Showing posts with label Manchester United. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Manchester United. Show all posts

Friday, 1 March 2024

Manchester United get double injury boost ahead of City clash


Harry Maguire 


Harry Maguire is expected to miss Manchester United's derby clash with Man City this weekend, with no players set to return from injury for the match. However, two players who were a doubt in midweek should be fit.


The 30-year-old missed United's midweek victory over Nottingham Forest, four days after he had netted in their Premier League defeat to Fulham at Old Trafford. Maguire previously suffered a groin injury in December and consequently missed six games as a result of his injury.


Bruno Fernandes and Raphael Varane, who have both had niggles, are both expected to be available after they fought to be part of the midweek win over Nottingham Forest. Speaking at his pre-match press conference on Thursday afternoon, manager Erik ten Hag issued the injury news for the clash.

Monday, 20 September 2021

‘IT WAS A BIT STRANGE’: David De Gea Reacts to His penalty save

 


Manchester United goalkeeper David De Gea made a rare penalty save from West Ham United’s Mark Noble on Sunday – and found the build-up ‘a bit strange’.

Friday, 13 August 2021

Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp questions Man Utd transfer strategy



Jurgen Klopp is wasting no time in laying the gauntlet down to Manchester United, with the Liverpool boss questioning how the Red Devils can afford the likes of Jadon Sancho and Raphael Varane.

The managerial mind games have started early this season, with Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp questioning how Manchester United can afford their transfer business.

Klopp will hope to see his side back at the top of the Premier League this term after a disappointing campaign last time around, and is wasting no time laying the gauntlet down to opposite number Ole Gunnar Solskjaer.

United are fourth-favourites to regain the title they last won under Sir Alex Ferguson in 2013 and haven't been shy about splashing the cash this summer.

Jadon Sancho arrived in a £73million deal from Borussia Dortmund just after the European Championships, while an agreement is also in place to sign Raphael Varane for Real Madrid.

Varane is expected to cost £41million, which means United's transfer spend will be north of £100million when the Frenchman finally puts pen to paper at Old Trafford.

By contrast, United have recouped barely any money in transfer revenue, with the little known duo of Johan Guadagno and Charlie McCann both having left the club for undisclosed fees.

Speaking ahead of Liverpool's Premier League opener against Norwich City, he said: "We all know the situation of Chelsea and City and PSG.

"What United are doing, I don't know how they did it. We have our own way to do it. We are allowed to spend the money we earn.

"This year we spent before we earned money by buying Konate. It's not about me being surprised [by rival spending], I've been here long enough to know they always find a solution to these things.

Saturday, 7 August 2021

Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has explained what Raphael Varane will bring to Manchester United



Raphael Varane is expected to complete his transfer to Man United from Real Madrid next week.

Ole Gunnar Solskjaer says Raphael Varane will bring a 'new dimension' to Manchester United.

Varane, 28, is set to undergo a medical next week to complete his £43million transfer from Real Madrid.

United hope to finalise the deal by, or on, Wednesday and Solskjaer has already suggested Varane will be on the bench against Leeds United next Saturday.

Varane is due to become United's third summer signing after Tom Heaton and Jadon Sancho and Solskjaer is pleased with the club's business so far.

"We have built a playing squad with a good spread of ages," Solskjaer said in his programme notes. "Some really talented young lads, some very experienced senior professionals and some who are right in their prime.

"But what unites everyone, both the players and the staff, is the hunger and enthusiasm that we all have for success. We are all- ready to take that step on our journey and that requires constant evolution.

"We have already significantly strengthened our squad for the 2021-22 campaign with returning players and the signings of Tom Heaton and Jadon Sancho, and the impending arrival of Raphael Varane will bring another new dimension to our collective approach."

HOW SANCHO AND VARANE REACTED TO UNITED V EVERTON

All eyes were on Old Trafford as Manchester United faced Everton in front of 55,000 fans and countless supporters watching on MUTV - including Jadon Sancho the prospective new signing Raphael Varane. 



Ole Gunnar Solskjaer's men produced a sparkling performance at Old Trafford in the final friendly of their pre-season campaign, brushing aside a Premier League opponent with ease.

Mason Greenwood opened the scoring with a neat finish following an error by goalkeeper Jordan Pickford, before Harry Maguire executed a bullet header from Luke Shaw's corner to double the advantage. 

Bruno Fernandes was making his first appearance of the summer and Portuguese showed no signs of rust, particularly when unleashing a vicious free-kick that flew into the top corner.

Bruno's amazing set-piece sparked a huge ovation from the delighted Old Trafford crowd and, of course, sent ripples among fans reacting to the game on social media. 

Those included summer signing from Borussia Dortmund, Sancho, who is expected to join the squad after the weekend. 

The England international was watching the match on MUTV and showed his appreciation for his new team-mate Bruno, with the tweet:.

Bruno 😍

— Jadon Sancho (@Sanchooo10) August 7, 2021

The transfer of Varane from Real Madrid to United is still to be finalised following last month's announcement that a fee has been agreed between the two clubs.

As Solskjaer confirmed this week, completion is not too far away.

“[It’s] Paperwork now, you know, with Brexit and all that,” Solskjaer said. “I was going to say malarkey but I don’t want to go into politics!

“It’s cost us a few days, with the visa, but he’s been looking after himself.

“Of course, we’ve got his medical first and hopefully that’s going to be done soon.”

Wednesday, 26 October 2016

My life in Manchester is a disaster - Mourinho


Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho says living alone in a hotel in the City of Manchester is a 'bit of a disaster'.
Mourinho has been living in the city's Lowry Hotel since being appointed United manager in the summer and the former Chelsea boss whose family is in London claims he is loath to venture out because of the persistent hordes of photographers camped outside his hotel.
"I just want to cross the bridge and go to a restaurant. I can't, so it's really bad.
"For me it's a bit of a disaster because I want sometimes to walk a little bit and I can't.

"The reality is that my daughter will be 20 next week, my son will be 17 in a couple of months. They are very stable.

"University in London. Football in London. Friends. So they are in an age where they can't chase me like they did before. So for the first time the family lives in a different way." Mourinho told Sky Sports.
Mourinho who reportedly earns more than £10m a year is believed to be searching for an apartment but hinted that he is missing his family.

Monday, 24 October 2016

Why it is too early to write off Man Utd's title hopes - Phil Neville


Manchester United made a disastrous start against Chelsea on Sunday - and got worse as the game went on.
From what I saw from United in their 4-0 defeat at Stamford Bridge, I don't think they are anywhere near the level that their manager Jose Mourinho wants them to be at, and it will probably take them a lot more time to get there.
But what I would add is that they have come out of a period of tough games, and they are going into a spell where their fixtures look a lot more winnable. Mourinho said so himself afterwards.

The next few weeks are an important time for them because you don't win the league by beating the clubs around you - you win it by beating everyone else.
That is what United have to do now, and they have to be more ruthless because draws will not be enough - for me, when they were held at home by Stoke at the start of October, it was almost as disappointing as Sunday's defeat.
In the next few weeks, United are at home to Arsenal but also play Burnley, Swansea and West Ham. Even if they only win those three games, then their world is a brighter place.
Yes, United need to go on a run to make up the ground they have lost but they are only six points off the top of the table and we have already seen things can change very quickly in the title race
After a great start, leaders Manchester City have gone three games without a win and look like they have lost confidence. I don't see a side playing with any rhythm or fluidity.
And it looked like Tottenham's victory over City had launched their season - but they have drawn both their league games since.
It is one of those years where there is not going to be a runaway winner, so United just have to stay in touch at the top.
What Chelsea have done recently is an example of why it is far too early to write United's season off.
After the first six games of the season, which saw them struggle defensively and lose to Liverpool and Arsenal, I was wondering what their new manager Antonio Conte was doing. His team looked like the same old Chelsea who struggled last year.
But then Conte changed to the 3-5-2 formation that has brought him such success with Juventus and Italy, and they have not looked back.
In three games since, against Hull, Leicester and now United they have scored nine goals, kept three clean sheets and picked up nine points.
All of a sudden, their forward players are playing with freedom - plus they have a solid foundation behind them with their three centre-halves plus N'Golo Kante and Nemanja Matic in midfield.
Hazard in particular has benefited because he is taking up much better positions and is having a greater effect on games for the full 90 minutes because the defensive responsibility is totally off him.

While Chelsea look like they have found the formation and system that suits them, United are still searching for theirs.
It looked like they might have found it against Liverpool at Anfield on Monday night when they were hard to beat, solid, aggressive and a threat going forward.
They still created chances against Chelsea on Sunday but pretty much everything else went out of the window - they were opened up far too easily and did not have the same aggression.
While Monday's 0-0 draw was a fantastic defensive performance, where United looked like they wanted to defend and enjoyed it, against Chelsea they did neither.
Conceding the first goal after only 30 seconds killed their game-plan but they made things worse after that by trying to chase the game.
Instead of being hard to break down it looked like they were trying to play their way out of trouble and it played into Chelsea's hands.
The Blues were not bothered about United having more possession because they knew the more they had of the more ball, the wider open they would be when they hit them on the counter-attack.
As the game went on, United took too many chances at the back and looked extremely vulnerable.
They became ragged and their players lost concentration, which is something you would never normally associate with a Mourinho side, and Chelsea's third goal epitomised United's poor defensive display.
Yes, it was a good pass from Nemanja Matic to give Eden Hazard the chance to take on Chris Smalling inside the area but you would not normally find those gaps.
So, I am not surprised that the biggest thing Mourinho was disappointed about afterwards was the mistakes that led to all four of Chelsea's goals.
It is not as though the Blues continuously opened United up. Cut out those errors, and it would have been a much tighter game.

Friday, 21 October 2016

Mourinho relaxed about Chelsea return


Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho has claimed he is undeterred by the prospect of returning to former club Chelsea in the Premier League this Sunday afternoon.
The 53-year-old is the most successful boss in Blues history following his two spells in charge at Stamford Bridge after winning three championship crowns, three League Cups and the FA Cup.
Mourinho’s second stint with Chelsea ended with his departure midway through the 2015/16 season following a disappointing start to the title defence, which led to him later being recruited by United in June and he will return for the first time as Reds boss this coming weekend.
Speaking at a press conference that was held after the Europa League win over Fenerbahce on Thursday night, Mourinho was asked to assess Chelsea’s form under new manager Antonio Conte and provide an assessment of what it will be like for him to return to his old employers.
“I don’t have to analyse their start to the season but, when you look at the table and you see where they are, in the middle positions, it cannot be bad,” the boss said. “I knew that working in England, staying in the Premier League, I would, sooner or later, have to play against Chelsea and I would have to go to Stamford Bridge. The computer has decided that I have to go now, so we go.”
Following his first departure from Chelsea in 2007, Mourinho returned to west London with new club Inter Milan and told the media he is “always lucky at the Bridge”. When asked how important that might be this time around, the United boss explained why his comment is no longer valid. 
“When I played there with Inter, before that, I had never lost a match at Stamford Bridge because I had that [unbeaten] home record,” he said. “Now, I lost already a few matches at the Bridge. Last season, I lost two or three matches so I cannot use the same words. Now, I lost there.”

Wednesday, 19 October 2016

PSG lost 8million fans after Ibrahimovic left for United – Blomqvist


Jesper Blomqvist has claimed that Paris Saint-Germain “lost eight million supporters”, after Zlatan Ibrahimovic joined Manchester United this summer.
Ibrahimovic left the Ligue 1 champions at the end of last season after four years and signed for the Premier League side as a free agent.
Blomqvist, also a former Sweden international, says PSG have lost more than just a player.
 “He is one of the biggest personalities in Sweden,” Blomqvist told the Sun.
“He has launched his own perfume, Volvo cars and his own sports clothing range. He is his own brand. He is everywhere even though he has stopped playing for the national team.
“I work a lot with travel companies in Sweden coming over to Manchester. The interest is just triple. Zlatan is so big in Sweden. I think PSG have lost eight million supporters in Sweden and now they are all Manchester United. Not all but it is like that.
“More planes come over, they sell a lot more tickets to the United games. I have done it every now and then for a couple of years. Now there are 10 times more calls from companies who want me to come over with the supporters.”

Tuesday, 18 October 2016

Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho claims Liverpool deserve criticism for performance


Jose Mourinho rubbished concerns over Manchester United's possession stats at Liverpool by insisting Jurgen Klopp's side deserved more criticism.
United enjoyed just 35 per cent of possession in their goalless draw at Anfield - their lowest in a Premier League game for 13 years. Mourinho claimed after the game they actually had 42 per cent but match data issued by Opta stated it was 35 per cent.
David de Gea made two phenomenal saves from Emre Can and Philippe Coutinho in the second-half, having made a simple stop in the first period, but Mourinho was keen to highlight how little Liverpool worked the Spaniard over the course of the 90 minutes.
"Look, last season United won here," Mourinho said. "Liverpool had 14 shots on target and United had one. How many shots on target did Liverpool have today? Two? Two shots with 65 per cent of possession. You have to be critical of Liverpool, not of us, because 65 per cent and two shots, it is their problem, not our problem.
"I think the team was perfect. Even the goalkeeper was on holiday for 90 minutes but he had two big saves to do and he did."
Mourinho also felt Liverpool's decision to pair Jordan Henderson with Can was 'cautious', a tactic enforced on Klopp by Giorgino Wijnaldum's unavailability due to injury.
"We stopped them to play, but they also did very well by the defensive point of view," Mourinho said. "They played Can and Henderson for some reason, and they did that for 90 minutes, so they normally project more players in attack.
"They were very cautious, they kept always Can and Henderson in position, they had only one player behind the three more offensive players, so I think it was that intention to try and control us, which they also did well.
"I think it was a good performance, difficult match for us and for them and I think we controlled the game tactically and we controlled the game emotionally, and it's not easy to do both things in here.
"The result I think is acceptable, we wanted more for long periods in the game we thought that we could be positive but we didn't score and we don't score we don't win, but I think a very positive performance."

Monday, 17 October 2016

Paul Scholes: Manchester United lack identity, Liverpool favourites to win


Paul Scholes believes that Jose Mourinho's Manchester United remain a work in progress and Liverpool are favourites to win when the two sides meet at Anfield on Monday.
Scholes played for United throughout their period of dominance in the English football, and while the Red Devils have won the last four Premier League meetings between the two sides he feels Liverpool could now have the edge.
The former England international believes Jose Mourinho has caused confusion with his team selections since taking over from Louis van Gaal in the summer, leading to a mixed start which leaves United in sixth place in the table and three points adrift of Jurgen Klopp's team.
"If you were betting, you would be betting on Liverpool," Scholes told BBC Sport. "He [Mourinho] was not ruthless enough in the off-season. There is so much confusion about who should play.

"What I saw of Mourinho at Chelsea is that he had 13 or 14 players who played every week. He never rested players even in the League Cup or whatever competition he was in.
"With United, it is still a settling-in period. It is going to take a bit of time for them to knit together and see what they are about. Is there an identity to the team yet? I don't think there is."
When Mourinho won the title with Chelsea in 2015, he used only 19 outfield starters in the whole of the season, and he has already used 15 with United this season.

Tuesday, 20 September 2016

Wayne Rooney's form is foremost among Manchester United's problems



The poor form of Wayne Rooney isn't Manchester United's only problem after three consecutive defeats, but it's the most pertinent one. He is the captain and a club legend and is only three goals away from becoming United's all-time leading scorer with 249 goals.
The 30-year-old has won every major trophy in his 12 years at the club and is popular and respected. Being "a good lad" goes a long way in professional football. Players like Rooney; he's a team man and a joker.
Managers also like him and not only because he's so versatile and prepared to play anywhere for the team. Others might stand their ground and insist on occupying their favoured role but Rooney will just get on with it. It's to his credit that he's been talented enough to play in different positions and that the team comes first, in front of any personal scoring ambitions.
But he's not playing well, something even his most ardent supporters will concede. Rather than fulminating with anger, they're saddened that a once great player is floundering. From being the standout under David Moyes three years ago, Rooney now doesn't look worthy of his place in the team.
There are still moments, such as the one that set up a last-minute winner at Hull last month or a game- changing FA Cup final performance vs. Crystal Palace in May, but it's nowhere near enough.
Rooney continues to start in his usual position behind the leading striker. It is a highly-coveted role: Marcus Rashford, Henrikh Mkhitaryan, Juan Mata and Ander Herrera would all love to play there. Paul Pogba was tried there against Feyenoord, though he didnt impress.
Yet more than one United fan hoped he'd get sent off towards the end of Sunday's game at Watford when he became frustrated at referee Michael Oliver and was booked for a foul on Roberto Pereyra. It could have done him and Jose Mourinho a favour.
Three games out could have offered time for Rooney to refocus, while it also would have taken the decision to keep him in the team out of Mourinho's hands. An absence would also show whether he would be missed or whether there is a better replacement.
He has played worse than he did at Watford, when he started on the right of a midfield three. That, incidentally, seemed to contradict what Mourinho said when he took over, that Rooney was best used as a striker.
But fans are almost unanimous that he should be dropped. In a Monday poll among supporters on United We Stand -- many of whom went to Watford - 92 percent were in favour of that happening.
It's impossible to judge whether Rooney has simply hit a brick wall. In 1997, Eric Cantona called it a day while he was still at the top and just short of his 31st birthday -- the exact age Rooney is now -- and United coaches later said that the Frenchman felt he was on the way down. Meanwhile, Gary Neville realised his time had gone when he was exposed in a game at West Brom in 2011.
Or does Rooney go down the route of Ryan Giggs and change his position completely, play less but still have an influence in games?
There's zero suggestion that he's going to retire but, if Rooney's legs have gone, then it's understandable: He's played 718 games of senior professional football and has put in the hard miles. When Cristiano Ronaldo was making headlines in Manchester, Rooney was doing much of his running.
Through no fault of his own, Rooney has another problem. Initially, he was asked to form a partnership with Zlatan Ibrahimovic, a relationship which would take time even in a stable system, which United don't yet have, unlike Manchester City with Pep Guardiola.
Mourinho's initial idea was for players to get the ball to Ibrahimovic and Rooney, that there was nobody better than the two of them at working the small spaces, but the Swede is disappointed at the lack of service he's receiving. With Anthony Martial also out of form, United have issues up front as well as in the easily overrun midfield behind the forwards.
Luck can play a part in developing partnerships -- Sir Alex Ferguson only hit on the spark between Andy Cole and Dwight Yorke two months into the 1998-99 season -- but an otherwise composed Mourinho blaming referees after each defeat won't wash for long.
We're only seven games in and it's still very early days under the new manager, but it is possible to discern some traits of his United. The big (fame) names start, as do the big (physical) players.
United could have had a much tougher fixture list so far, having only played Man City of the top domestic sides. Coming up are games against champions Leicester City and struggling Stoke, before a six-day spell in which they visit Liverpool and Chelsea. Amid that are League Cup and Europa League games. Will Rooney continue to feature in some, if not all, of those?
Mourinho has been remarkably calm so far. He's been on a charm offensive and a winning start afforded him a honeymoon period. He knew he had to change his image after Real Madrid and his second stint at Chelsea, but on Sunday against a Watford team who'd not beaten United for almost 30 years, he presided over a third straight defeat. The last time that happened to Mourinho was in 2002.
For a man known as a winner, who is as close to a guarantee as there is for organising victories and who United executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward described as "quite simply the best manager in the game today," Mourinho has now lost 14 of his last 32 games in all competitions.
Before that, he'd lost a mere 14 of his previous 105. It's not only Rooney who needs to find his touch again.

Sunday, 18 September 2016

Mourinho blames individual and collective errors


Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho blamed "individual and collective mistakes" and was critical of referee Michael Oliver after his side suffered a third successive defeat.
United's 3-1 loss at Watford on Sunday followed defeat against Manchester City in the Premier League and Feyenoord in the Europa League.
With the game goalless, Anthony Martial lost possession leading to Etienne Capoue scoring the opening goal and Mourinho felt a foul should have been given for Miguel Britos' challenge. Although Marcus Rashford eventually equalised, Watford went on to win through a goal from substitute Camilo Zuniga and then a Troy Deeney penalty.
Mourinho told BT Sport: "There's no debate, no controversy. It's an obvious situation, like last week against Manchester City, but it's something I cannot control or be critical with. In the first half, for the first 25 or 30 minutes, we didn't play well. That's something we can control and improve, then the referee and linesman's mistake is not under my control. I can do nothing to improve it.
"The second half was much better, we got the draw [equalising at 1-1] then, after that, we were the team [who looked likelier to win]. [Heurelho] Gomes made a phenomenal save [from a Zlatan Ibrahimovic header]. Luck is not something we can control. What we can control is individual and collective mistakes. The second goal is an individual mistake. We know we have to press the wing backs outside the box. Then, another individual mistake [for the third goal]."
When asked if he was concerned, Mourinho replied: "I'm always concerned when we don't get results we want. That's an obvious situation."
Mourinho continued on his theme of the players' errors in his post-match news conference, and said it is his job to ensure they are cut out in future.
"I feel that some individuals probably feel the pressure and responsibility too much," he said. "But from a collective point of view, I only have good things to say about them. At 1-1 everyone thinks we are going to win the game. We were showing complete control, intensity, creation.
"But their second goal is a mistake that goes against our plan and our training, because our intention was for their wing-backs to be pressed and not let them progress. And what happened was the guy gets the ball 20-25 metres away from our box and instead of being pressed, we give him the space to progress. [Nordin] Amrabat receives the ball and our left-back [Shaw] is 25 metres from him instead of five.
"But even at 25 you have to jump and go and press, but no, we wait. This is a tactical but also a mental attitude. It's something that doesn't become perfect in a couple of weeks. So we have to improve, no doubt, individually and collectively. And that's my job.
"We started the season very well with [winning] the Community Shield and three victories in a row in the Premier League, the best start that a new manager has had at Manchester United I think. But was I thinking that my team was ready, perfect, unbeatable? Not at all.
"I was completely aware that we were not perfect, with lots of players who are not end products and can make their own mistakes."
Asked if he felt referee Oliver should have penalised Miguel Britos' tackle on Martial in the build-up to Watford's opening goal was a foul, Mourinho said: "When you come with that question it's because you know. You don't ask me about that if you think that nothing happened. The reason you asked the question is my answer.
"The referee's crucial mistakes are not in my control, there is nothing I can do about that. That is not under my control. But against Man City you know what happened in minute 55 [when Mourinho felt United should have had a penalty for a challenge by Manchester City goalkeeper Claudio Bravo on Rooney], today you know that happened for the first goal, against Feyenoord there was the offside goal. So we were punished by these mistakes and I can't do anything about it."
Looking ahead, Mourinho told MUTV: "Tomorrow, we have a training session at 10.30 in the morning and we have to be there and we have to work, but they have to show a certain attitude towards the negative moment.
"We need positive people to give us positivity because obviously, the next time that these guys go on to a football pitch, they're going to feel -- as a normal human being -- the weight of the defeat."
Watford captain Deeney felt that his team deserved credit for how they stifled United, saying: "I am not surprised by how we played. We should take a bit more credit, we pressed well, condensed the space and were tough in the tackle. We need to be against teams like Manchester United who have high quality players and spend a lot of money."


Saturday, 17 September 2016

Pogba should forget record fee, play freely for Manchester United – Mourinho


Jose Mourinho wants Paul Pogba to forget his world-record price tag and show Manchester United his true quality.
A summer of discussion bore fruit five weeks ago when the open secret of the 23-year-old’s Old Trafford return from Juventus was made official.
United paid an eye-watering €105 million euros (£89 million) to bring back a player who left them four years earlier in search of first-team football, with a further €5m (£4.25m) due if certain targets are met.
It is a remarkable, record-breaking fee that sees Pogba stand alone as the world’s most expensive player ever — a price tag that appeared to weigh heavily in United’s disappointing back-to-back defeats to Manchester City and Feyenoord.
Mourinho had expected the Frenchman’s tail-off after his bright start to life at United, and now wants him to block out the background noise that comes with his status.
“The world-record player is always a question that will be open until somebody breaks the record,” Mourinho said. “I think there are clubs that paid 20, 30, 40 [million pounds], which is a bigger deal than what Man United paid for Paul because you make a relation between what you pay and the club revenue.
“You realise that other clubs paying 20, 30, 40 is a much bigger thing than what Man United did, and I just want Paul to forget that and to play his football.
“Euro final, no preseason, holidays, come back — it’s normal that in the first week he had the very good impact in the first game.
“It’s normal that after the first game he has a little decrease, but I am full of trust with him because I know the player he is.
“I know that he is a very good guy with a lot of ambition, so the form will come naturally and will come with the team. The team improves, Paul improves. No problem.”
Pogba’s form tallies with United’s own drop-off after their winning start to life under Mourinho came to a shuddering halt.
They head to Watford on Sunday looking to avoid a third straight defeat, which could see them fall six points behind Pep Guardiola’s City after just five matches.
“You are right, it is early days,” Mourinho said. “I prefer to be four in front than four behind, that’s obvious, but as you are saying it’s very early days.”
Asked, though, if Watford was the biggest match of his short reign given the events of this week, Mourinho said: “Watford? I think Man United has to show every game, every game, every competition.
“The club is too big, the supporters are too passionate for the professionals not to feel that every game is a very important game, so I don’t think they should need a defeat or in this case two defeats to try to give everything they have to give.
“It should belong to them and that is what I expect from them — it is that on Sunday we will try to win the match, normal.”
A good start would certainly help United’s chances in Hertfordshire, given the sloppy and unwieldy first-half displays that played a large part in their downfall in both the Manchester derby and their Europa League opener.
“Look, I always say that the best motivation you can have is your own motivation,” Mourinho added. “If you need other people to motivate you … I always feel that my job is that I am an extra source of motivation, but the motivation belongs to the players.
“And if the players at this age need … the great life, the money, they have to do what they want, I think they shouldn’t need an extra source of motivation.
“The motivation belongs to themselves so I believe in that, I believe that on Sunday they will try to win the match, try to give absolutely everything and it will be just by them to try to help.”

Thursday, 15 September 2016

Manchester United beaten by Feyenoord in Europa League opener



Manchester United made a laboured start to their Europa League campaign as they were beaten 1-0 by Feyenoord in Rotterdam.
Tonny Vilhena scored the decisive goal for the Eredivisie side in the 79th minute as Nicolai Jorgensen's cut-back cross found the 21-year-old midfielder free in the box to slot home.
Jose Mourinho made eight changes to the side that lost against Manchester City in the Premier League at the weekend, introducing Marcus Rashford and Anthony Martial into the XI and naming Chris Smalling as captain on his first start of the season.
But the wholesale changes had a detrimental effect and United struggled for tempo and to create any clear cut chances of note in a first half that saw them frustrated by Giovanni van Bronckhorst's organised side in front of a lively but less-than-capacity crowd at De Kuip.
Martial came closest to breaking the deadlock for United in the 24th minute when he put a Matteo Darmian cross wide from close range but they failed to test former Liverpool goalkeeper Brad Jones during the opening 45 minutes.
United didn't improve much after the break and frustrated by the lethargic performance he had seen in the opening hour Mourinho made three changes in the 63rd minute minute with Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Memphis Depay and Ashley Young introduced in place of Rashford, Martial and Juan Mata.
However, the gamble didn't pay off and with little over 10 minutes remaining Vilhena fired a low effort past David De Gea in the United goal.
A desperate late onslaught from United yielded little more than a drilled free kick from Ibrahimovic that Jones saved comfortably, while De Gea came up for a 93rd-minute corner but Feyenoord held firm to claim a winning start in Group A.

Europa League not the competition Manchester United want - Mourinho

Jose Mourinho has admitted that the Europa League is "not the big dream for every big player" but they have to find motivation and Manchester United want to win the competition.
United manager Mourinho is preparing his team for the opening Europa League game of the season on Thursday, away against Feyenoord, and is disappointed that the stadium will be at reduced capacity due to crowd trouble.
Speaking at his news conference on Wednesday, Mourinho said: "This is not a competition that Man United wants. It's not the big dream of every big player, but we are not in the Champions League.
"We come to win the game. We want to win the competition. It's difficult to do, but it's simple to feel it and to say. This is the way we want to approach the competition.
"For a club of our dimension, to do well is not to be out in the group phase. Tomorrow is an important match for us."
The United manager warned against complacency, giving a reminder of what happened to Louis van Gaal's side last season in the Europa League. They lost a first-leg tie away against minnows FC Midtjylland, which was a low point in the Dutchman's reign, and do not want a repeat.
Mourinho said: "If you see what happened last season, against Midtjylland, you don't forget that as a fan. Maybe as a player but not the fans. We have to make sure we are not sleeping."
Discussing the situation with the stadium, he added: "There is not player or manager who wants to play in an empty stadium. We are lucky it is not closed, just half of it, but half is not the same as full. Every player wants a great atmosphere.
"I remember clearly what happened against Roma [when some Feyenoord fans caused trouble, leading to the Dutch club being punished]. I don't think this is Feyenoord. Feyenoord is much bigger than a few hundred that created that situation.
"But, in the end, the clubs are punished by these actions. The players are going to be punished, I am punished, [Feyenoord manager Giovanni] van Bronckhorst will be punished."
Meanwhile, midfielder Ander Herrera has said that he will "never give up" in his new deeper role. The Spaniard was brought into that position as a substitute against Manchester City on Saturday and it helped United to improve in the second half although they lost 2-1.
Herrera said: "I can make mistakes because I am human but what I am not going to do is give up. Never. I try to share my energy with the team, to win the ball back as quick as possible.
"I will keep doing the same the the manager wants me to play. I am a team player and I am ready. I will do what the manager asks me."
When asked about Mourinho's message after the derby, Herrera said: "All I can say is that he has shown us his confidence. He believes in us.
"They were better than us in the first half, we have to accept that, no excuses. But next time we face a team like Man City, who like to play from their keeper, we will do it better. You have to learn from every situation."

Wednesday, 14 September 2016

Rio Ferdinand predicts the 2016-17 Premier League top four


Rio Ferdinand has developed into one of television’s best football pundits over the past year.
The former Manchester United and England defender, who ended his illustrious playing career in 2015, has probably exceeded expectations since taking up a full-time role at BT Sport.
Few pundits talk as passionately, eloquently or with as much conviction as the 37-year-old.
The retired centre-back was asked a range of different questions during his six-minute video, including which four teams will finish inside the Premier League’s top four come May. According to him:
1. Manchester United
2. Manchester City
3. Chelsea
4. Tottenham



Monday, 12 September 2016

Manchester United announce record profits

 Man United become first UK club to earn over half a billion pounds in a year


Manchester United have announced total revenue of £515.3 million ($683.5m) for the year ending June 30, 2016.
United have taken a record profit of £68m and in the process have become the first UK club to earn over half a billion pounds in a single year. However, that figure is short of the £570m in annual revenue that Barcelona announced in July.
United are also on target for record revenues again over the next year, despite failing to qualify for the Champions League, having been helped by the huge rise in broadcasting income for this season.
Following the news, executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward set his sights on returning United to "the pinnacle of our sport."
Speaking in his conference call on Monday, he said: "Jose Mourinho's appointment is a reflection of our determination to return to the pinnacle of our sport. We are writing the next chapter in our history."
Looking ahead, Woodward highlighted the effect world record signing Paul Pogba has already had, saying that the impact on Facebook was "more than Bale and Neymar combined."
Their £515m figure for 2015-16 was short of Barcelona's, revealed in July, as the Spanish club announced earnings of £570m, having benefited from a stronger Euro against the pound post-Brexit.
United, who agreed a 10-year £750m ($1.28 billion) contract with adidas -- the biggest deal in sports-licensing history -- in 2014, have a net debt that is £260.9m, but commercial revenue has soared to £268.3m, which is an increase of 36.3 percent over the prior year.
The accounts showed that sacking Louis van Gaal and his coaching staff cost £8.4m in compensation.
United's wage bill was up to £232.2m, with there being a rise in player salaries due to Champions League participation.
They also had to write off £6.7m as an asset because Bastian Schweinsteiger is "no longer considered to be a member of the first-team squad."
In a season when they won the FA Cup, United also saw matchday and TV revenue rise and signed 14 sponsorship deals.
Woodward had previously been reported as saying: "Our record Fiscal 2016 financial performance reflects the continued underlying strength of the business and the club is on target to achieve record revenues in 2017, even without a contribution from the Champions League."
"This strong financial performance has enabled us to invest in our squad, team management and facilities to position us to challenge for, and win, trophies in the coming years."

Friday, 9 September 2016

Zlatan Ibrahimovic regrets not playing for Jose Mourinho longer


Manchester United striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic has reiterated his belief that Jose Mourinho is a "mastermind" and revealed his only regret is that he didn't have more time to play under the Portuguese boss.
Ibrahimovic and Mourinho spent a year together at Inter Milan, where the United boss led the club a historic Treble of Serie A, Coppa Italia and Champions League titles the season after selling the Swede to Pep Guardiola's Barcelona.
The two stars have reunited at Manchester United, where they will participate in their first Manchester derby on Saturday against Guardiola's City. And the former PSG man hailed Mourinho ahead of the match.
"Mourinho is a mastermind. He knows everything about the game," Ibrahimovic said.
"I do not have many regrets, but I do regret that I did not get to play under Mourinho for longer. When the opportunity came again for him to be my coach at United it was an easy decision.
"Who wouldn't want to be coached by him? I am at a great club with a great coach and great fans and I want to be as successful as possible for them."
Ibrahimovic has helped United to a 100 percent Premier League record thus far -- matching City's impressive start to season -- making this campaign's first derby between the two even more special than usual.
"These games always mean so much to the fans and we want to win for them, but the players must always be focused," Ibrahimovic said.
"Every game must be looked at as an opportunity to win three points whoever the opposition."
On the absence of City striker Sergio Aguero through suspension, Ibrahimovic said: 'You know when you play the teams at the top that any team they put out is going to be dangerous."


Sunday, 4 September 2016

Ibrahimovic: Mourinho is the mastermind, every player would want him as manager?



Zlatan Ibrahimovic has credited Jose Mourinho as the decisive factor in persuading him to bring his stellar career to the Premier League, claiming he previously rejected moves to England's top flight on two occasions.
Ibrahimovic headed the winner in Manchester United's Community Shield victory over Leicester City and has scored three times in as many Premier League matches to prove an instant hit with the Old Trafford faithful.
The 34-year-old was only compelled to move to England following a decorated stint at Paris Saint-Germain – where he became the club's all-time record goalscorer amid an unprecedented period of success for the Ligue 1 champions – when his former Inter boss Mourinho succeeded Louis van Gaal at United.
"I was close to moving to the Premier League twice - once with Arsenal and then Manchester City," he told reporters.
"But it never happened and I don't need to play in the Premier League.
"Mourinho is the mastermind, the masterbrain.
"He knows what he needs to do to win. I learned a lot from him at Inter. Who wouldn't want to have Mourinho as manager?"
Ibrahimovic is set to lead the line in his first Manchester derby when United host City at Old Trafford next Saturday.