

He said: “When he started talking about the football side of things, he lost me a little bit – talking about the squad, the budget, the players available, as they should still be doing better. But it was nice of him to front up.”

READ MORE: Sir Jim Ratcliffe: Fact-checking the Man Utd co-owner’s interview bullsh*t

The British billionaire was also questioned by Gary Neville over the club’s decision to stop paying for staff lunches and stopping insignificant payments to former players in their bid to right the sinking ship before announcing plans for a new £2bn stadium the very next day.

And Keane wasn’t comfortable with the juxtaposition of the poor treatment of staff and ex-players due to budgetary concerns with the Old Trafford announcement.

Speaking on the Stick to Football podcast, Keane said: “He [Jim Ratcliffe] is on about saving money at the club and we know the way that a lot of ex-players have been treated, the fund they had available, the staff that have been at the club for years – on one hand he’s still treating them badly, and I understand it’s a business and you’ve got to try and make the right decisions, but the next day they’re building a £2 billion stadium for their fans around the world. You have to show loyalty to people that have been at the club for years.

“From the business side of it you’d think he knows what he’s talking about but saying that, on one hand they’re getting rid of lots of people and on the other, they’re going to spend £2 billion on a stadium. He can still look after people a little bit better.

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Neville claims the “optics are terrible” for United after he spoke to the club about their cost-cutting decisions.

He said: “I rang up the club about the former players trust and the employee food thing, I rang the communications people and as a journalist I was entitled to ring them. I thought they weren’t right [decisions], there are solutions around it. You can’t be spending £1 million a month on one player and take away food from staff – optically it’s terrible.

“The £40,000 for the ex-players, these are players from the 1960s and 1970s and they were funding some of these players funerals who can’t afford it. Players who have played for United 10, 15, 20 times and can’t afford their funerals, that’s what they’re funding, they’re not funding Wayne Rooney or Gary Neville’s petrol for their cars. These are players from 50-years-ago who are struggling to live.”

Neville also said that if he was to change one thing about the club it would be the ownership, claiming the fans should have a stake.

He added: “[If Gary could go back in time and change anything] I would change the ownership of [Manchester] United and make sure that nobody really had a hold of it. It’s always been owned by local family or an American family. The idea that fans that don’t have a position in football clubs and don’t have an ownership stake of 10%, 15%, 20% so they always have a golden share of some kind is wrong.”

Man Utd transfers: Barcelona respond to £57.8m bid amid reports of ten-man Amorim ‘blacklist’

Manchester United’s summer transfer plans could well hinge on the outcome of their Europa League campaign.

Ruben Amorim has one final hope for the season in their European campaign as their Premier League season looks set to be their worst-ever performance.

Strengthening for the future to avoid another catastrophe is going to take some serious recruitment and United’s squad overhaul will be no mean feat – especially given the number of players who could exit.

One area that certainly needs addressing is midfield. Casemiro and Christian Eriksen both look well past their best and the future of Kobbie Mainoo is also in doubt given the financial pitfalls that could meet United if they cannot guarantee European football next season.

As it stands, United face Real Sociedad in the second leg of their Europa League tie. With the game locked at 1-1, Amorim’s side needs to win to move forward and hope they can somehow claim the trophy they last won in 2017.

Without it, they are unlikely to sign the likes of Frenkie De Jong, a player who reports in Spain have claimed they have made a bid for. Fijaches have claimed that the Red Devils have submitted a £57.8m (€65m) bid but it has been knocked back before the summer window. 

He currently has one year left on his deal and while the club are looking to extend a deal, there is a possibility that they may have to change their stance on selling him if they cannot come to an agreement.

However, given that De Jong has started just four league games and just four of their 10 Champions League games, the 27-year-old is far from a first-choice midfielder and the likes of Pedri, Gavi, Marc Casado and Fermin Lopez are all likely to be selected ahead of him.

Such a move has always been in United’s thoughts having been heavily linked with a move in previous years but their current position is far from what is when they were last interested in a move.

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Ruben Amorim’s summer transfer plans

United are set to lose Jonny Evans, Christian Eriksen, Tom Heaton and Victor Lindelof at the end of the season and there could well be more exits to help fund signings, especially given that qualifying for Europe looks a tall order.

There are talks of a blacklist of players for Amorim for the summer that includes the three players on loan, Jadon Sancho, Marcus Rashford and Antony, who reportedly have ‘no future’ at the club – and there are multiple others.

Casemiro, Eriksen, Mason Mount and Rasmus Hojlund are also said to be on the way out and not in Amorim’s plans and they will likely have to take significant losses on the likes of Casemiro, Mount and Hojlund who cost nearly £200million combined.

Terland and Riviere fit for trip to Anfield

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Terland and Riviere fit for trip to Anfield

Thursday 13 March 2025 12:00

Marc Skinner has revealed that United Women’s current Player of the Month, Elisabeth Terland, is available for Friday’s much-anticipated away game at Liverpool.

Our leading goalscorer has missed our last two games but, in a big boost, has returned to fitness ahead of the team’s first-ever trip to Anfield.

Several other recent absentees are also set to form part of our travelling squad, too, with Skinner in upbeat mood during his pre-match press conference.

United Women lie second in the Women’s Super League table ahead of Friday’s game (19:15 GMT), and can close the gap on leaders Chelsea – who have played a game more – to five points, should we take all three points.

“[It’s] positive,” said Skinner, when quizzed on the team’s health by the attending journalists.

“Jayde [Riviere] has been training this week, so will be in contention for the matchday squad. Lisa [Naalsund] is the same, and the only one that we will be without in this game – barring, obviously, [Evie] Rabjohn, [who is] long-term – is Simi Awujo. 

“So everybody else is in contention. Elisabeth [Terland] is back in. So we’re looking forward to taking a healthy squad into the Liverpool game.”

Liverpool currently reside in sixth, but our opponents earned a significant boost last weekend by beating Arsenal 1-0 to reach the Adobe Women’s FA Cup semi-finals.

The Merseysiders’ result was even more impressive given it was delivered under the auspices of an interim boss, Amber Whiteley, following the departure of former manager Matt Beard last month.

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“I respected the result, because I thought Liverpool could deliver that,” Skinner said, reflecting on Liverpool’s big win over Arsenal.

“I think they’ve got that quality. You look at their players. I know Amber well and, obviously, Scott [Rogers] who’s with her. They were with Matt for a long time, so they’ll continue that kind of rhythm, that DNA. 

“But I expect them to be full of confidence, even though I think it’s [only] two games she’s had, they’ve won two.

“I think it’s going to be difficult. It’s at Anfield. It’s something we’ve got to battle with. We’ve got to battle the game and the tactics of the game, but we’ve got to battle the spirit of the game. I’m expecting them to be on top form and we’ve got to be the same to win the game.”

HOW TO WATCH AND FOLLOW

Tickets are available to all supporters until 3pm on Thursday 13 March. We received an initial allocation of 1,500, including 20 wheelchair pairs. Tickets are priced £10 for adults, £5 for over-65s and £4 for under-17s. Click here to purchase.

If you aren’t able to get to the ground in person, you can watch the game live in the United Kingdom via BBC Three, BBC iPlayer and the BBC Sport website.

We’ll also keep you up to date on the United App and ManUtd.com, with minute-by-minute updates. Prime cuts of the action, plus extended highlights, will be made available across our platforms later in the weekend.

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Thursday 13 March 2025 12:00

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Man Utd star at ‘war’ with Ratcliffe ‘not athletic enough’ for new contract as transfer exit close

Kobbie Mainoo has been branded “not athletic enough” amid a contract standoff between Manchester United and the academy graduate.

Mainoo was deemed when Sir Jim Ratcliffe first arrived at the club in February 2024, but the club is now thought to be willing to listen to offers of around £70m for the midfielder, who’s been in talks over a new contract at Old Trafford.

The England international currently earns just £20,000 per week but recompense more in line with the club’s top earners, with initial reports suggesting he wanted £180,000 a week and more recent suggestions claiming he wants closer to £150,000 to remain at Old Trafford.

But Ratcliffe has ‘declared war’ with his new contract policy, which will involve big bonuses rather than significant up front fees, meaning Mainoo is unlikely to receive anything close to his desired wage.

Former United midfielder Lee Sharpe can see “both sides” of the argument, agreeing with Ratcliffe’s move toward a performance-based salary, and also suggested Mainoo isn’t “athletic enough” to command such an increase.

“I think there’s an argument for both sides,” Sharpe told BetBrain. “I don’t think Kobbie Mainoo is athletic enough to get around the pitch. I think he’d be great as a number ten; he’s great on the ball in tight areas, can score a goal, see a pass, and can beat people one-on-one.

“But for a reported £180,000 a week – Manchester United have already had their fingers burnt by players that are on high wagers but are injured or aren’t in the team. I can understand his position, and why he’s valuing himself at that figure. But I would be offering bonuses and incentives rather than a flat £180,000-a-week wage, such as a goalscoring or appearance bonus.

“I think he’d be very lucky to get that amount of money per week, with his age and the number of games he’s played for the club.”

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Sharpe also believes his old side should consider signing Crystal Palace striker Jean Philippe Mateta to try and help Rasmus Hojlund’s development.

“Jean Philippe Mateta would be a great buy for Manchester United,” he added. “He’d give some respite to Rasmus Hojlund and would be someone to learn and play off for him. He’s physical and he’s a nightmare for defenders to play against, so I definitely think he’d be a positive addition.

“Manchester United are at least three years away from even looking at the Premier League title. With the players Ruben Amorim has available and the style of football he wants to play, I think Jean Philippe Mateta would be an ideal signing. He’s someone that can hold the ball up, knows where the goal is and can bring other players into play.

“United are sat in the bottom third of the table; they need to work themselves up the table before they can start looking at strikers of that ilk. They need to make the club an appealing prospect for players around Europe in order to attract top talent to the club.”

Man Utd: Ratcliffe ‘declares war’ on Mainoo with new drastic contract policy to force him out

Sir Jim Ratcliffe has ‘declared war’ in a bid to reduce Manchester United’s bloated wage bill and is ‘refusing to budge’ to meet Kobbie Mainoo’s demands.

Ratcliffe revealed the dire straits the club is in while talking to Gary Neville and others this week in a series of interviews, claiming the club would be “bust by Christmas” without the cost-cutting strategies he’s overseen since taking charge just over a year ago.

But laying off members of staff at Carrington and failing to feed those that remain isn’t going to make any real difference, with most of the money leaking out of the club being spent on the players’ wages.

Ratcliffe has therefore ‘vowed to slash players’ pay’ according to The Sun.

‘Salaries for new signings and stars attempting to renegotiate their deals will be massively scaled back’, with ‘huge bonuses offered instead when results improve’.

A United source said: “The club is moving towards performance-based contracts. This has been discussed with agents going forward.

“We will still pay competitively but we do need to manage our wage bill and ensure we are getting value for money.”

The change will see lower base pay offered to new players, but will also hit current players negotiating new deals, like Mainoo.

Talks over the academy graduate’s wage demands have stalled – he currently earns just £20,000 per week and wants £150,000 – but the report claims Ratcliffe is ‘refusing to budge’ in a bid to ‘change the culture’ at United.

It’s a decision that’s likely to see Mainoo leave the club after a report last week claimed he was ‘minded to reject the offer of a new contract at ­Manchester United and seek a move abroad’ in any case.

It was claimed United ‘would be open to selling’ the player and believe he is worth ‘around £70million’.

Chelsea’s previous interest was mentioned but Mainoo ‘moving to another Premier League club is not currently part of his thinking’.

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Red Devils legend Wayne Rooney is unlikely to be pleased with Ratcliffe’s policy change given Mainoo is one of just two players he believes his former club should be holding onto.

Rooney said: “[On whether there is a way back for this Manchester United team] No, I don’t think so. They look lost. They look scared. Bruno [Fernandes] is the one who keeps producing, he annoys you at times but keeps producing. They need massive changes to the squad, I think 10-15 players need to leave the club. Obviously, they can’t do that, but there is a mentality there where no one is taking responsibility [in the squad].

“[On the players to keep] I’d keep Bruno and [Kobbie] Mainoo. There is a culture at the club where it’s too easy to lose games and the players come out and say, ‘Onto the next one,’ and all that rubbish. Just show some character and fight on the pitch. It’s bad watching, it hurts. Being from Liverpool but spending so many years at United, I want the team to do well, I’ve got my kids in the academy, and it hurts watching them.”

United CEO singles out staff member who he thinks will be crucial to the club’s success “for the next years”

Manchester United CEO Omar Berrada has come out swinging in defence of manager Ruben Amorim after rumours of his potential sacking swirled across the media.

Despite having gotten off to a difficult start at Old Trafford earlier this season, Amorim seems to be growing into his role, building a team that appears increasingly comfortable under his wing.

During the 1-1 draw with Arsenal last weekend, Man United appeared solid at the back and creative in the midfield, showing a level of ingenuity that had not been seen for quite some time.

Sadly, the team’s constantly improving performances on the pitch have not silenced rumours about Amorim’s potential exit, with names such as Xavi and Unai Emery being mentioned as potential replacements.

Fortunately, for Amorim, his progress has not gone unnoticed, with Berrada swiftly coming to his defence against a backdrop of mounting rumours.

“I’m an optimist by nature and, as hard as the current situation is on the pitch, I do think that in Ruben and in [technical director] Jason [Wilcox], we have the right people to lead the men’s side, in terms of our football planning for the next years,” Berrada stated as per TEAMtalk.

“Ruben has a very clear identity of how he wants to see the team playing. He’s working extremely hard with the coaching staff and the wider staff around Carrington to get us to a position where the team can perform better.”

“But we have seen progress over the last few weeks,” Berrada acknowledged. “Perhaps it hasn’t translated into wins, which is what we all want to see, but we do have the confidence that we have the right people in place and that we’re going on a journey that’s going to take us back to the top.”

Since arriving at Old Trafford in November, Amorim has racked up a mixed bag of results. In 26 matches in all competitions, Amorim’s team has won 11 matches, lost 10, and drawn five.

Given this turbulent record, tonight’s match could not be more crucial for Amorim.

With United no longer in the FA Cup or Carabao Cup and the team sitting in 14th place in the Premier League, the Europa League is Amorim’s last opportunity to clinch silverware this season.

What’s more, a win would help to justify Berrada’s backing of Amorim while helping to win the supporters’ trust.

Featured image Carl Recine via Getty Images


Follow us on Bluesky: @peoplesperson.bsky.social

A faithful Manchester United supporter, Mathew has worked as a football writer and analyst for SB Nation, FanSided, and now The Peoples Person. Mathew’s heroes include David Beckham, Cristiano Ronaldo, and Sir Alex Ferguson, all of whom played their part in creating some special childhood memories.

Manchester United USA pre-season tickets on sale today with ‘secret code’

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Fans of four Premier League teams – including Manchester United – can secure their tickets for the ‘Summer Series’ in the US in summer 2025.

Manchester United, Everton, West Ham and Bournemouth will play each other in three US cities in July and August in a money-spinning tournament aimed at promoting the Premier League overseas and tickets are now on sale here.

Fans who registered for the early pre-sale will be sent a secret code to access tickets from 2pm UK time on Thursday 13 March, while general sale will take place from 2pm on Friday 14 March on Ticketmaster for all six games.

All four teams will play on three match days, meaning tickets to games in New Jersey, Chicago and Atlanta will give fans access to two games each.

The tournament kicks off in New Jersey at the Metlife Stadium, where Everton play Bournemouth followed by Manchester United v West Ham on 26 July. West Ham then take on Everton and Manchester United play Bournemouth in Chicago’s famous Soldier Field on 30 July.

The final round of games take place in Atlanta on Sunday 3 August at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

Tickets are priced from $77 – a big increase over the $33 cheapest ticket in the 2023 tournament. The tournament did not take place in 2024 and has been hit by difficulties this year after Arsenal and Liverpool reportedly turned down the chance to take part.

Manchester United are seen as the biggest draw for the Summer Series but Bournemouth could be the only side to finish in the top half of the Premier League table this season after a stunning run of form under Andoli Ireola.

Summer Series 2025 match schedule
Saturday, 26 July at MetLife Stadium, New Jersey
Match 1: Everton v AFC Bournemouth (16:00 ET kick-off)
Match 2: Man Utd v West Ham (19:00 ET kick-off)
Wednesday, 30 July at Soldier Field, Chicago
Match 1: West Ham v Everton (17:30 CT kick-off)
Match 2: Man Utd v AFC Bournemouth (20:30 CT kick-off)
Sunday, 3 August at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta
Match 1: AFC Bournemouth v West Ham (14:00 ET kick-off)
Match 2: Man Utd v Everton (17:00 ET kick-off)