Manchester United
Amorim: Why he refused early tactical concessions at Manchester United
Amorim says he resisted tactical changes to avoid appearing to bow to media pressure on formation…
Rubem Amorim has explained why he resisted early calls to abandon his 3-4-2-1 setup at Manchester United, saying outside pressure would have sent the wrong signal to his players. The formation was a new plan for the club and recruitment since his arrival has been shaped to fit those demands, while Amad Diallo — marginalised under Erik ten Hag — has moved into the picture.
Many observers pointed to the formation and a perceived unwillingness to adapt as a key factor in United’s worst season in 51 years in 2024–25. Amorim accepts it was a learning curve but says the squad has improved after targeted recruitment and a more settled preseason. He also confirmed he had been experimenting with different approaches in the buildup to the 4–4 draw with Bournemouth and said he was surprised that knowledge of those trials had leaked out.
The 40-year-old resisted altering the shape against Bournemouth and in the 1-0 defeat to Aston Villa six days later, but switched to 4-2-3-1 for the Boxing Day win over Newcastle United. He said changing sooner would have undermined his authority and suggested the absence of eight players because of injuries and Africa Cup of Nations commitments also shaped the timing.
“When [journalists] talk about changing the system all the time, I cannot change because the players will understand that I am changing because of [media pressure]. I think that is the end for the manager,” Amorim said in his latest press conference.
On the decision to adjust the approach against Newcastle he added: “When we are playing well in our system, I think that is the moment to change, if it is a better thing to win the next game. That is what we did [against Newcastle].”
Amorim insisted the shift is not a reaction to external pressure but a consequence of established principles and necessity. “Today is a different moment. We don’t have a lot of players [so] we need to adapt, but I already know that they understand why we are changing. It is not because of the pressure of [journalists] or the fans.
“It is because now we understand the way we want to play and the principles are the same. We can change the system. I think we are going to become a better team because when all the players return, we are not going to play all the time with three defenders.
Barcelona
Barcelona Seeking Permanent Marcus Rashford Move as United Hold Firm
Barcelona want Rashford to remain after his loan; the club value him and might use creative finance.
Barcelona want to keep Marcus Rashford beyond the end of his current loan, according to recent reports, with the club exploring options to register him for the 2026–27 season. Rashford has become a meaningful contributor this term, the first male England international to play for Barcelona since Gary Lineker in the 1980s, and has recorded seven goals and eight assists across all competitions. Only two team-mates, Lamine Yamal and Fermín López, have produced better returns.
The forward initially benefited from injuries within Barcelona’s frontline but is not an automatic starter when the squad is fully available. He was among the substitutes when Hansi Flick’s side thumped Athletic Club in the Spanish Super Cup semi-final, and he was not expected to be included from the first whistle in Sunday’s final against Real Madrid.
Reports say the loan contains a release clause of €30 million (£26 million, $34.9 million). The coverage does not explicitly state Barcelona will trigger that clause, only that the club want Rashford on the books beyond this season. How Barcelona proceed may involve negotiation over price or further temporary measures given their strict financial constraints. As Flick put it: “The truth is, the club can’t pay hundreds of millions for a new player, like other teams, so we have to be smart with our players.”
Rashford’s preference to remain in Spain is clear. “Of course, what I want is to stay at Barça.”
At Manchester United, attitudes appear unchanged despite changes in coaching personnel. Amorim may have been the one to drop Rashford before the first Manchester derby of the 2024–25 season and never give him another minute for United. He is also reported to have said he would rather name his 63-year-old goalkeeping coach Jorge Vital on the bench instead of Rashford, and Rashford was banned from United’s training ground until the coach had left for the day during the summer window. The Athletic claims that “United as a club” shared the coach’s desire for “more application” from Rashford.
Barcelona’s apparent interest and the player’s own wishes create a negotiated path that both clubs will need to navigate before the loan expires in June.
Chelsea
Rosenior sets youth target, invokes United’s Class of ’92 as blueprint
Rosenior compares his young Chelsea side to United’s Class of ’92 and calls for bravery and balance.
Liam Rosenior has framed Chelsea’s current crop as a long-term project modelled on Manchester United’s 1990s youth revolution. He invoked the Class of ’92 era as an example of what sustained faith in young players can deliver and argued the club must be equally daring if it is to replicate that success.
“I was a Manchester United fan and I am now massively a Chelsea fan,” Rosenior revealed. “I remember Sir Alex Ferguson was brave enough to put six or seven players aged between 19 and 21 into a title-winning team because he believed in them.
“They grew and won trophy after trophy. It was an amazing period in that club’s history. Without that bravery, it doesn’t happen. There is potential for that here.”
The piece recalled Ferguson’s summer of 1995 decision to rely on academy graduates after losing the title to Blackburn Rovers. Paul Scholes (20), David Beckham (20), Nicky Butt (20), Gary (20) and Phil Neville (18) all featured in the opening game of 1995–96, with Ryan Giggs then 21 completing the youthful half-dozen.
Yet Rosenior also highlighted the quality already in the squad. “Speak about Moisés Caicedo or Enzo Fernández or Cole Palmer or Reece James—world-class players and still very, very young,” Rosenior insisted. “That is the ultimate ambition for this club—to create that again.”
The article noted United’s average starting XI age of 25.5 in 1995–96, the second-youngest in the division, compared with Chelsea’s current average of 24.7 and a relative lack of senior figures. Enzo Maresca had warned in December that experience is crucial: “When you have 20 and 21-year-olds and a player who is 30 or 31, and he starts to say something to them, it’s invaluable,” the Italian boss explained in December. “But it’s the strategy of the club,” he sighed. Less than two weeks later, he was gone.
Tosin Adarabioyo, who turned 28 in September, is the oldest player in Chelsea’s Premier League squad, which includes 12 players aged 21 or under. The club have not spent on a player over the age of 25 since co-sporting directors Laurence Stewart and Paul Winstanley were appointed in 2022.
The debate over youth versus experience has a long memory. Alan Hansen declared: “You can’t win anything with kids.” Gary Neville reflected the same reality: “I’ve said many times that Alan Hansen was right, you don’t win anything with kids,” Neville told Sky Sports back in 2019. “The Class of ’92 didn’t win that Premier League title. We had Steve Bruce, Gary Pallister, Roy Keane, Eric Cantona, Brian McClair and Peter Schmeichel. We had world-class performers and two of the best centre backs ever. Keane was the most inspirational captain and leader, Cantona was world-class, Schmeichel was the best in the world and Dennis Irwin was brilliant.
“They pulled us through it.”
Manchester United
Mbeumo Available for Manchester Derby After Cameroon Exit
Bryan Mbeumo is set to be available for next Saturday’s Manchester derby after Cameroon’s AFCON loss.
Manchester United are set to welcome Bryan Mbeumo back for next Saturday’s derby at Old Trafford after Cameroon’s 2–0 quarterfinal defeat to Morocco in the Africa Cup of Nations.
The setback for Cameroon means United regain the services of their summer signing. Mbeumo has not featured since the 4–4 draw with Bournemouth in mid-December yet still leads the squad for goals, xG, shots on target and touches in the penalty area. He also serves as one of the team’s chief creators and routinely hauls the gravity of the squad forward with his repeated surges upfield.
United have shuttled through interim solutions while Mbeumo has been away. Darren Fletcher was an emergency interim option, but the club could have another caretaker in place by the time the forward returns. Ole Gunnar Solskjær and Michael Carrick are the two leading contenders and both will surely be grateful to have Mbeumo back available.
The Red Devils managed just one win in their first five games without their top scorer, failing to beat three sides currently slumped among the Premier League’s bottom five. Patrick Dorgu was asked into a more attacking role and scored his first goal for the club while also providing two assists. Matheus Cunha doubled his season tally with strikes against Aston Villa and Leeds United, but neither result produced victories.
Brighton & Hove Albion boss Fabian Hürzeler was succinct in his assessment of the £65 million ($87.2 million) move from Brentford: “Money well invested.”
United will not be at full strength in other respects. Noussair Mazraoui, who played the full 90 minutes of Morocco’s 2–0 win over Cameroon, will be unavailable until the trip to Arsenal’s Emirates Stadium on Sunday, Jan. 25. Morocco denied Cameroon a single shot on target in that game, although Mbeumo did have a strong penalty appeal waved away.
Amad Diallo remains involved in the tournament as the third and final Manchester United player at AFCON. Only Morocco’s Real Madrid forward Brahim Díaz has outscored Ivory Coast’s versatile wideman this winter, and Díaz will face Mohamed Salah’s Egypt in Saturday’s last quarterfinal with the chance to extend his three-goal tally.
