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Monday 03 March 2025 21:00

Manchester United’s Under-18s beat Middlesbrough 3-1 in the U18 Premier League North at Carrington on Monday evening.

The visitors had flown into a first-half lead, when Daniel James slotted a low drive past Cameron Byrne-Hughes to open the scoring.

But an inspired United turnaround in the final twenty minutes turned the game on its head as first James Scanlon converted from close range.

Our young Reds completed the comeback when Jim Thwaites thumped home an 81st-minute penalty, after an impressive solo display.

And there was still time for Scanlon to add a third in injury time, as he grabbed his second goal of the evening, to put the game beyond Boro altogether.

FIRST HALFIt took the visitors just twelve minutes to find the opener at Carrington, with Lucas Harrison spreading a superb pass into the feet of James.

James did have two bites at the cherry, as first he was denied by Byrne-Hughes. However, the rebound fell kindly to the forward, who in turn tucked his effort into the bottom corner.

Thwaites’s attacking thrust almost earned an instant leveller, before Ollie Lloyd was on hand to deny him down to his right.

Defender Dante Plunkett was the next to come forward down the left flank, played in cleverly by Thwaites. His low drive was turned behind for corner as our young Reds upped the ante.

Amir Ibrigamov then saw his strike blocked on the goal line as the first half ebbed on, before Victor Musa’s header cannoned back off the woodwork in further frustration.

Lloyd was on hand to keep Boro’s advantage as we reached the interval shortly after, denying Musa again after Thwaites had smartly lifted a cross into the six-yard box.

SECOND HALFAs the second 45 minutes began, debutant Jayden Ngwashi rose the highest to meet Samuel Lusale’s cross. His header was easily collected by the continually-busy Lloyd.

Adam Lawrence made four changes as we reached the hour mark, with Scanlon, Gabriel Biancheri, Tyler Fletcher and Godwill Kukonki all introduced.

It was Scanlon who was involved straight away, with Ibragimov’s cutback falling to the feet of the Gibraltar international, but his strike flew over the bar.

Samuel Lusale in action at Carrington.

Anton Palmer found some space in a rare attack for the visitors as we reached the final twenty minutes. The Middlesbrough man took aim with a powerful drive that was held well by Byrne-Hughes.

But Lawrence’s side asserted some dominance following the flurry of changes, with Fletcher playing a delightful pass that found Scanlon in acres of space. He drove at goal before tucking home the equaliser at Carrington.

Our turnaround was complete just ten minutes later, with Ibragimov hauled down inside the area, earning our young Reds a spot-kick and a chance to flip the scoreline around.

Thwaites took on the responsibility – blasting his penalty past Lloyd with real conviction and with much to the joy of his team-mates.

The scoring was complete in added time, as a flowing counter-attack saw Scanlon blast home his second of the evening – with the prize a well-warranted three points, as the full-time whistle sounded shortly after.

MATCH DETAILS

United: 

Byrne-Hughes; Overy (Kukonki, 62), Ngwashi, Mills, Plunkett; Devaney (Fletcher, 62), Bailey, Thwaites; Lusale (Scanlon, 62), Musa (Biancheri, 62), Ibragimov.

Subs not used: Heath

Goals: Scanlon 71 & 90+3, Thwaites 81.

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Monday 03 March 2025 21:00

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Man Utd told to replace ‘useless’ star with ‘scary’ Leicester man after ‘disgraceful’ transfer call

Manchester United have been urged to ditch “useless” Andre Onana with a Leicester star “who has it all” after a making a “disgraceful” transfer decision which is costing them dear.

Onana has been heavily criticised this season having made a number of errors to contribute to Manchester United’s woeful season, and ex-Red Devils defender Paul Parker reckons his former club should sign a new goalkeeper to replace the Cameroon international.

And he reckons that man should be Leicester’s Mads Hermansen, who ranks fifth in our goalkeeper ranking, and has been one of the Foxes’ standout performers in their own dire season.

“In an ideal world, Man United should buy a new goalkeeper to replace Onana. He’s just not good enough, and I don’t think he even looks like a goalkeeper at all,” Parker told SpilXperten.

“Right now, I think (second choice Altay) Bayindir should get a chance, but in the long run, the club should go for Mads Hermansen, who has single-handedly kept Leicester somewhat afloat this season.

“I think he has it all. He’s a fantastic shot-stopper, he’s good with his feet, and he has a strong attitude. As a centre back, I would be scared to have him behind me, but in a good way, because he has such a strong aura.”

MORE MAN UTD COVERAGE ON F365…
👉 Ferguson failures at Manchester United exposed in comparison with forward-thinking Klopp
👉 Analysing Chido Obi’s 14 touches against Fulham – is he really the answer for Amorim?
👉 Rashford’s value, it can’t get worse, Europa glory: Five reasons to be cheerful for Man Utd

Parker believes Untied should never have let David de Gea – who’s now Fiorentina’s No.1 – leave the club, insisting the way they cast him out was “disgraceful”, with the decision looking all the more “ridulous” given how “useless” Onana has been.

Despite the pundit’s views, he doesn’t think United will be chasing a new stopper in the summer, with such major surgery required on Ruben Amorim’s in the squad.

He added: “The problem is probably that the goalkeeper position won’t be a priority for a new signing, as there are so many other issues in other positions that need strengthening.”

“I can’t help but think about why the club let David De Gea go. It was a really disgraceful way they parted with him after he was named Player of the Year three times in a row, and right now, it looks even more ridiculous because his replacement is so useless.

“Another thing I really don’t like about Onana is his mentality. It doesn’t seem to bother him when Manchester United concedes a goal.

“You never see him standing there shouting or scolding his defense, like De Gea or Peter Schmeichel always did. For them, keeping a clean sheet was a matter of life and death. It meant everything to them.”

Official: Ten Hag’s former right-hand man at United appointed head coach of national team

Former Manchester United assistant coach Benni McCarthy officially been appointed the new head coach of the Kenya national football team.

McCarthy was unveiled earlier on Monday, putting pen to paper on a two-year contract, which will see him lead the nation to the 2027 Africa Cup of Nations.

Kenya will host the competition alongside East African neighbours Tanzania and Uganda. McCarthy takes over from Francis Kimanzi, who served in an interim capacity since Turkish coach Engin Firat vacated the role towards the end of last year.

McCarthy’s first match will see him come up against Gambia on March 17, in a World Cup qualifier clash. Kenya will then face Gabon a week later.

Reacting to his appointment, McCarthy said, “I am honoured to take on this role and excited about the journey ahead with the Kenyan national team. I have studied the talent in this country, and I believe there is immense potential to compete at the highest level.”

“Together with my coaching team, including Vasili Manousakis, Moeneeb Josephs, and Pilela Maposa, we are committed to building a structured, disciplined, and competitive squad.”

“Our goal is to develop a strong team identity, play exciting football, and make the nation proud. I look forward to working with the players, the federation, and the passionate Kenyan fans to achieve success.”

Asked what he wants to achieve with Harambee Stars, the former United coach told Flashscore, “I want to make Kenya, the best team that East Africa has ever seen before, I strongly feel, if we can fix the national team, then Kenya will go far. For me, it is about passion in people’s faces, and that means they really love the country and so far the national team has not produced what they want.”

“The way we want to work, the way we want to achieve things, people will be surprised to see what we will achieve, and with the team I am coming along with, I don’t think anything will stop us from achieving what we want to achieve and make the fans happy.”

McCarthy joined Ten Hag’s backroom staff at Old Trafford in the summer of 2022 and helped the Red Devils win a Carabao Cup and finish in the Champions League places during his first season.

In particular, McCarthy was credited with the resurgence of Marcus Rashford, who plundered a career-high 30 goals across all competitions that term.

The former South Africa international parted ways with United last summer amidst INEOS’ reshuffle of the coaching department.


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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!

Dream team or stuff of nightmares?: Ten Hag set to link up with Jurgen Klopp at RB Leipzig – report

Manchester United have been hamstrung by INEOS’ decision to award former manager Erik ten Hag with a contract extension last summer following their FA Cup triumph.

They overlooked the disastrous Premier League campaign, fearing fan backlash and subsequently proceeded to arm the Dutchman with a substantial transfer war chest, signing players that fit his transitional style.

However, as expected the campaign started off badly and just a couple of months later, Ten Hag was sacked and replaced with Ruben Amorim, a manager known for playing a polar opposite brand of football.

With half the players not fit for purpose, the Portuguese has found it tough going and he is having to pay the price for all the recruitment errors made under Ten Hag.

EtH still without a job

As for the former boss, he is without a job even though he has been linked with plenty of top clubs. The ex-Ajax boss himself admitted recently that he is enjoying time away from football with his family and business back home.

But Fichajes have claimed that he might not be without a job for too long with RB Leipzig keen to bring Ten Hag to the Red Bull Arena in the summer.

Marco Rose is set to depart at the end of the season after a disappointing campaign and the board have identified the 55-year-old as the perfect replacement.

“RB Leipzig are facing a major restructuring after confirming that Marco Rose will leave the club at the end of the season. After a campaign marked by ups and downs, the board of the German team has begun working on the search for his successor and has identified a name that is a big name on the European scene: Erik ten Hag.

RB Leipzig want him

“The Dutch coach, currently without a club after his departure from Manchester United, is in the orbit of the Leipzig directors, who are looking to give their sporting project a turnaround.

“The coach comes from a difficult period at the Red Devils, but with extensive experience and a style of play that has generated praise throughout his career. During his time at Ajax , Erik ten Hag showed his ability to lead teams to the top, excelling in European competitions with an attacking and dynamic game.”

Former Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp, who is the current Red Bull Global head of football, could soon be working with the man who had announced not too long ago that he wanted to break the duopoly of Liverpool and Manchester City in the English top-flight.

Whether the partnership will work remains to be seen but it will be an exciting one for sure. Now for Leipzig to convince the Dutch boss.


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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

Exclusive: United legend predicts dramatic return to Old Trafford for Marcus Rashford on one condition

Gary Pallister believes signing a new striker is a “main priority” for Manchester United this summer given the ongoing struggles of Rasmus Hojlund and Joshua Zirkzee, but it will prove difficult to find the right target.

Speaking to the The Peoples Person in an exclusive interview, hosted by Casino Apps, the former defender describes a more reliable centre-forward as “completely necessary” for Ruben Amorim to improve the team but questioned which striker the Red Devils would be able to sign this summer.

A New Number Nine

“I think it’s important we go and get a centre-forward,” Pallister states. But he suggests the market for strikers this summer is a difficult one given the lack of options as well as the club’s limited finances: “Who is there for the club [to sign] at the moment?”

United have been strongly linked with moves for the two Victors – Victor Osimhen and Viktor Gyokeres – but the fees involved for both are likely to prove too costly, particularly given both strikers will turn 27 next season.

Pallister believes there is “work going on behind the scenes” to identify a new striker but contends United will “have to sell” before they can buy this summer, further complicating the situation.

“Everybody has a price tag right now,” he states as INEOS seek to buttress their war chest this summer with the club reluctantly open to the departures of players like Kobbie Mainoo and Alejandro Garnacho.

Strikers’ Struggles

The former defender does offer some sympathy for Hojlund and Zirkzee, who have combined for just five Premier League goals this season, given the lack of creativity in the team. “When there’s a lack of goals, the onus falls on the centre-forward, but they have not had the best service at times.”

However, Pallister does not believe Zirkzee is an “out-and-out centre-forward” – mirroring Amorim’s assessment of the 23-year-old Dutchman – while Hojlund needs to add “more guile to his game” to be a success in the Premier League.

“You’ve got to be a little cleverer if you want to score goals in this league,” the 59-year-old concudes. “Rasmus is putting the effort in, you can’t knock him for [that]. But it’s just not happening for him.”

The bright performance by Chido Obi in Sunday’s disappointing exit from the FA Cup at the hands of Fulham offered a concerning comparison to the more experienced Dane, as Hojlund’s 17-year-old compatriot offered far more in 22 minutes than the number nine had in the previous hour from the start.

A Return for Rashford?

Pallister also offered an olive branch to Marcus Rashford over a shock return to the fold at Old Trafford next season.

Asked if he thought there was a possibility the 27-year-old forward, currently on loan at Aston Villa, could be play for United again, the former defender said it was “not an impossible thing.”

“If he proves himself. He’s got his hunger back at Villa, then maybe there’s a future for him still at Man United,” Pallister asserts.

Given Rashford remains United’s third top scorer and chance creator in the Premier League this season, despite not having played a minute for his boyhood club since early December, perhaps Amorim should reconsider whether the English forward has a “future” at Old Trafford also.

Featured image Stephen Pond via Getty Images


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Darragh is a writer for The Peoples Person who spent three years as a history graduate slowly realising football was by far the most interesting thing to write about.

Ferguson failed Manchester United and embarrassing Klopp comparison proves it

Jurgen Klopp set Liverpool up for success in a way Sir Alex Ferguson failed to do at Manchester United, even if he did bestow Wilfried Zaha upon David Moyes.

After Manchester United co-owners INEOS laid some of the blame for the club’s miserable past decade at the feet of former manager Ferguson, Gary Lineker made the unwelcome comparison to Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool handover.

“If you look at Liverpool now, they’ve got a new manager in Arne Slot, and it’s testament to how Jurgen Klopp left the club in a really good state. So the structure is really good,” he said.

“That probably wasn’t the case at the end of Sir Alex Ferguson’s [time at Old Trafford]. I know they won the league that season, but it wasn’t their best side, and a lot of their great players were coming to the end of their careers. I think from there they had problems. The academy wasn’t delivering the players that they were before.”

It is an argument supported by a brief glance at the respective ages of the squads the managers built before leaving – Liverpool’s was 25.6 in 2023/24 while Manchester United’s was 27.1 in 2012/13 – but also a direct comparison between the composition of the teams.

Goalkeepers – Manchester United
David de Gea, Anders Lindegaard, Ben Amos and Sam Johnstone
Alisson, Caiomhin Kelleher, Vitezslav Jaros and Harvey Davies

Neither manager can be said to have particularly neglected the goalkeeping department they left behind. De Gea and Alisson were not at the peak of their powers at the time of the respective handovers – the former’s best was still to come while the latter’s was behind him – and separating them might even come down to a matter of personal opinion.

In 2012/13, De Gea inspired Manchester United to the Premier League title with 11 clean sheets in 28 games, conceding 26 goals. Alisson kindly made as many appearances for Liverpool in 2023/24, keeping eight clean sheets and conceding 30 goals. De Gea also had a slightly better save percentage (77.2% to 73.4%) so probably edges a comparison even before factoring in that he was 22 when Ferguson retired; Alisson was 31 when Klopp left.

The presence of Kelleher as comfortably the best option of those back-ups does claw back some points for Liverpool but De Gea was one of precious few positives – and often the only one – at Manchester United for the first decade of post-Ferguson incompetence, even if he did fail to fulfil the Scot’s title promise.

Full-backs – Liverpool
Rafael and Patrice Evra
Trent Alexander-Arnold and Andy Robertson

There had been some indication that Antonio Valencia and Ashley Young would be repurposed from exciting wingers into battle-hardened full-backs but those transformations would not be completed under Ferguson, who didn’t need the hassle and preferred a more traditional approach.

Rafael was given Gary Neville’s shirt number and a four-year contract at the start of the manager’s final season, but he was one of many players never of the requisite consistent elite standard who were exposed without the security of Ferguson. And Evra was not only a shadow of his former self – as indicated by the public and painful summer-long pursuit of Leighton Baines – but one of the many agents of chaos Moyes could not control.

While Alexander-Arnold’s entire head has been situated in Madrid and Robertson is in the noticeable twilight of his career, their pairing is comfortably stronger.

And no, Fabio and Steven Gerrard-goading Alexander Buttner do little to weigh the balance in Manchester United’s favour, particularly up against the might of Conor Bradley (and Kostas Tsimikas also exists).

Centre-halves – Liverpool
Rio Ferdinand, Jonny Evans, Nemanja Vidic, Phil Jones, Chris Smalling and Michael Keane
Virgil van Dijk, Ibrahima Konate, Joe Gomez and Jarell Quansah

On squad depth alone, it is no contest. It seems ludicrous to even suggest and woke lefties might pretend otherwise but six is a bigger number than four.

Liverpool, fully aware of this, have prioritised the addition of a centre-half in the summer. Their last signing in that position was Konate in July 2021, since which they have released Joel Matip and made £25m or so selling Sepp van den Berg, Ben Davies and Billy Koumetio.

The question is whether such an obviously shallow collection of centre-halves is offset by their combined excellence. If Van Dijk and Konate in particular represent the ‘quality’ side of the argument, that Manchester United sextet fills the ‘quantity’ role well.

Ferdinand and Vidic, a Morgan Amalfitano-fearing 34 and injury-prone 31 respectively, were preparing to be shown daily videos of Phil Jagielka. Jones and Evans spent a frustrating amount of time in the treatment room too and Smalling struggled to establish trust with anyone other than Louis van Gaal.

Keane, returning from one of his many career loans, was inevitably unable to disturb that pecking order but fresh blood really was needed in this position perhaps more than any other once Ferguson left.

Their depth was little more than superficial in reality. Liverpool are remarkably susceptible to one Van Dijk injury bringing everything crumbling down, but his durability outside of Jordan Pickford-inflicted knee knackings forms part of his undeniable aura.

Central midfielders – Liverpool
Michael Carrick, Tom Cleverley, Shinji Kagawa, Anderson, Paul Scholes and Darren Fletcher
Ryan Gravenberch, Alexis Mac Allister, Dominik Szoboszlai, Curtis Jones, Wataru Endo and Harvey Elliott

Ferguson and Klopp’s final summer transfer windows really do emphasise the point that one focused on forward-planning while the other was steadfast only in leaving as a champion.

Klopp managed that painstaking rebuild of his entire midfield structure in a matter of months, swapping Naby Keita (28), Fabinho (29), Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain (29), Jordan Henderson (33) and James Milner (37) for Gravenberch (21), Szoboszlai (22) and Mac Allister (24), as well as the more experienced Endo (30).

It was not immediately apparent in 2023/24 but that set up Liverpool wonderfully when each player settled in. With Jones and Elliott providing ample support, it is the club’s strongest area.

Compare that to Ferguson, who went all out to dethrone Manchester City by bringing in the phenomenal but ageing Van Persie alongside players who were either not good enough or never properly acclimatised in Kagawa, Buttner, Nick Powell and Wilfried Zaha.

That Manchester United midfield felt it most: Scholes retired with Ferguson, Cleverley and Anderson were poor and Fletcher had barely featured. It was a burden Carrick understandably failed to shoulder alone.

Right-wingers – Mo Salah
Antonio Valencia and Adnan Januzaj
Mo Salah

Mo Salah.

Left-wingers – Liverpool
Ashley Young, Nani, Ryan Giggs and Wilfried Zaha
Cody Gakpo and Luis Diaz

It is difficult to overstate just how reliant on a couple of players the last title-winning Manchester United team was in terms of attacking output. Van Persie scored more than twice as many goals as anyone and him and Wayne Rooney were the only players with more than five Premier League assists.

Evra and Kagawa ranked joint-fourth for combined goals and assists with just nine, ahead of Giggs (five, level with Carrick) and Young and Nani (both three, equal with Buttner).

Zaha being the last signing Ferguson ever made, his arrival arranged for the summer he left, perfectly sums up the state of the club he handed down to Moyes.

Klopp again bestowed upon his predecessor fewer but far better players. Diaz has scored more goals against Manchester United this season (two) than Young and Nani managed in 30 appearances between them in 2012/13 (one).

Forwards – Manchester United
Robin van Persie, Wayne Rooney, Javier Hernandez, Danny Welbeck and James Wilson
Diogo Jota and Darwin Nunez

The Van Persie tail-off to 12 goals and three assists in 21 injury-addled games was stark but that alone beats the combined efforts of Jota and Nunez in 2024/25.

Many a critic has slammed Manchester United for the sales of Hernandez and Welbeck but Moyes inherited and used both and while Rooney had the club over a barrel yet again before signing another contract extension, he still had plenty to offer for years to come – albeit never in central midfield.

The entire argument is rendered null and void, however, with the introduction of Wilson to the equation. Player-manager Giggs trying to secure his legacy by using his four-game caretaker reign to give the teenager his debut was hilariously small-time. Klopp wishes he could have given academy players such a meaningful chance.

Amorim’s position at United under threat after FA Cup disaster, World Cup winner being considered as replacement – report

Ruben Amorim’s long term position at Manchester United could be under threat as the club’s hierarchy have identified several potential candidates to step in, as per reports.

Fulham intensified Amorim’s concerns as the Cottagers knocked United out of the FA Cup at Old Trafford on Sunday.

There is not much left to play for in the Premier League for the Red Devil as they sit 14th in the table, 14 points behind fourth-placed Manchester City.

Under the new head coach, United have also been knocked out of the League Cup and now winning the Europa League is the Mancunians only hope to salvage something from the season.

United’s abysmal form and unconvincing performances have led to question marks over Amorim’s calibre to lead the Premier League giants.

According to Fichajes, United are “beginning to consider a possible change” following the side’s recent run of poor results.

Ineos showed plenty of trust in Amorim’s potential as they took little time to secure his services from Sporting CP after sacking Erik ten Hag. However, his start in England has generated “doubts among the board and the fans.”

Accordingly, United are understood to be analysing “possible replacements” should Amorim fail to steady the ship in the coming months.

The Spanish outlet claim Joachim Low, Julen Lopetegui, and Massimiliano Allegri have emerged as the “strongest” names to potentially take over the helm.

Low, who led Germany to World Cup glory in 2014, is viewed as an attractive option due to his ability to manage dressing rooms filled with strong characters.

Meanwhile, ex-Real Madrid and West Ham United manager Lopetegui is appreciated for his ability to “rebuild projects”.

Finally, Allegri, who most recently managed Juventus, is among the leading candidates due to his incredible success in Serie A, having lifted the league title with the Old Lady and AC Milan.

The clock appears to be ticking and if things don’t improve quickly, the United board will reportedly not hesitate to pull the trigger on Amorim.


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Vishal has covered football for over five years. Currently a writer at The Peoples Person. Big fan of ball-playing center-backs!

Man Utd boss Amorim could now be ‘forced to sell family silver’ instead of ‘underachieving players’

Man Utd boss Ruben Amorim could now be forced to sell some of his star players this summer than concentrate on getting rid of underperforming players, according to reports.

The Red Devils are having a terrible season with Amorim’s side moving up to 14th in the Premier League table after beating Ipswich 3-2 last week.

Man Utd are now clear of the relegation zone but have little chance of making Europe unless they go on a run of results not seen yet this season.

Results and performances have been worse under Amorim than predecessor Erik ten Hag with the players struggling to get to grips with his system, style of play and philosophy.

The Red Devils brough in Patrick Dorgu to attempt to help the situation in the January transfer window but the Portuguese head coach needs a lot more than one player to turn around their fortunes.

Man Utd, who exited the FA Cup to Fulham on Sunday, are likely to miss out on playing in Europe next season unless they can win the Europa League with the Red Devils playing Real Sociedad in the Round of 16.

And no Champions League football once again would cost the club heavily with The Sun claiming that Man Utd are ‘staring at a £100million-plus black hole as the cost of their season of Hell is laid bare’.

Failure to win the Europa League, which gives the champions a place in next season’s Champions League, ‘will have a dramatic effect on Amorim’s summer funds and potential spending plans’.

As well as the huge amount given for just participating in the Champions League and gate receipts etc, there is also the potential £31m that Man Utd are set to miss out on by potentially finishing 14th instead of fourth in the Premier League.

The Sun adds:

‘It all adds up to a huge headache for Amorim and the club – which has already announced that ticket price increases and a major cost-cutting programme is required as the Old Trafford hierarchy conjure with looming Profitability and Sustainability Rules issues.

‘The confirmation from Prem chiefs that PSR will still apply next season, with clubs only allowed to make “permitted losses” of £105m over three years, will plunge United into further financial concerns.

‘But PSR requirements and the impact of this season’s failures on the club’s income stream may now force Amorim to sell the family silver in this summer’s transfer market – and prevent him getting rid of some of the under-achieving players.’

MORE MAN UTD COVERAGE ON F365…
👉 Analysing Chido Obi’s 14 touches against Fulham – is he really the answer for Amorim?
👉 Wayne Rooney picks three reasons for Man Utd to re-sign ‘fantastic’ PL star – ‘If I’m completely honest’
👉 Lineker makes Klopp comparison as he fingers Ferguson for start of Man Utd decline

Former Man Utd striker Dwight Yorke thinks that Amorim has missed a trick to get some initial results before attempting to build his philosophy once he gets his own players in.

Yorke said: “I do believe that despite the challenges of where United are, as a manager, you’ve got to stabilise the club. You’ve still got to win football matches. And no one will say go beat Liverpool, City, Arsenal.

“When Brentford, Crystal Palace, Brighton beat you, you’ve got to ask yourself some questions.

“How could David Moyes go to a team that was struggling more than United and suddenly turn that around?

“I’m not saying that Amorim’s not a good manager. We’re not asking you to beat Liverpool, we’re not asking you to beat Arsenal. All we’re saying is, just win some football matches against teams that you should be beating.

“And if you’re not going to win against the big boys, and you’re not going to start winning against the small boys, when are you going to start?

“Moyes has done well at Everton but certainly we’ve got better players at United. Somehow, he’s managed to turn it around while we continue to struggle.

“I’m not saying beat the big teams. I’m just saying beat the lower teams and win the winnable games. We’re in 15th place. People still think that we are safe. I am not so sure. There’s still a long way. And the more games you are losing to, the harder it gets.

“Amorim is in a difficult place right now. He needs to find a way out.”

READ NEXT: Mediawatch: Amorim ‘rant’, Fletcher ‘antics’ but Zirkzee ‘spot’ takes the biscuit

Ratcliffe set to tear up 10-year United agreement in latest cost-cutting plan – report

Manchester United co-owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe is reportedly considering terminating the 10-year lease agreement of the club’s London offices in Kensington.

Since Ratcliffe assumed operational control of United in February last year, he has gone about implementing a series of cost-cutting measures in a bid to return the Red Devils back to profitability.

Last summer, 250 employees were made redundant and last week, the club released a statement confirming hundreds of more staff are set to be axed in the coming weeks.

Ratcliffe also cancelled cup final perks for staff, cancelled the highly popular Christmas party and more recently, scrapped free lunches for employees at Old Trafford.

Noe, The Guardian reports that the INEOS billionaire is contemplating an early termination from a 10-year lease agreement at Kensington.

United moved into their plush offices less than two years ago, following the expiry of a 10-year rental agreement on another building in Mayfair.

According to Matt Hughes, Ratcliffe has decided that the vast majority of United’s staff should be based in Manchester, deeming the 23,000 sq ft space in Kensington as too large and expensive.

The report further states, “In announcing a “transformation plan” last week that will involve between 150 and 200 redundancies, United committed to maintaining a presence in London, but the Guardian has learned this will involve looking for new premises.”

“While downsizing at their current office is also being considered, it is understood that moving out entirely two years into a 10-year agreement is viewed as the most likely course of action.”

Even though United’s current office is less than a mile from INEOS’ headquarters in Knightsbridge, this isn’t a factor Ratcliffe is considering.

United occupy the entire top floor of the Kensington Building, which covers 16,000 sq ft, plus a 7,000 sqft roof terrace.

Ruben Amorim’s men are back in action on Thursday when they face Real Sociedad in the round of 16 of the Europa League.

Featured image Michael Regan 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!

INEOS’ brutal approach will arm Amorim with a war chest to transform United this summer – report

Manchester United could be set to save £25 million a year following the club’s next planned round of job cuts, according to a football expert.

Financial advisor Stefan Borson reveals the brutal cost-cutting measures implemented by INEOS, which saw around 250 staff members lose their jobs, saved the club £8.6 million.

“It might save let’s say £25million a year by sacking 400 people at the lower levels. We know that the cost of the first 250 people to be made redundant by United was £8.6million. We know that from the accounts,” Borson states.

“That gives you an average of around about £35,000 per person as a redundancy cost. That would imply that those people probably have something like £70,000-100,000 salaries on average. It’s quite a lot and it’s quite senior people.

“Therefore, let’s say two, three, four times that in an annualised saving. If you think about maybe they got three months’ notice, you then times it by four to work out what an annualised cost might be of those individuals.”

The next “round of redundancies” is expected to total around 200 members of the Old Trafford workforce, leading Borson to assess a total saving of around £25 million, based on the figures from the previous cuts.

However, the expert warns, these savings are not sufficient to offset “expensive player wages, amortisation and interest costs” – the big-hitters draining the Red Devils’ finances over the past decade.

“When they talk about losses over the last five years, they’re talking about the operating level. That’s after very expensive player wages, amortisation and interest costs.

“The interesting thing is, if you sack or make redundant 450 people but can’t deal with player wages, amortisation and the interest cost, unsurprisingly, that doesn’t particularly help your operating profit that much.”

United will focus on shifting deadwood from Ruben Amorim’s first-team squad with the club pushing for the permanent departures of their two biggest earners – Marcus Rashford and Casemiro.

Shifting either of these players in the summer would provide a similar financial boost to the sacking of 200 regular staff members, Borson contends.

“It could be sort of £25million of the ones that have gone. We know that £25million is around about what Casemiro and Rashford are each paid, so just one player is paid around those sorts of numbers. It’s not easy for Manchester United to deal with profitability by making redundant lots of junior staff.”

It may not be “easy” for INEOS to fix the club’s finances with redundancies, but the Petrochemical giant will utilise every conceivable avenue to improve the situation at Old Trafford; and no one is safe from this brutal cost-cutting approach, not even Sir Alex Ferguson.

But if this approach helps Amorim to overhaul the first-team this summer, it may be a price worth paying.

Featured image Michael Regan via Getty Images


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Darragh is a writer for The Peoples Person who spent three years as a history graduate slowly realising football was by far the most interesting thing to write about.