Manchester United
Bayındır on the United Goalkeeper Contest: A Constructive Rivalry with Lammens
Bayındır stresses unity with Lammens amid a healthy fight for the Manchester United goalkeeper spot.
Altay Bayındır has described a positive working relationship with Senne Lammens even as the pair contest the Manchester United goalkeeper position. Lammens made his United debut in last weekend’s crucial 2–0 win over Sunderland and produced a confident display that has kept him ahead in the pecking order.
Bayındır, 27, spoke to Manchester Evening News and framed the situation as healthy competition rather than internal division. “That is the way, everyone has to be together, always,” he said. “We have a good group, a good goalkeeper group, and we are always pushing each of ourselves on the pitch.
“Of course, we are fighting for the shirt, but in the outside, we have a good relationship, like how we did with André. He’s at Trabzonspor and he’s doing well.”
The wider club context is uneasy. United have taken just ten points from their opening seven Premier League matches, are not competing in Europe this year and have already suffered a humiliating defeat to Grimsby Town in the Carabao Cup.
Bayındır emphasised collective responsibility and ongoing improvement as the route back to consistent results. “I can say football is a team thing. Everyone needs to work good, you know? Everyone needs to be focused. From my side, every day, after every game, we are improving ourselves and we’re thinking what we need to do more.
“After the game, we are doing the analysis. We’re seeing everything in the analysis, which parts we have to improve—everything. When you can catch the routine, you can be better every game, because it’s about experience. Also you’re learning something from every game and that’s the important thing.”
For Bayındır the message is simple: internal competition should lift standards across the squad, and consistent analysis and work are the means by which both goalkeepers can contribute to better team performances.
Man Utd Transfer News
Cunha: Teammates Want Casemiro to Remain Beyond This Season
Matheus Cunha says teammates ‘hope there’s a little bit more’ as Casemiro’s future remains unclear..
Matheus Cunha has suggested that many within the Manchester United squad would welcome Casemiro staying beyond this campaign, despite the Brazilian’s public indications that he is ready to move on.
Cunha made the point after Sunday’s win over Liverpool, underlining Casemiro’s influence both on the pitch and in the dressing room. “I play with him in the national team and I know how important he is. He’s an amazing guy and to have this guy in the dressing room is a privilege,” the forward told reporters.
The midfielder has produced arguably his best form since arriving in England from Real Madrid and his experience is a clear asset. As a five-time European champion with Real Madrid, Casemiro’s knowledge would be valuable when Manchester United return to the Champions League in 2026–27.
Cunha added that uncertainty over contract details leaves room for hope. “We don’t know in the end how it is with his contract. [But] then, of course, we—everyone—hope there’s a little bit more. I know it’s harder than we talked about, but, in the end, you never know.”
At 34, Casemiro is described in the draft as not old by today’s standards and clearly a popular dressing-room figure. The piece highlights that his continued presence could act as a morale boost and that United might manage his minutes, with the option of reducing Premier League appearances to focus on European fixtures.
The article also notes the squad’s underlying need for reinforcements. Even before Casemiro’s departure was announced, Manchester United required midfield strengthening. Now the team reportedly needs three or possibly four new midfielders ahead of next season. If Casemiro were to remain, the immediate task of replacing him directly could be deferred until 2027.
Those are the positions and considerations facing the club as the season progresses and questions over Casemiro’s future remain open.
Manchester United
VAR ruled ‘inconclusive evidence’ after Šeško goal stood in Manchester United v Liverpool
Premier League: VAR said ‘no conclusive evidence’ Šeško handled ball; Darren England saw no issue. .
The Premier League issued an explanation after Benjamin Šeško’s goal for Manchester United against Liverpool was allowed to stand, citing a lack of definitive camera evidence. Bruno Fernandes’s header was diverted awkwardly by Liverpool’s third-choice custodian and fell on to Šeško’s body. Enhanced replay suggested the ball may also have skimmed the striker’s fingers.
On-pitch referee Darren England saw no issue with the finish and video assistant referee Stuart Attwell did not recommend a review on the touchline. As the Premier League would subsequently explain on their official Match Centre X account, “The referee’s call of goal was checked and confirmed by VAR—with it deemed there was no conclusive evidence that Šeško handled the ball before scoring.”
The matter was treated as one of evidence rather than intent. The FA’s Law 12 is clear that it is a handball offence if a player “scores in the opponents’ goal directly from their hand/arm, even if accidental.” In situations where the scorer is the suspected offender, the VAR process must identify a clear and conclusive angle to overturn the on-field decision. In this case officials concluded no such angle existed.
Reaction online was immediate. Blown-up images that appeared to show Šeško’s left ring finger make contact prompted calls for the goal to be disallowed. “That definitely looked like it hit Sesko’s left hand and got pushed more towards goal” reflected a commonly held view among commentators. Former Manchester United centre back Rio Ferdinand compared the moment to Diego Maradona’s “hand of god” goal, while Arne Slot pleaded for a handball from the Liverpool dugout and club icon Sir Kenny Dalglish tapped his arm in frustration from the Old Trafford stands. Even some Manchester United supporters accepted the ball may have touched Šeško’s hand. “Sesko aka hand of god! Love to see it” was among the fan responses.
With the VAR process concluded, the decision to allow the goal rested on the absence of conclusive footage rather than a judgment of intent.
Analytics & Stats
How Bruno Fernandes can rewrite two Premier League assist records against Liverpool
Fernandes can break two Premier League assist records: season assists (19) and set-piece assists…
Michael Carrick’s tactical change has given Bruno Fernandes room to operate in the right-side pocket behind the front line, and the results are clear. Carrick restored United’s skipper to the No. 10 role after a period in Ruben Amorim’s two-man midfield, and Fernandes says the move has altered his positioning. “I float a lot in that zone there now with Michael,” Fernandes reflected in an interview with Opta. “He doesn’t want me to just be stuck in the middle, so often asks me to find that pocket [of space].”
That positional freedom has put Fernandes on the cusp of two Premier League landmarks with four matches left in the season. He has 19 assists in 2025–26, level with Mesut Özil on the season charts and one behind the all-time single-season mark of 20 set by Thierry Henry and matched by Kevin De Bruyne in 2019–20. No player in the 34-year history of the Premier League has provided more than 20 assists in a single campaign, and Sunday’s derby with Liverpool presents a high-profile chance to close that gap.
Fernandes showed the shift in focus at Brentford, taking no shots as he concentrated on creating. Eventually, Benjamin Šeško finished one of the five chances Fernandes created, taking the skipper to 19 assists and a single assist behind the record.
If Matheus Cunha recovers from a slight hip issue, he is the likeliest direct beneficiary. As Opta note, Cunha has received 19 open-play chances from Fernandes this season—the most chances any player has been provided by a single teammate in the current Premier League campaign.
There is also a set-piece subplot. United’s No. 8 has set the former Real Madrid man up for six Premier League goals this season—another division high—five of which have come from set pieces. Fernandes sits on 10 set-piece assists, one shy of Steven Gerrard’s top-flight record of 11. The midfielder has worked on dead balls and admits the demands have changed: “I will tell you that five years ago, I would go to take a corner and just put the ball into the middle of the box and let’s see if someone gets it,” he revealed. “And nowadays I have to hit a spot, so sometimes it’s even harder to get an assist from a set piece than it actually is in open play.”
