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Amorim tells Kobbie Mainoo technical quality alone will not win him more minutes

Amorim: Mainoo must add pace, positional awareness and varied tempo if he is to secure more minutes.

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Ruben Amorim has been frank about Kobbie Mainoo’s pathway to a larger role at Manchester United. The 20-year-old’s technical ability is clear, but Amorim warned that it will not be sufficient in the system he is building.

“I think for some guys [talent] is enough, but for him it is not enough,” Amorim said. “I believe in him a lot, he is a top top player, but he can be so much better.

“I think he needs to have the technical ability that he has, but he needs more pace. He needs to understand the position better. He needs to play in different speeds. Sometimes it’s slower. Sometimes it’s faster, and I think he can improve on that.

Amorim emphasised the tactical demands of a two-man midfield and how Manchester United now functions differently compared with the previous regime. “The way I play is completely different from the last manager. I watched a lot of Premier League games when I was in Portugal. You can feel the Manchester United team was really transitional. Sometimes I looked at Kobbie Mainoo and felt he was the only guy who calmed the game down. Now we have other players who can do that and we play a different game.

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“Mainoo is really good at controlling the game, but if he plays as an eight, he has to reach the box, returning, and sometimes he has to cover a lot of space with just two,” he said. “Bruno [Fernandes] is doing that job. And then sometimes it’s bad luck.

“Bruno is maybe the more influential player in the last few years, and he’s been playing in that position. Kobbie Mainoo could play as a six, but sometimes he passes the ball and goes away and it’s not a reference as a six, so we have to balance everything.”

Amorim also confirmed he spoke with Mainoo after the transfer window closed to outline his plans. “I didn’t have a conversation with him before the window closed because I didn’t want Kobbie Mainoo thinking that I was having a conversation with him just to hold on to him,” explained Amorim. “I did it this week.”

Mainoo made his first Premier League appearance of the season before the international break, coming off the bench to replace the injured Mason Mount, and will hope to add minutes when United face Manchester City on Sunday.

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Arsenal

Money Talks: CIES Ranks the World’s Most Valuable Squads

CIES values nine squads over $1bn; Real Madrid leads at $1.78bn while Tottenham exceed $1bn. Values.

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The surge in transfer prices and squad valuations has reshaped how clubs are measured. The CIES Football Observatory produces those estimates by weighing a player’s quality, age, position and length of contract, and those individual valuations are then summed to give each squad a market value.

The scale is striking. There are nine clubs with squads valued above $1 billion. At the top is Real Madrid with a squad valuation of $1.78 billion and Kylian Mbappé listed as the most valuable player at $221 million. Barcelona follow with $1.60 billion, Lamine Yamal accounting for $403.9 million of that total. Arsenal and Paris Saint-Germain each sit at $1.55 billion, with Bukayo Saka ($131.5 million) and Désiré Doué ($150.3 million) named as their most valuable players respectively.

Liverpool’s roster is valued at $1.20 billion, most valuable player Florian Wirtz ($149.8 million). Bayern Munich come in at $1.15 billion with Michael Olise ($162.6 million) as their top-rated asset. Tottenham’s squad is valued at $1.03 billion; Xavi Simons is listed as their most valuable player ($98.1 million), despite the club’s current relegation fight and Igor Tudor’s assessment that players “are lacking when we attack, we lack the quality to score the goal. We are lacking in the middle to run and we are lacking behind to stay there to suffer and not concede the goal.”

The list also includes Manchester United ($953 million, Benjamin Šeško $100.3 million) and Inter ($942 million, Lautaro Martínez $117 million). Earlier-positioned squads under $1 billion include Atlético Madrid ($903 million, Julián Álvarez $136.5 million), Juventus ($896 million, Kenan Yıldız $152.5 million) and Brighton ($894 million, Diego Gómez $86.4 million).

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Several voices in the game have reflected on the market changes. Karl-Heinz Rumminegge said, “There are some players who do not come with a price tag.” Robert Lewandowski complained, “You are young, you score 10 goals in six months and some club will pay 60 or 70 million,” adding, “Before, you had to achieve something.” Vincent Kompany warned players about hype: “I always tell my players, ‘When there’s hype please don’t believe it, you’re not that good.’”

Whether the valuations mirror on-field quality or the inflation of a transfer market remains the central question CIES data brings into focus.

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Man Utd Transfer News

Carrick signals United could seek a different profile to succeed Casemiro

Carrick says United may pursue a different profile to replace Casemiro and addresses Fernandes. plus

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Michael Carrick suggested Manchester United may not try to find a direct like-for-like successor to Casemiro this summer, saying the club could take a different approach to the midfield role that has been occupied by the Brazilian.

“Listen, this is totally no disrespect to Case, he’s been fantastic, he’s been a player for us and he’s been important in the dressing room and one that I’ve spoke to and connected with really well,” Carrick said. “But as a club and as a team, players come and go, some are bigger, some are maybe more important than others at different times.

“I don’t think it’s ever really about replacing like for like,” he continued. “I think you can go in a different direction, you understand what the balance of the squad needs, whether that’s on the pitch, off the pitch, leadership, positionally—there’s all sorts of different things going into it.”

At his best, Casemiro combines physicality and technical control, contributing defensively while also offering a threat in attack. His tally of seven Premier League goals this season is more than Amad Diallo, Kobbie Mainoo and Mason Mount have been able to muster between themselves. The piece also notes a vulnerability: an ageing Casemiro can see his positional discipline dip, particularly when fixtures arrive without a clear week of rest.

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Finding a player with that blend of attributes would be challenging and expensive, Carrick implied, which is one reason the club might consider a different profile rather than a straight replacement.

Carrick is serving as interim manager and his reign is expected to conclude before the summer transfer window fully opens. He has worked under the assumption his remit remains limited to the current season and transfer discussion under his watch has been minimal.

On Bruno Fernandes, the background remains complex. Back in December, Fernandes revealed that it took the intervention of then-manager Ruben Amorim to prevent his Manchester United exit in the summer of 2025. There were concrete talks over a move to the Saudi Pro League, and his contract reportedly contains a release clause of an undisclosed value.

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Manchester United

Rooney and Keane at Odds Over Carrick’s Case for the United Job

Rooney urges United to keep Carrick; Keane doubts his long-term fit but concedes the job is earned.

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Two of Manchester United’s most prominent voices have offered sharply different views on Michael Carrick’s prospects of moving from interim to permanent manager. The debate intensified after United’s win over Villa at Old Trafford, where Carrick’s run as caretaker drew praise and scepticism in equal measure.

Wayne Rooney was unequivocal in his backing, saying he “knew” a turnaround was coming when Carrick took charge and insisting the former midfielder “100 per cent” deserves a contract for next season. “I know him very well. I know his character and his personality. It needed a calm head, but someone who knows the place. The players needed some love, and he has given them that,” Rooney said. “We have seen the players play with more quality, more together as a team, and they look like a very strong team. Why would you change?”

The evidence Rooney pointed to includes immediate improvements in performances against Manchester City and Arsenal in January, and a clearer, simpler approach that many associate with the club’s traditional style. Not every display has matched that early standard, but results have largely followed, a practical measure of success at elite level.

Roy Keane offered a contrasting view. The outspoken former captain, openly criticized by Carrick’s wife more than a decade ago prompting surprise beef that seemingly continues to this day, acknowledged Carrick’s progress but would not personally hand him the job. “I would’ve thought [Carrick will become permanent manager] but I wouldn’t [give him the job],” Keane said. “I think there’s better options out there. I think the games where he’s come in and in terms of winning football matches, he’s done a very good job. He’s obviously simplified things but there’s been no jeopardy in those games.”

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Keane highlighted Carrick’s lack of experience in European competition and trophy-winning management as a potential drawback. “I think to manage Manchester United, you need someone a lot more experienced in terms of winning trophies, competing in Europe and he hasn’t got that. He might have that in a few years, and he might be in the mix then. But the fact he’s winning football matches at the moment of course gives him a great chance [of getting hired now].”

Keane listed Diego Simeone, Luis Enrique and Thomas Tuchel when asked about alternatives. Tuchel, who was a consideration in the summer of 2024 when United decided to keep faith in Erik ten Hag, might have been an option until recently extending his contract as England manager.

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