Manchester United News
De Zerbi’s Marseille Exit Presents Manchester United With a Clear Managerial Opening
De Zerbi’s Marseille exit gives Manchester United a clear opening in the summer manager search ahead
Marseille have confirmed the departure of manager Roberto De Zerbi, a development that instantly reshapes the managerial landscape for Manchester United. De Zerbi has been a long-term target for those running the club after earning admirers across the Premier League during his time at the Amex Stadium.
United’s interest first moved beyond gossip during the end-of-season review in the summer of 2024. Club officials considered the future of Erik ten Hag and spoke directly with De Zerbi, even discussing the terms of a potential contract, before ultimately persisting with the Dutchman. De Zerbi joined Marseille soon after and, in his debut season, lifted Marseille from eighth to second in Ligue 1.
That rise kept him on United’s radar and attracted interest elsewhere. Tottenham Hotspur spoke with the Italian as recently as the summer of 2025. Links resurfaced in January after Ruben Amorim’s Old Trafford exit and De Zerbi reiterated his regard for English football. “The Premier League is absolutely the best league in the world, and I have great memories of when I worked in Brighton ,” he admitted. “It was an amazing experience for me, and I feel the league is getting better and better.”
With De Zerbi now available, United may find it considerably easier to strike a deal. Spurs are themselves at a crossroads over the future of Thomas Frank and could revisit the Italian they spoke to before hiring the Dane.
United have also taken steps to avoid rush appointments. The club’s appointment of Michael Carrick as interim boss provides time to weigh options, which club officials appear to be doing. De Zerbi is an obvious candidate, but other names remain under consideration. Oliver Glasner will leave Crystal Palace this summer, Andoni Iraola of Bournemouth is expected to step up, and there have been calls for United to try and lure Unai Emery away from Aston Villa.
Beyond the domestic market, Mauricio Pochettino and Thomas Tuchel will both be out of contract after the World Cup, and Julian Nagelsmann’s Germany contract runs until 2028 though an early approach could be explored. For United, De Zerbi’s exit from Marseille has simplified one facet of a wider search.
Man Utd
United delay permanent appointment as Carrick strengthens his case
Wilcox is intent on waiting; decision due at season’s end as Carrick has improved United’s form….
Manchester United have not committed to a permanent successor and Michael Carrick is not guaranteed the job. Reports last month suggested no other candidates were yet being spoken to, but the final decision is being postponed.
The Guardian writes that the decision on who gets the job won’t be made until the end of the season. Jason Wilcox, director of football, is leading the process and is “intent on waiting.” That appetite for patience sits alongside the case Carrick has built since taking charge.
Off the back of three successive wins in his first three matches, Carrick said he is “loving” the job, but also understands the situation and is “not getting too carried away.” He was appointed in mid-January and, since then, United have picked up more points than any other Premier League team.
Carrick’s impact has been framed around simplification for the players. Amorim arrived with complex tactical plans that did not fit and were judged to have failed. Under Carrick there has been a restoration of the club’s established style: high tempo, aggressive play, fast wingers and deadly transitions. Performances have not been flawless, but a side that previously crumbled more easily now shows greater resilience.
The case for an internal candidate is strengthened by Carrick’s long association with the club. He played for United for 12 years (2006–18) and was a coach for three more (2018–2021). That background is contrasted with recent managerial departures. When compared to how Louis van Gaal, Erik ten Hag and Amorim have fallen short, Carrick’s knowledge of the club is presented as a material advantage.
Carrick’s sole permanent managerial spell was three seasons at Middlesbrough, where promotion was not achieved. The article notes precedent for clubs appointing managers with limited top-flight experience: “Pep Guardiola had never held a top-flight managerial position before Barcelona gave him the keys to the first team in 2008. Nor had Zinedine Zidane at Real Madrid eight years later.” If United decide against Carrick, it is unclear which alternatives would be chosen.
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Casemiro Urges United to Back Kobbie Mainoo After Midfield Rebound
Casemiro calls for faith in Kobbie Mainoo after his return to the United midfield this season. again.
Casemiro has publicly urged Manchester United to retain faith in Kobbie Mainoo, stressing the teenager’s potential to be a long-term midfielder for the club. The academy graduate was largely overlooked by former United manager Ruben Amorim, not starting a single Premier League game in the first half of 2025–26. After a minor Christmas injury, Mainoo has been a fixture since Michael Carrick took charge in mid-January, playing all but 14 minutes of the 900 available in the league and starting alongside Casemiro on each occasion.
“Kobbie is the present and the future,” Casemiro told ManUtd.com in a fan Q&A. “I think that he is one of the best eights and can be for that for the next 12 years. He is a player I really like—he always wants the ball.
“It is true that football can’t change your mentality, but Kobbie demonstrated that he hasn’t changed his focus once. He has to continue focusing like he is now and continue playing the important role he is now. But what a player he is, he is a great player. He has demonstrated this, in the Euros final with England, he has demonstrated it in finals, he scored in the [2024] FA Cup final.
“He is the present and the future.”
Mainoo forced his way into England’s midfield after establishing himself in United’s first team at 18. He had only three caps when Euro 2024 began but won a place in the starting lineup after the group stage as England reached the final. His international involvement then stalled; he played only once more for his country in September 2024 before a club resurgence prompted a recall last month. Mainoo appeared off the bench in England’s draw with Uruguay, started the defeat to Japan and will be targeting a place in Thomas Tuchel’s XI for the Group L opener against Croatia in Arlington on June 17.
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Which Manchester United Players Will Miss the 2026 World Cup
Several Manchester United players will miss the 2026 World Cup as nations fail to qualify. For rest.
Manchester United will send fewer representatives than usual to the 2026 World Cup in North America. Several members of the squad will spend the summer recovering and preparing for the 2025/26 campaign rather than competing at the tournament. Some players simply did not make their national squads, while others will miss out because their countries failed to qualify.
Patrick Dorgu is among those who will be absent from the finals. He was unavailable for Denmark during its critical European playoff clashes with North Macedonia and Czechia due to injury. The match against Czechia ended in misery for Denmark as missed penalties in the shootout—including one skewed by Rasmus Højlund, still technically a United striker—proved costly at the end of a 2–2 draw after extra time. Denmark failed to progress and will miss only its third World Cup of the century. That outcome is disappointing for Dorgu but offers Manchester United the chance to reintroduce the versatile full back gradually once he is fit.
Bryan Mbeumo enjoyed a fine debut season at Old Trafford, but his summer prospects were affected by international disappointment. The 26-year-old had hoped to represent Cameroon at his second World Cup, yet a disappointing qualification campaign leaves him with an empty summer. Cameroon finished second in qualifying, dropping into the CAF playoffs where a win would have delivered a place in the inter-confederation playoffs. Instead, defeat to DR Congo on penalties in the semifinal ended Cameroon’s hopes of reaching North America. Mbeumo will now wait until 2030 for another chance to play at the World Cup.
Benjamin Šeško has seen his slow start at Old Trafford transform since the turn of the year. The towering striker has been in excellent form for his new club, producing a string of crucial goals for interim manager Michael Carrick as United pursue Champions League qualification. His club form means the focus for Šeško this summer will be on maintaining momentum with Manchester United rather than international action at the World Cup.
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