Manchester United
Amorim Departs Manchester United After 14 Months Amid Reported Tensions
Ruben Amorim leaves Manchester United after 14 months amid rumour of a falling out with Jason Wilcox
Ruben Amorim has left Manchester United after 14 months in charge. The departure was announced amid rumours of a falling out with director of football Jason Wilcox.
Amorim’s exit brings an abrupt end to a 14-month spell leading the first team. Available details are limited, but the prevailing account links the decision to tensions between Amorim and the club’s football leadership. The description of events has centred on the reported disagreement with Jason Wilcox rather than on on-field matters.
The timing of the departure and the nature of the reports will prompt immediate questions about the club’s internal structure and the relationship between coaching staff and the director of football. Within that framework, the episode highlights how off-field relationships can become decisive in the organisation of a top-level club.
For supporters and stakeholders, the development is significant because it removes the manager after just over a year at the helm. The facts presented focus on the length of Amorim’s tenure and the rumours of a falling out with Jason Wilcox. At this stage, commentary should be cautious and confined to those elements that have been disclosed.
Manchester United now faces a period of transition. The club’s next steps, whether interim arrangements or a search for a permanent successor, will determine how quickly the team moves beyond this period of uncertainty. What is clear from the information available is that Ruben Amorim’s time in charge has ended after 14 months, and that the departure has been linked in reports to a breakdown in relations with the director of football, Jason Wilcox.
Barcelona
Xavi and the Manchester United Vacancy: Separating Report from Reality
Reports say Xavi is open to Manchester United, but nothing formal exists between club and coach …
Reports linking Xavi Hernández to Manchester United have some basis, but the momentum appears to be coming chiefly from the coach rather than the club.
A first full season in charge at Barcelona delivered the Spanish Super Cup and the 2022–23 La Liga crown ahead of a Real Madrid side led by Karim Benzema. The tensions beneath that success then surfaced in the next campaign, which ended without a trophy and finished with Xavi relieved of his duties.
According to Fabrizio Romano, Xavi is “ready” to return to management, “would love to take a job in the Premier League” and is “very open” to the Manchester United opportunity created by Ruben Amorim’s departure. The same report also stressed that “nothing advanced” and “nothing concrete” has arisen between the club and Xavi.
Xavi’s return to Barcelona was presented as a restoration of a long tradition. As Pep Guardiola put it, “Johan Cruyff painted the chapel,” Guardiola once mused. “And Barcelona coaches since merely restore or improve it.” With just a little more than two years coaching in Qatar on his résumé, Xavi made clear his commitment to possession football: “We cannot lose our ‘house style,’” he declared. “That’s the thing which has made the club great.”
During his two full seasons as Barcelona boss, the team averaged 64% possession in La Liga, but sustained penetration was often lacking. The 2022–23 title owed as much to Robert Lewandowski converting half-chances as to a tight defence. Half of Barcelona’s league wins in that period were by a single-goal margin and 1–0 was the most common scoreline.
Xavi himself acknowledged the frustrations: “I lose my patience because I see the pass but what I think should happen doesn’t happen,” he admitted shortly before announcing his decision to quit in January 2024. The hierarchy persuaded him to stay, confirming that decision in April, and his dismissal was revealed in May. He often said that “Barcelona is the most difficult club to manage in the world.”
As ex-United defender Gary Neville noted on Sky Sports, “Barcelona will never change for anybody,” he told Sky Sports. “I don’t believe United should change for anybody. The club has to find a manager who has got experience and who’s willing to play fast, entertaining, attacking and aggressive football.” Given the current picture, any move for Xavi would require careful thought on both sides.
Manchester United
Raspadori Deal and Amorim Exit Leave Zirkzee More Likely to Remain at Manchester United
Roma’s Raspadori move and Amorim’s exit leave Zirkzee more likely to stay at Manchester United. 2026
Roma’s reported pursuit of Giacomo Raspadori and the sudden change of management at Manchester United have increased the chances Joshua Zirkzee stays at Old Trafford this month. The 24-year-old forward struggled for game time in the first half of the season and had been widely tipped to move to find the consistent minutes required to push for a place in the Netherlands squad ahead of the 2026 World Cup.
Roma director Ricky Massara admitted the club’s interest in Zirkzee cooled after United’s managerial change. “[Zirkzee] is a Manchester United centre forward liked by many clubs, not just us,” Massara told Sky Sport Italia earlier this week. “Naturally, the situation is different after this change of management, there are no contacts in progress, but I wouldn’t focus on individual names.” He added: “It’s true there are negotiations in progress with both Atlético Madrid and Raspadori.”
Sky Sport Italia subsequently reported Roma have quickly reached agreement with Atlético to sign Raspadori on loan with an option to buy. The move requires the player’s acceptance, and any pursuit of Zirkzee would be abandoned if the Raspadori deal proceeds.
Zirkzee’s involvement for United has risen since the November international break, after barely featuring in the first three months of the season. He was called upon by Darren Fletcher in the first game after Amorim’s sudden departure and has played some part in each of the last 10 Premier League fixtures, registering direct goal involvements in two of the last three. He is still typically used from the bench.
Another factor working against an immediate exit is the expectation no new signings will be made in January. Amorim made the club’s stance clear in December and his departure has not altered that position: “It’s going to be hard for someone to leave the club if we don’t get a substitution. We are short. Even with the full squad, we are short for something that can happen.”
United were believed to have been keen on Antoine Semenyo because of his £65 million release clause, but after the goalscoring winger chose Manchester City the Red Devils withdrew and decided against spending on an alternative. Funds are intended to be held for the summer window, when a central midfielder is the priority target.
Burnley
United Leave Turf Moor Frustrated After Šeško Double Is Cancelled Out
United dominated but drew 2-2 at Turf Moor after an Ayden Heaven own goal and Anthony reply. in vain
Manchester United left Turf Moor with a draw after a 2-2 result against Burnley, a game in which they dominated possession but failed to turn control into three points. The match swung wildly: an Ayden Heaven own goal put Burnley ahead at half-time, Benjamin Šeško struck twice after the interval to put United in front, and substitute Jaidon Anthony levelled to deny the visitors victory.
United began well and the away support were audible as they sang Ole Gunnar Solskjær’s name amid talk of a possible interim return. Early openings arrived but were not taken, and Burnley capitalised against the run of play when Bashir Humphries’ cross took a deflection off Heaven and looped over Senne Lammens.
After half-time Šeško changed the game. Fernandes slipped him in for an instinctive finish six minutes after the restart, and a second followed from Patrick Dorgu’s precise cross, Šeško guiding the volley into the net. United looked to have done enough, but Lisandro Martínez failed to close down Jaidon Anthony, who turned and fired the home side’s first shot on target into the corner.
Player contributions were mixed. Bruno Fernandes returned to the starting XI and set up the first Šeško goal before being substituted at 61 minutes. Patrick Dorgu impressed on the left, and Šeško converted two instinctive finishes to double his season tally. Ayden Heaven was unfortunate to be credited with the own goal and had a glaring chance to make amends later.
Substitutes included Mason Mount (61’), Leny Yoro (61’), Joshua Zirkzee (74’), Kobbie Mainoo (74’) and Shea Lacey (84’), with Lacey coming close to a late breakthrough. Unused subs were Altay Bayındır, Harry Maguire, Tyrell Malacia and Jack Fletcher.
Key match statistics underlined United’s control: possession 68% to 32%, expected goals 0.85 to 0.06, total shots 12 to 2 and shots on target 6 to 0. In the end United will view this as two points lost after a performance that produced control but not the result.
