Will Power

Tuesday, July 31, 2018

The foundation of Jose Mourinho's frustrations at Man Utd

As Manchester United's pre-season tour of the United States reaches its conclusion in Miami, Sky Sports News reporter Vinny O'Connor examines whether Jose Mourinho's pre-season frustrations are justified.

This was not the same Jose Mourinho we saw in Ann Arbor. With a sweatshirt draped over his shoulders, smiles for his coaching staff and players, there was a relaxed air to training in Miami rather than one of frustration.

At one point he broke off to record, what looked like, a video message into a phone, but never did he become detached. The mood very different from the one he exuded in the media room of Michigan's Big House on Saturday evening.

Obviously a 4-1 defeat by Liverpool did not help. Jurgen Klopp's praise of his own youngsters (two of whom now look set to leave, Sheyi Ojo and Pedro Chirivella) also contrasted starkly with Mourinho's assessment that Manchester United are operating with less than 30 per cent of the squad he intends to use this season.

However, the frustration Mourinho vented goes back much further than a pre-season that has not gone to plan. The source of his angst comes back to recruitment.

Over the past year, Mourinho has seen Paris Saint-Germain spend £200m on Neymar and £166m on Kylian Mbappe. On top of that, Liverpool have broken the world-record transfer fees for a goalkeeper and defender in the space of six months.

Yes Manchester United have spent an initial £89m on Paul Pogba. Yes Manchester United have spent £75m on Romelu Lukaku. In real terms though, is that really competing with PSG? Is that creating a squad with strength in depth?

Liverpool may have finished six points behind Manchester United last season, but their recruitment drive appears to have given Klopp a more rounded squad compared to one at Mourinho's disposal.

The solution is clear, at least from Mourinho's point of view. He wants more investment in his first-team squad.

United have signed Fred, Diogo Dalot and Lee Grant for a total spend of over £70m, but that has failed to strengthen the problem areas Mourinho believes he needs to address if he is to not only keep the likes of Liverpool at bay, but also close the gap to Manchester City.

He has identified five players he feels can do that, a list he submitted months ago. He says there is a chance of getting two but believes only one will arrive at best.

Centre-back is the key area he is looking to strengthen. Sky Sports News understands Barcelona defender Yerry Mina is his favoured choice.

However, the pursuit of Leicester centre-half Harry Maguire seems to highlight a disconnect, a lack of synergy between manager and those responsible for recruitment.

With nine days to go until Deadline Day, it is ultimately that dynamic that will determine what frame of mind Mourinho will be in when United kick off the new Premier League season against Leicester on Friday Night Football.

Credit: Skysports.com

Mourinho says one more signing will be 'fine'

Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho says he is confident he will be able to add one more player to his squad before the transfer window closes.

Mourinho had expressed a desire for two new arrivals but says it will be 'not a drama' if the club make just one new addition.

United have signed Fred, Diogo Dalot and Lee Grant this summer so far and Mourinho said after their 4-1 International Champions Cup defeat to Liverpool at the weekend that two new signings would be ideal.

But he now seems reconciled to the fact that there may be only new face, telling beIN Sports: "I am confident I will get one, but I think two I am not going to get - which is not a drama.

"In every pre-season it happens the same, with every club, which is that the manager wants more.

"It's our nature, you always want more for your team, but then club decisions are different and normally you don't get what you want, which happened during all my career.

"So, if I get one player until the end of the market, that's fine."

With Grant and Dalot not seen as first-choice players, Mourinho says his starting XI will be similar to last season's.

Asked if he knows his likely line-up for the first Premier League game against Leicester, Mourinho said: "More or less, I know.

"It's not going to be very different. We basically have the same players.

"The players we have bought - one is a goalkeeper cover, one is a 19-year-old kid, so in fact we have one new player, which is Fred.

"So, of course, our team is not going to be very different."

Credit: Skysports.com

Grant: Mourinho not as unhappy as he seems

Lee Grant has dismissed the notion that Jose Mourinho is unhappy, insisting the Manchester United manager is upbeat and enthusiastic when working with the team.

Mourinho has gone public with his frustration during pre-season with a long list of complaints ranging from some of his squad returning late from the World Cup to a lack of transfer activity at Old Trafford.

The Portuguese has also singled out players including club captain Antonio Valencia and wantaway forward Anthony Martial for criticism but Grant says Mourinho is a very different character when he is working with the squad.

"From what we're getting from the inside it [the atmosphere around the camp] has been nothing but positive," the United goalkeeper told Sky Sports News.

"He's come in even after the Liverpool game and spoken very highly of what we've have given as a team and as a unit.

"The messages we are getting from the manager are positive ones and that is important for us going forward. His attitude and demeanour around the place is great and that is helpful for us especially when we are under-manned and we are working our hardest.

"We are well aware at this stage of the season you have got to work hard and get the minutes into the legs and that is what we are doing."

Grant made a surprise £1.5m switch from Stoke to Old Trafford where he is expected to take up the role of third-choice 'keeper for the season behind David de Gea and Sergio Romero.

The 35-year-old has been one of the brightest performers for United in pre-season but is realistic about his first-team prospects for the upcoming campaign.

"I'm not under any illusions about the task I have got in front of me this season and I'm not going to sit here and say I am going to play 30 games this season," Grant said.

"But when I am given the opportunity I am going to be ready and that's all I can do."

Credit: Skysports.com

Will Paul Pogba now emerge as Manchester United’s new leader?

He was a pivotal figure on and off the pitch in France’s World Cup win but will Paul Pogba be able to emerge as the leader of this Manchester United team? The answer to that will rest with Jose Mourinho but also the player himself, writes Adam Bate.

The sight of Paul Pogba cajoling his team-mates in their moment of need will have been jarring for some of his more vocal critics. But there he was. France's leader in the dressing room. "Today, we run ourselves to death out on the pitch," he told his team-mates before the Argentina game. "No one lets anyone else down. No one drops off. The details, boys."

Another video of Pogba before the final itself was even more revealing. These were not the manic utterings of an overexcited young man but instead evidence of his calm guidance. He was urging concentration and providing context ahead of the biggest game of their lives. This was real leadership, backed up by a man-of-the-match performance on the pitch.

Samuel Umtiti claimed that Pogba had always been a leader but another France centre-back, Adil Rami, was perhaps more accurate when he spoke of the 25-year-old becoming one in Russia. Pogba had, after all, been jeered by his own fans when playing against Italy on the eve of the tournament. He grew into this role and he grew into his role in midfield too.

"It is a World Cup and we have to sacrifice," he explained. "We have to defend. It's not what I do best, I'm not N'Golo Kante, but I will happily do it. I think I have become more mature."

That last word is the one that will resonate with Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho ahead of the forthcoming Premier League season. He has suggested as much in his typically pointed remarks during the club's pre-season tour of the United States.

"I hope he understands why he was very good," said Mourinho. "That's the point about his performance level and contribution to a winning team, is to understand why he was so good - especially in the second part of the competition, where he was absolutely brilliant."

Mourinho highlighted Pogba's performance in the semi-final win over Belgium, in particular, and the positional maturity he showed in that game - waiting for the right time to express himself. He will probably be wondering how Didier Deschamps convinced him to do it.

The truth is that Pogba still considered his disciplined display to be a sacrifice and admitted as much. It is easier to make that sacrifice when the prize is so great and the reward is so immediate - 90 minutes away, as he himself pointed out in his dressing room speech.

It is a little trickier to be persuaded of that when United go to Burnley in the final game before next month's international break (and all that will bring for France's homecoming heroes). Nor will the need for three points be quite so obvious when United travel to Vicarage Road to take on Watford in the first game back from that trip.

Pogba has already shown that he can deliver in the big games for Mourinho. Most notably, there was his standout performance in the turnaround win over Manchester City that delayed Pep Guardiola's title celebrations. Pogba scored twice in two second-half minutes - just part of a "phenomenal" performance, according to his manager.

"To lose against Manchester City and see them celebrate in their home stadium, I couldn't let this happen," Pogba told Sky Sports afterwards when explaining his motivation in beating United's Manchester rivals. But perhaps that's part of the problem. The target was there for him - imminent and achievable. Consistency is the challenge now.

Even in that game, he had been unconvincing before the interval and it was not exactly the turning point in his United career that his supporters had hoped for. Pogba was substituted before the hour mark in the very next game against West Brom. Then he returned as the star man in their midweek win at Bournemouth. And that was just April.

"Manchester United are a far better team with Paul Pogba in it," Gary Neville told Sky Sports that month. "He brings arrogance, confidence and belief. But when you are a player who is signed for that money, you have to play well and you have to match it.

"It is no good shouting and singing and not playing. You have to play well. He shows great belief and confidence and shows total confidence in himself - but you have to deliver consistently. Manchester United have shown great faith in him to deliver, they paid a lot of money for him, and there is a large expectation."

One suspects Pogba himself is far from convinced that those expectations are always fair. "I am less entitled to make mistakes than others," he said during the World Cup. "I went from the biggest transfer in the world to the most criticised player in the world."

He may be right about that. It is worth noting that nobody has been involved in more Premier League goals for Manchester United than him in the past two seasons - 11 of his own and 14 assists for others. What's more, he has achieved those numbers without being given the freedom that others are afforded to get into the opposition box.

"It is hard to make this run in a two," he told Sky Sports when discussing his equalising goal against City, "because you have to stay and you have to control. When we have three players, I know Nemanja Matic will stay behind, and you have more freedom to go in front."

Nevertheless, he has succeeded in a two-man midfield for France - if that can ever be an accurate description of any partnership of which one member goes by the name of Kante. There has been Blaise Matuidi drifting inside in support. Steven N'Zonzi has contributed off the bench too. But it was Pogba who found a way to make it work for him and the team.

"I am playing as a midfielder now, which is my role," he explained. "I am being less offensive. I think people judge me now on my role as a midfielder and not as a player who can get goals and assists." Again, changing the expectations can change the perceptions.

Twenty-one games without a goal, as happened for Manchester United last season, need not matter if he is helping to bring the sort of control that he provided for France's wins over Peru and Uruguay. Assists are not vital either if he can spring attacks for his team, as he did in the build-up to his own goal in the final against Croatia. His game is multi-faceted.

United will need him to be flexible again this season. No doubt there will be opportunities to enjoy the freewheeling version of Pogba, complete with the late runs into the box that can steal the show and the points with it.

The arrival of Fred, a dynamic midfielder who can cover the spaces that his team-mate vacates, will help. Mourinho has said as much. "We think Fred is the kind of player that we need to complement the qualities of our midfield players," he explained this summer.

But there will also be times when United will want four forward-thinking players ahead of Pogba too. When Jesse Lingard or Alexis Sanchez are operating as the number 10 in support of Romelu Lukaku, Mourinho must stress the need for him to maintain his discipline.

Pogba can do it. He has shown the whole world that he can do it. He is a World Cup winner now and the time has come to see him for what he is - United's best asset, not a problem to solve. The manager may have appeared to omit him from a six-man shortlist for the captaincy but Pogba can still lead this team - if he is ready to embrace the role.

"I think I am still improving," he told Sky Sports towards the end of last season. "I can still do better. I am not young but I can still improve, learn and get more experience. I will get better and better during the next year." Pogba has been as good as his word so far. If he can maintain it then he could yet achieve special things with his club as well as his country.

Credit: Skysports.com

Early team news for United v Real Madrid on Tour 2018

Manchester United conclude Tour 2018, presented by Aon, with what promises to be a thrilling game against Spanish giants Real Madrid.

The Reds round off the stay in the United States with a final match in the International Champions Cup (ICC), against the European champions in Miami at 01:05 BST on Wednesday (20:05 EDT local time on Tuesday).

Jose Mourinho has a number of selection issues to contend with ahead of facing his former club at the Hard Rock Stadium.

Jose will definitely be without the services of first-team regulars Antonio Valencia, Anthony Martial and Nemanja Matic.

Regular captain Valencia left the squad after sustaining what is believed to be a calf injury in the goalless draw against San Jose Earthquakes, while Martial flew to Paris to be with his partner, who gave birth to their second child last week.

Matic has also flown home to undergo surgery on an injury he sustained at the World Cup with Serbia, with the influential midfielder set to miss the start of the season – which begins for United against Leicester City in the Premier League next Friday, 10 August.

It means Andreas Pereira, who scored a sensational free-kick against Liverpool, could get another chance in the engine room – perhaps alongside Ander Herrera, who captained the Reds against the Merseysiders last weekend.

Fred is also in contention to make his first start for United, after the Brazilian made his unofficial debut as a 71st-minute substitute in Ann Arbor last time out.

David De Gea also linked up with the squad last week following his World Cup exploits and looks set for his first outing of pre-season, against a team who preside in the city he was born in – Madrid.

With the exception of late arrivals De Gea and Matic, the introduction of Ro-Shaun Williams and Joshua Bohui as late substitutes against Liverpool means that every player who is part of the squad in the US has received some game-time during the tour so far.

Elsewhere, Matteo Darmian, who has featured in all four of the Reds’ pre-season fixtures thus far, could start again at right-back in the continued absence of Valencia and new signing Diogo Dalot.

It remains to be seen whether Chris Smalling or Luke Shaw will be involved amid injury concerns. Centre-back Smalling was replaced by Eric Bailly in the starting line-up against Liverpool after picking up a problem in the warm-up, while left-back Shaw also sat out the game.

At the opposite end of the pitch, Alexis Sanchez is expected to lead the line again – with Martial, Marcus Rashford and Romelu Lukaku still unavailable. The Chilean, who has impressed since joining the squad late, will look to add to his goal against AC Milan in our ICC opener.

New manager Julen Lopetegui, who was sacked as Spain’s coach two days before the World Cup, has named a large squad mixed with youth and experience for their International Champions Cup campaign, which starts against United.

Among those who could feature for the Spanish side are goalkeeper Keylor Navas, captain Sergio Ramos, midfielders Isco and Toni Kroos, plus forwards Karim Benzema and Gareth Bale.

Madrid are adjusting to life without Cristiano Ronaldo, who sensationally left the Bernabeu behind to join Italian giants Juventus last month.

After facing the Reds, Lopetegui’s side take on Ronaldo’s new club in Landover on Saturday and Roma in East Rutherford next Tuesday as preparations continue for their first competitive fixture of 2018/19, in the UEFA Super Cup against city rivals Atletico Madrid in Estonia on 15 August.

Tim Fosu-Mensah has a United mentality

Ask Tim Fosu-Mensah for his career highlights and the Manchester United defender picks out some natural choices – making his senior bow against Arsenal, winning the Emirates FA Cup, the Europa League and earning a first international cap for the Netherlands.

However, he clearly has a passion for some of the less obvious things. “When Anthony Martial scored against Everton [in April 2016], I gave the assist,” he told MUTV. last season. “It was the 1,000th Premier League goal at Old Trafford.”

Such knowledge marks the Dutchman out as somebody who knows a lot about the game and is eager to achieve more.

I spoke to him at Crystal Palace’s training ground towards the end of his season on loan with the Eagles, where he gained invaluable top-flight experience for somebody who only turned 20 this year.

Now performing regularly for United in the United States on Tour 2018 presented by Aon, he is showing his athleticism in the centre of defence.

With Antonio Valencia and Diogo Dalot already ruled out of the Premier League opener against Leicester City, Fosu-Mensah could still emerge as an option for the right-back position. He has examples all around him of fellow Academy members who have fought for a place in the senior squad. It would appear his choice to move from Ajax at 16 has been the right one.

”Obviously, United is a very big club,” he told me. “The first time I came, I saw Andreas Pereira and he just spoke to me about the club and gave me good feelings straight away. Brian McClair was there and I had a good feeling about the club. I made the decision to go to United and I am happy with this decision.

“I think the Academy is, how do you say this, very strict but in a positive way for you. I think that has benefited the players. You can see it with the mentality of Jesse [Lingard], Marcus [Rashford], Scott [McTominay] and Axel [Tuanzebe]. You know you can see the mentality of the players, which is a very good mentality to have.”

Tim continued: “It’s about being grounded. That was the most important thing for the Academy. You were not allowed to wear gloves or any other gear! At Ajax, it was all allowed, and I came here in the winter and asked Andreas: ‘What is this?’ He said: ‘Just keep going’ and it’s good. I definitely needed some convincing!”

Fosu-Mensah hopes to gain more experience by facing Real Madrid – Gareth Bale, Toni Kroos, Karim Benzema and co – at the Hard Rock Stadium.

That International Champions Cup fixture will conclude the American adventure for Tim, who continues to pursue his dream at United.

Mata: I like playing up front with Alexis

Juan Mata admits he has relished his different role as a support striker during Manchester United's pre-season matches in the United States.

The experienced Spaniard has started up front with Alexis Sanchez in the two previous games against AC Milan and Liverpool.

It’s a position that Juan could continue to occupy when Jose Mourinho’s Reds conclude Tour 2018, presented by Aon, against European champions Real Madrid in Miami at 01:05 BST on Wednesday (20:05 EDT on Tuesday local time).

“It's a different shape,” Mata told MUTV before the squad trained in Miami on Monday. “I think the manager is trying to fit all the first-team squad players into the first XI and I’ve felt okay.

“It’s a system that I think is very difficult to play against and in the last two games I was playing with Alexis up front. I used to play as a striker when I was a kid in the Real Madrid Academy and I like to be in the box, so it’s fine.

“It’s been a few years since I’ve played there but I think once you’ve played in there you pick up the components and you still have them. Now I just try to play that position and try to score.”

Mata has played a significant part in all four matches in the US so far, starting three and coming on as a half-time substitute against San Jose Earthquakes.

Juan also got on the scoresheet in our first game, netting the equaliser in the 1-1 draw with Club America in Arizona.

Due to several first-team players being unavailable for various reasons our no.8 has received plenty of game-time, but the 30-year-old is feeling fit and sharp.

“Yes, I’ve had more minutes than in other pre-seasons because of the number of players that are here, but I feel okay,” said Juan. “We are playing five games, with a game tomorrow, but I feel fine. I like to play a lot, I feel better when I play so many games, so hopefully I’ll be 100 per cent ready for Leicester.”

Mata feels a glamour tie with Spanish giants Real Madrid is the perfect way to bring the curtain down on the tour.

“It’s our last day before the final game and we’re in Miami,” explained Juan. “I think it’s been good to be here in the States again. Some days we’ve trained in LA then we’ve played a lot of games. I think we’ve had two good weeks of training here.

“They are a great team with a great squad. They now have a new manager [Julen Lopetegui] who we know very well but the players are pretty much the same. They are one of the biggest clubs in the world. We will be able to play with some of our young players, which will be a good experience for them. I think it’s a perfect end to this US tour.”

After facing Real Madrid, United will return to Europe for a final pre-season fixture against Bayern Munich in Germany before opening the 2018/19 Premier League campaign against Leicester City at Old Trafford on Friday 10 August.

Mata feels the fitness of the squad is a bigger priority than getting good results during pre-season.

“Obviously, results could have been different but I think the most important aspect in pre-season is to get in good physical condition and get ready for the first official game, which is the important one.

“Results are not so important now – the most important thing is to arrive [in the first game] with no injuries and in good physical and mental condition.”

Opinion: Pereira is showing plenty of promise in the US

Is this the season Andreas Pereira becomes a first-team regular at Manchester United?

The Belgian-born Brazilian has impressed many supporters throughout the club’s pre-season tour of America with a series of four accomplished performances as part of a midfield triumvirate.

That no.6 position looks set to be his preference going forward following a conversation with Jose Mourinho earlier this summer and, on the early evidence, there could be a bright future in that role.

Pereira rose through the Academy as an attacking midfielder, or even an occasional forward, with great technical ability and that comfort on the ball is aiding his form in the middle of the park, where his passing is often crisp and intuitive. Doing the simple things well is among his strengths.

There are still improvements to be made for a 22-year-old prospect who is learning the position, obviously, yet the boss should be credited for recognising his potential. Michael Carrick, among the finest ball-players in Reds history, is also paying close attention and offering advice.

Pereira’s last appearance, against Liverpool on Saturday, offered a glimpse of his character, too, when he asked senior pro Alexis Sanchez if he could take ownership of a 25-yard free-kick. The Chilean duly obliged and watched with delight when Andreas curled his shot into the top corner.

You can naturally read too much into small moments like that, but there is a feeling that we’re dealing with a more confident and experienced player following those two loan spells in La Liga.

The first temporary move to Granada threw Pereira into the heat of a relegation battle and he scored five goals in 35 appearances, though he could not prevent their drop to the Segunda Liga.

When we caught up with him last summer, on Tour 2017, he spoke eloquently about how that spell forced him to grow as a person, learning to play in senior football while juggling the experience of living alone for the first time. He was lonely at first, he told us, yet the boy soon became a man.

A second move to Valencia followed and, suddenly, Pereira was playing in the higher echelons of Spain as Juan Mata’s former club fought to secure a top-four finish. “It was a very important year and I learned a lot,” Andreas told us last week. “I am very happy to be back and I’m ready to play.”

So how much will he feature this season? The hope is that our no.22 can build on his fine pre-season form and enhance it in the competitive campaign, utilising his learnings from Spain.

Jesse Lingard is an obvious role model to follow, after his fellow Academy graduate matured during several loan moves in the Football League before making his breakthrough into the first-team.

With Paul Pogba and Marouane Fellaini on holiday after the World Cup, plus Nemanja Matic also nursing an abdominal injury, there is clearly a chance to impress.

The remaining pre-season matches against Real Madrid and Bayern Munich should offer more playing time for our flourishing starlet.

After that, who knows? But don’t be too surprised if Andreas Pereira is involved against Leicester City on that opening night of the Premier League season.

The opinions in this story are personal to the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Manchester United Football Club.

Credit: Skysports.com

Monday, July 30, 2018

Mourinho would not have spent his money to watch US tour

Jose Mourinho admits he would not pay to watch his under-strength, under-performing Manchester United side on their pre-season tour of the United States.

United have endured a miserable time so far in America. They could only manage draws in 90 minutes against Mexican side Club America, MLS outfit San Jose Earthquakes, and AC Milan in their International Champions Cup opener.

They were then hammered 4-1 by arch-rivals Liverpool at 'The Big House' stadium in Ann Arbor, Michigan on Saturday night.

"The atmosphere is good but if I was them, I wouldn't come," Mourinho said.

"I wouldn't spend my money to see these teams. I was watching on television Chelsea against Inter and the people in Nice decided the beach was better. They didn't go to the game, the stadium was empty.

"I think the passion many Americans have for soccer deserves more. They deserve the best teams and invest to bring the best clubs to the US. But we, and some other clubs, were not able to give to the people the real quality football that can attract even more passion in this country."

Mourinho complaining about his squad being decimated by so many of his players being on post-World Cup holidays has been a constant theme of United's unhappy trip across the Atlantic.

The likes of Paul Pogba, Romelu Lukaku, Marouane Fellaini, as well as the England quartet of Phil Jones, Ashley Young, Jesse Lingard and Marcus Rashford, are still absent.

Antonio Valencia and Chris Smalling also missed the Liverpool defeat through injury, while Anthony Martial had returned home to attend the birth of his second child.

Alexis Sanchez did feature in Michigan, but he cut a frustrated figure as Andreas Pereira's stunning free-kick strike provided scant consolation for a United side ripped apart by Liverpool.

Asked about Sanchez's demeanour, Mourinho replied: "Do you want me to be very happy with the players he has around him?

"We are not playing here to improve the team, the dynamic or our routines.

"We are playing just to try to survive and not have some ugly results. Alexis is the only attacking player that we have.

"We don't have wingers, we don't have strikers. He is the only one who is here and the poor man is trying his best with the frustration of somebody who wants more.

"This is not our team, this is not our squad - not even 30 per cent of it.

"We start the game with almost half the players who are not even going to belong to our squad on August 9 (transfer deadline day)."

United are back in International Champions Cup action on Tuesday night when they take on Real Madrid in Miami.

Credit: Skysports.com

Napoli make loan offer for Darmian

Napoli president Aurelio De Laurentiis says they have made a season-long loan offer for Manchester United defender Matteo Darmian.

The Italy international started United's 4-1 defeat by Liverpool on Saturday but is behind Antonio Valencia in the pecking order and wants a move as he seeks more playing time.

Jose Mourinho has said Darmian can leave if they receive a suitable bid and Di Laurentiis says Napoli have made a loan offer with a view to a permanent deal.

Speaking to Italian outlet Radio Kiss Kiss, Di Laurentiis said: "We have asked for Darmian on a loan with a right to sign next summer."

Damian, who joined United from Torino in 2015, says a return to Italy could be an attractive option.

"I want to play more regularly," said the 28-year-old. "Last season, I didn't play much, that's my objective and my ambition. That's why I spoke with the manager and also with the club about my future.

"I want to leave but we will see what happens because we don't know."

Credit: Skysports.com

Your Monday Briefing: 12 things you may have missed

Your Monday Briefing wraps up the key Manchester United news from the weekend, making sure you're up to date on all things Red…

DEFEAT AT THE BIG HOUSE
The Reds were beaten 4-1 by Liverpool at the gargantuan Michigan Stadium on Saturday evening in front of over 101,000 fans. Sadio Mane opened the scoring from the penalty spot and Andreas Pereira equalised with a sensational free-kick, before Jurgen Klopp’s more experienced team prevailed in the second half thanks to goals from Daniel Sturridge, Sheyi Ojo and Xherdan Shaqiri.

PEREIRA SHOWED HIS QUALITY
The midfielder’s set-piece was a clear positive from an otherwise disappointing game and his display as a whole earned plenty of praise from supporters. Lee Grant also spoke glowingly about the young Brazilian, telling us: “He’s got great quality, we all know that. He’s shown that throughout the course of pre-season. He has fantastic technical ability and hopefully we can see more of it.”

FRED MADE HIS FIRST APPEARANCE
Speaking of Brazilians, our new no.17 stepped off the bench to replace Juan Mata on 71 minutes and MUTV analyst Danny Webber was encouraged by what he saw from our new recruit in Ann Arbour. “He wanted to pop up in the right areas, drive forward with the ball, demand possession, and he had the courage to wear that badge on his chest for the first time in difficult circumstances.”

A LATE CHANGE TO THE LINE-UP
Chris Smalling was taken out of the starting XI as a precaution just a few moments before kick-off and Eric Bailly volunteered to start in his place, despite carrying a very slight injury himself. Jose Mourinho praised the Ivorian afterwards, saying: “He decided by himself that he did not want another kid on the pitch. It is not fair to Alexis, to Mata, to Herrera, and the guys that are there.”

'THE RESULT IS NOT IMPORTANT'
Jose Mourinho and captain Ander Herrera both expressed that opinion, citing our inexperienced squad that is currently made up of Academy prospects, returning loanees and first-team players. The focus must be on our first Premier League game of the season against Leicester City on 10 August, they said.

DE GEA WAS NOT INVOLVED
David joined the touring squad on Friday and described his batteries as “recharged” while speaking to MUTV. But, having only trained for a day, the Spaniard was omitted from the matchday squad and merely took part in the warm-up. It remains to be seen if he’ll play against Real Madrid this week.

MATIC IS IN MANCHESTER
It was confirmed over the weekend that Nemanja had left the squad and headed to Philadelphia for surgery on an abdominal injury, which was sustained while representing Serbia at the World Cup. He has since travelled home to Manchester and Mourinho expects him to miss the start of the season.

GOODBYE, LOS ANGELES
United left California after the final whistle in Michigan and arrived in Miami on Sunday, where they have since trained at Barry University. The team also spent time with some people who had been affected by February’s tragic shooting at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida.

RASHFORD AND YOUNG RETURNING EARLY
In the post-match press conference, Mourinho revealed Marcus and Ashley have both decided to cut short their summer holidays so they can return to United for pre-season training.

TWO LOAN DEALS FOR YOUTH STARS
Away from the first team, Academy graduate Matty Willock completed a temporary move to St Mirren and made his debut in a 6-0 win over Dumbarton. Cameron Borthwick-Jackson also joined Scunthorpe United on loan and we wish them both well.

UNDER-23S BEATEN BY NORTHAMPTON
Our youngsters lost 2-0 to the League Two side in a friendly, with Billy Walters and Kevin van Veen scoring in the second half. Ricky Sbragia had spoken beforehand about trialling a new formation.

UNDER-15S LOST IN THE FINAL
Despite scoring a dramatic late equaliser that secured a 1-1 draw against Co. Antrim, our Under-15s lost the SuperCup:NI Junior Section final via a dramatic penalty shootout on Friday night.




Sunday, July 29, 2018

Mourinho frustrated with Manchester United's transfer activity

Jose Mourinho has voiced his frustration at Manchester United’s lack of transfer activity this summer.

Mourinho has signed Fred, Diogo Dalot and Lee Grant during the transfer window, which closes on August 9, and confirmed his desire to recruit two more acquisitions but only expects one at best.

Sky Sports News understands United have approached Leicester to sign Harry Maguire while fellow centre-backs Yerry Mina and Toby Alderweireld are understood to be other options.

"I would like to have two more players," Mourinho said, after his side were beaten 4-1 by Liverpool in the International Champions Cup.

"I think I am not going to have two. I think it's possible I am going to have one. It's possible.

"I gave a list to the club of five names a few months ago and I wait to see if it is possible to have one of these players.

"If it is possible it is possible, if it is not possible it is not possible. If it is possible, good, if it is not possible we keep fighting, working and believing in the players that we have."

According to Sky sources, Anthony Martial has told Mourinho he wants to leave the club, with Chelsea, Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund keen to sign him.

Matteo Darmian is another player who might leave Old Trafford this summer after the defender reiterated his desire to secure improved playing time, with Napoli interested in his services.

United open the new Premier League campaign on August 10 against Leicester at Old Trafford - a match you can watch live on Sky Sports Football.

Mourinho was also critical of the referee Ismail Elfath after their pre-season friendly defeat to Jurgen Klopp's side in Michigan, saying he had come to officiate the wrong sport.

"The referees they come by mistake - they were called by the baseball federation, thought it was a baseball game," he said.

"They arrived here and it was soccer and they had to be in a soccer game. So, it was good fun."

Credit: Skysports.com

Mourinho criticises Antonio Valencia and Anthony Martial after Man Utd lose to Liverpool

Jose Mourinho has criticised Antonio Valencia and Anthony Martial after Manchester United's 4-1 defeat to Liverpool in the United States.

Martial started both of United's opening matches on their pre-season tour of the US before being allowed to leave so he could attend the birth of his second child. However, while happy for the 22-year-old forward, Mourinho believes he should have returned to the tour.

The Portuguese also suggested he was unhappy with Valencia's condition upon his return to the squad, with United missing a host of senior players for the tour.

Mourinho, who has also voiced his frustration at Manchester United's lack of transfer activity this summer, now sees his side wrap up their International Champions Cup matches against Real Madrid on Tuesday evening.

"We play Real Madrid and we have no more players than what we have," he told MUTV. "Antonio Valencia comes from holiday - I think too much holiday for him. His condition was not good when he was back, then injury and also go back.

"Anthony Martial has the baby and after the baby is born - beautiful baby, full of health, thank God - he should be here and he is not here.

"So we have Alexis [Sanchez] and [Juan] Mata who play every minute of every match and now we have Real Madrid and after that Bayern Munich and that's our start."

Mourinho felt his side gained little from the encounter with Liverpool, lamenting the lack of senior names in his squad, and said he is hoping some players still recovering after the World Cup decide to return to the group sooner.

He said: "I just hope the boys on deserved holidays, they take care of themselves a little bit and I hope somebody wants to do what [Marcus] Rashford and [Phil] Jones decide to do, which is to be back a little bit earlier to try and help the team because for the beginning of the season we are going to be in trouble.

"The majority of the players that played are not going to play - some of them are not even going to belong to the squad.

"I know the ones that are not always ready - sometimes you need them and you don't have them. Eric Bailly was injured, he shouldn't be playing, but when he saw that [Chris] Smalling in the warm-up was coming out, he made a decision by himself not to let his team play with five kids in the back against [Mohamed] Salah, [Sadio] Mane and company so he put himself there for 90 minutes.

"When we had gasoline we competed, 1-1 after 65 minutes, after that gasoline is gone. [Ander] Herrera, [Juan] Mata, Alexis [Sanchez], [Matteo] Darmian, these are the boys we have, they cannot give more. So this match was for nothing."

Credit: Skysports.com

Herrera: The Premier League is our main focus

Ander Herrera has played down the significance of Manchester United’s results on Tour 2018, presented by Aon, declaring the Premier League opener against Leicester City as the sole focus.

The Reds suffered a 4-1 defeat to Liverpool on Saturday evening, which was the team’s fourth match in the USA following the previous outings against Club America, San Jose Earthquakes and AC Milan.

Due to a touring squad that largely consists of youth players and returning loanees, with only a smattering of first-team regulars, Herrera is rightly not concerning himself with the friendly outcomes.

As he told us at Michigan Stadium, all minds must be fixed on that visit of the Foxes to Old Trafford.

“The least important thing is the result right now,” Ander explained. “We are playing with the same players every game. It looks like a Christmas period to be honest rather than a pre-season, but it is what it is. We have to be all together, to try to have minutes in our legs, to not think too much about the results and let's try to keep improving because the most important thing is Leicester.

“Of course it is never nice to lose. But pre-season is pre-season. Everyone is giving their best, trying to help us. Even the kids, they are doing amazing, they are trying to help. But the difference between us and Milan, or Liverpool, is that they have 16 or 17 first-team players and we just have maybe 10.

“We must say thanks to the kids because they are helping and giving everything, so let's try to keep improving and always focus on the first Premier League game against Leicester.”

Saturday night’s match at Michigan Stadium was played in front of 101,000 fans and Herrera is continually grateful for such support. The Spanish midfielder is just sorry that they did not get to see the full-strength Manchester United team, although he hopes to make it up to them soon.

“America is always nice to come as we have a lot of fans here,” Ander said. “They are very passionate to come here to watch us, they are waiting the whole year to watch us, but to be honest this time we are not able to show them everything we have because of the conditions and circumstances. The only thing we can say is promise to try to win the first Premier League game, then the second and then the third. We want to say thank you very much for the support.”

Mourinho: Teams need players like Eric Bailly

Jose Mourinho has spoken of his respect and appreciation for Eric Bailly's willingness to play against Liverpool, despite the Ivorian's struggle with an injury problem.

Bailly had not even been named among the substitutes when the team news broke 75 minutes prior to kick-off at Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor.

But when Chris Smalling dropped out of the warm-up as a precaution, just minutes before the match was due to start, Bailly pushed himself forward as a replacement.

“Bailly was not going to play,” explained Mourinho in the post-match press conference. “But when he saw that Smalling in the warm-up was leaving, he decided by himself he did not want another kid on the pitch. It is not fair to Alexis, to Mata, to Herrera, and the guys that are there.”

United are without a number of first-team regulars, due to injury and the delayed returns of several players that competed in the World Cup in Russia. Mourinho explained that their absence means a heavier workload has fallen on the senior players that are part of Tour 2018.

“We are just trying to play these matches in the best way we can,” said the boss after the Liverpool defeat. “The boys did very well until the gasoline said goodbye.”

Quizzed further on Bailly's quality and role this season, Mourinho continued to lavish praise on the centre-back.

“He is a team boy, he is a great boy,” Jose said. “He is an honest man, always ready to give everything for the team. That is why we have him, why we still have him and why he is going to stay with us because football teams need people like him, like Herrera; this kind of people where the club is more important than anything else.”

Smalling's removal from the starting XI was later explained as a precautionary measure.

With Nemanja Matic and Antonio Valencia already returning home due to injury issues, and two friendlies, against Real Madrid and Bayern Munich, following hot on the heels of the Liverpool game, the boss will be keen to ensure as many first-team players remain injury free.

Mourinho confirms surgery for Matic in the USA

Jose Mourinho has confirmed that Nemanja Matic will miss the start of the season, due to an injury problem sustained at the World Cup.

The 29-year-old played three matches for Serbia at the tournament in Russia, and was given extended leave to go on holiday following his country's elimination.

Matic joined the pre-season tour on 22 July and trained with the squad for the first time two days later, but played no part in Wednesday's 1-1 draw with AC Milan in Carson, California.

Following Saturday night's 4-1 defeat against Liverpool in Ann Arbor, the manager confirmed that Matic had left the tour to undergo surgery.

“Matic arrived from the World Cup, holiday, direct to surgery because something happened in the World Cup,” said Mourinho.

“He has had surgery. He is out for the start of the season. He came from the World Cup with the injury and the time he had to rest on holiday was not enough to resolve the problem.

”I don't know how long he will be out for,“ admitted Jose.

There was further concern for United when Chris Smalling was removed from the starting line-up to face Liverpool, just minutes before kick-off as a precautionary measure.

The defender came out of the warm-up but was replaced in the team by Eric Bailly, who partnered Axel Tuanzebe and Tim Fosu-Mensah in the back three.

United's tour of the United States comes to a close on Tuesday, when the Reds face European champions Real Madrid in Miami.

A match against German champions Bayern Munich brings pre-season to a close on 5 August, before the Premier League campaign gets under way on Friday 10 August, as Leicester City visit Old Trafford.

Friendly: Liverpool 4 Man. United 1

Just over 101,000 fans packed inside Michigan Stadium as Manchester United and Liverpool played out an entertaining spectacle in Ann Arbor, but the International Champions Cup fixture ultimately ended in frustration as the Merseysiders ran out 4-1 winners.

A couple of penalties from Sadio Mane and Sheyi Ojo, plus second-half strikes from Daniel Sturridge and Xherdan Shaqiri,sealed the victory for Liverpool after a sublime first-half free-kick from Andreas Pereira.

There was a late change for United when the teams stepped out, with Eric Bailly replacing Chris Smalling in the backline as a precautionary measure. The Ivorian lined up in a back three alongside Tim Fosu-Mensah on the right of him and Axel Tuanzebe on the left. Matteo Darmian and Demi Mitchell provided support down the wings, while up front Alexis Sanchez led the line with support from Juan Mata.

It was Liverpool who had a couple of early sighters with Mo Salah, predictably, the one who was buzzing in and around the United defence. The Egyptian’s header forced Lee Grant into a finger-tip save after Mane had found him with a floated ball into the box. From the resulting corner, United were thankful to captain-for-the-day Ander Herrera as he cleared Virgil van Dijk’s back-post effort off the line.

Mane found Salah again four minutes later but his tame header was easy for Grant to collect.

At the other end, Mata twice had the ball in the net within a few minutes, after lovely link-up play both times with Alexis, but each time the flag was up for offside.

Jurgen Klopp’s men then took the lead on 28 minutes, after Salah was tripped by Demi Mitchell and Mane dispatched the spot-kick with aplomb despite Grant going the right way.

Liverpool's lead lasted barely three minutes as United drew level in stunning fashion. When awarded a free-kick some 25 yards out, Mata, Alexis and Pereira all stood over it, and it was the latter who dispatched a quite stunning effort into the top corner with Kamil Grabara stood like a statue in goal.

There was one change for the Reds at the half-time break with Joel Pereira replacing Lee Grant. Liverpool began brightly again, but United also looked dangerous in attack and McTominay will be disappointed he couldn’t connect properly with an effort on 55 minutes after nice set-up play from Alexis.

Fosu-Mensah was on hand to clear the danger when Mane sent a header goalwards soon after, but the United defence could do nothing to stop Klopp’s men taking the lead on 65 minutes when Liverpool debutant Shaqiri brought a long pass down in the box and found Sturridge who rolled a shot in off the far post.

Liverpool netted their third goal eight minutes later in somewhat harsh circumstances, when Herrera was adjudged to have fouled Andy Robertson inside the box, but the contact looked minimal. Substitute Ojo stepped up and coolly slotted home the penalty.

Two minutes earlier Fred had entered the fray for his first United appearance, but it proved to be a match to forget for the Reds as Liverpool claimed a fourth eight minutes from time thanks to a brilliant Shaqiri bicycle kick.

Next up for the Reds is a trip to Miami and another big game… this time against Real Madrid as Tour 2018, presented by Aon, draws to a close.

HOW WE LINED UP

United: Grant (J.Pereira 46), Darmian, Fosu-Mensah, Bailly, Tuanzebe (Williams 81), Mitchell (Chong 71), McTominay, Herrera (Bohui 81), A. Pereira, Mata (Fred 71), Alexis (Gomes 81).
Subs not used: Garner, Hamilton, Greenwood.

Liam Miller tribute match: GAA 'U-turn' on benefit game for late footballer confirmed

A tribute match in memory of former Republic of Ireland midfielder Liam Miller has been given the go-ahead on Saturday by the Gaelic Athletic Association.

The decision follows discussions with Croke Park's Management Committee and Central Council on Saturday morning.

The GAA had originally refused to host the match at its Pairc Ui Chaoimh ground in Cork.

A GAA event in advance of the 25 September game will also take place.

There is speculation this could be a GAA game involving Miller's home club Eire Og to raise money for injured gaelic players.

The GAA is an amateur sporting and cultural organisation, focused primarily on promoting indigenous Gaelic games and pastimes, including Gaelic football and hurling.

The association refused to host the game as its rules do not permit non-GAA sports at its venues, but the body's powerful management committee met on Friday to discuss a new interpretation of the relevant rule.

Former Celtic, Manchester United and Sunderland player Miller, who was from Cork, died in February at the age of 36 from cancer.

He played Gaelic football and hurling with Eire Og as a youngster before embarking on his football career.

The GAA's decision not to allow the benefit football match, which will take place on 25 September, to be played at the 45,000-capacity Pairc Ui Chaoimh came in for widespread criticism.

Arrangements were then made for the benefit game to be staged at Cork City Football Club's Turner's Cross stadium, which can accommodate 7,500 spectators.

The match is to raise money for Miller's family and for charities.

Former Republic of Ireland captain Roy Keane will manage a Manchester United Legends team against a combined Celtic/Ireland side in the testimonial game, with ex-internationals Robbie Keane and Damien Duff also expected to participate.

Credit: BBC Sport

Darmian pushes for Manchester United exit amid Napoli interest

Matteo Darmian is continuing to push for a move away from Manchester United as he seeks more playing time, despite United's two other right-backs being injured.

The Italian has been told by manager Jose Mourinho that he can leave Old Trafford, but only if a suitable bid comes in.

Napoli president Aurelio De Laurentiis has admitted the Serie A club are interested in the full-back, but no formal bids have yet been made.

Despite wanting out, Darmian could yet play a big part in United's plans for the remainder of pre-season after Antonio Valencia was flown home from their tour of the USA with a calf injury. New signing Diogo Dalot is sidelined until September with a knee injury.

"I don't think the injury of Antonio is a big injury. I don't know how long he needs to stay out, but at the moment he is the captain, he's first choice," Darmian said.

"I want to play more regularly. Last season, I didn't play much, that's my objective and my ambition. That's why I spoke with the manager and also with the club about my future.

"I want to leave but we will see what happens because we don't know."

United take on Premier League rivals Liverpool in the International Champions Cup in Michigan on Saturday.

Credit: Skysports.com

De Gea feels fully recharged after break

Manchester United keeper David De Gea says he has a “full battery” again after holidaying in advance of linking up with the Reds on Tour 2018 presented by Aon.

The Spain no.1 had a disappointing World Cup as his country lost coach Julen Lopetegui on the eve of the tournament and went out in the round of 16, to hosts Russia, on penalties. From a United perspective, it at least allowed the brilliant Reds' Player of the Year to have a break and still link up with his colleagues in the United States.

With the game against Liverpool rapidly approaching (Saturday 22:05 BST kick-off, live on MUTV) and a huge crowd anticipated at Ann Arbor, De Gea's return is a boost, even though Joel Pereira and new boy Lee Grant have performed well in his absence.

“I'm really happy to be back with the team and with my team-mates,” he told MUTV.

“It's beautiful weather and I want to be fit as quickly as possible. I had a holiday with my family, with my friends and everyone, and have a full battery to come back here to start again. It's always good to have a break, to relax and enjoy it with people.

”The season is long. You need to take a good rest and start again. Everything starts again and, hopefully this season, we'll do our job all together and try to win big things.

“It's hard. The first training session is always a bit difficult. The weather is hot and it's hard. I'll keep focused and training hard.”

Alexis Sanchez is still a new signing at United

It's an oft-repeated phrase in football: 'He's like a new signing’. Alexis Sanchez isn’t like a new signing for Manchester United because, effectively, he is still a new signing.

The Chilean was always going to need time to settle at Old Trafford after arriving mid-season in January and manager Jose Mourinho was quick to stress we would all see the best of the South American in 2018/19.

Despite the delay in him flying to the United States, Alexis is having the benefit of a rare pre-season campaign behind him and has looked the part in his two outings so far on Tour 2018, presented by Aon. A lively performer against San Jose Earthquakes, despite being on the receiving end of some rough treatment, he sparkled in the penalty shoot-out win over AC Milan.

We all know what Alexis can do, having seen him regularly inspire Arsenal and, of course, his previous work in Europe with Udinese and Barcelona. For me, he has always looked like a Manchester United player because of his sheer desire to win and determination to make positive things happen on the pitch.

Now the bedding-in process has been completed, we can rightly expect our winter window capture to hit top form. He reaches 30 in December and has the experience, wherewithal and pedigree to become an absolute superstar with the Reds. When I spoke to Marcos Rojo about him last season, the Argentinian said: “Chileans will be following us a lot more. If you think about him being the star of Chile in the way Lionel Messi is for us, they will be watching him a lot.

“Also, it’s the same colour – the Chile and Manchester United shirts are both red. So it’s a perfect match.”

Indeed, the signing of Alexis did look the perfect match and he offered glimpses of what he can provide with some sterling performances – including a key role in the comeback win over Manchester City and his Man-of-the-Match display against Tottenham in the Emirates FA Cup semi-final at Wembley.

We all appreciate he is a big-game player who can make the difference in the tightest of fixtures but he can also unlock packed defences with his trickery and penetration. In the absence of Anthony Martial, Marcus Rashford and Romelu Lukaku, he was deployed in a central attacking role against AC Milan and unsettled the Rossoneri’s backline throughout.

There is certainly the possibility he could partner Lukaku up front if a 3-5-2 formation is used, as he usually wreaks havoc down the middle. Otherwise, if 4-3-3 is the manager’s preferred option, his ability to operate on either flank with a licence to roam would surely see him take on the mantle as one of the club’s most dangerous weapons.

With the new sharp haircut and obvious thirst to succeed, Alexis looks capable of making a positive impact in the Premier League from the very outset.

While pre-season games are not always the best guides, there is little doubt he has been one of the main positives from the tour.

As his fellow South American Rojo said, Alexis is a star for Chile and, of course, a star of the world game. It was a shame he was unable to parade his talents and passion for his country in Russia but United can reap the benefits of the rare opportunity to recharge the batteries. Alexis looks fit, fresh and raring to go.

If he is at his peak, he can be one of the main men in 2018/19 for Jose’s side.

The opinions in this story are personal to the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Manchester United Football Club.

Credit: Manutd.com

Saturday, July 28, 2018

Klopp shrugs off Jose Mourinho's Liverpool comments

Jurgen Klopp believes there was an element of kidology at work when Jose Mourinho suggested Liverpool must win a trophy this coming season.

Mourinho, whose net transfer spend is £185m more than Klopp's in the last two years, this week said Liverpool's recent investment in players means they must deliver silverware.

Mourinho also labelled Klopp's change in attitude towards spending big money on marquee players as 'funny' but the German insists he is not fazed by Mourinho's comments.

Asked if Mourinho was playing mind games, Klopp told Sky Sports News: "Yeah, for sure, a little bit but that's okay.

"But I heard as well that Jose found me funny and one of my biggest goals in life is to make Jose smile! It doesn't happen too often and if it happens because of Liverpool - well done!

"I said a few things [in the past]. I cannot really remember what I said but I know what I said about the Pogba transfer.

"I would never talk about Manchester United unless somebody asks me about it but I am polite enough to give an answer if somebody asks me.

"That's not always the smartest thing to do, and I have absolutely no problem with what Jose Mourinho is saying. It is a free world and he can say whatever he wants.

"If he is happy about our transfers even better, but we know that it does not mean you win automatically whatever.

"Man United has a strong team and they will strengthen that in the next two weeks. They are already strong, the same as Man City and Tottenham.

"Arsenal and Chelsea have new managers but they will be strong - plus a few others - so it's our job to improve our own situation. That's what we try to do but that has to happen on the pitch, not in the transfer market.

"We want to deliver constantly. We want to improve that's what we want to show and we will see where that leads us to.

"Improvement means playing better football, being more consistent and entertaining the crowd in a very specific way - We are Liverpool and we stand for football. All I can say is that we will try everything we can to be as successful as possible and in the end we will see."

Credit: Skysports.com

Is Maguire the man to fix Man. United defence?

Manchester United are interested in signing Harry Maguire from Leicester, according to Sky Sports News. The England centre-back shone at the World Cup but is he the answer to United's defensive problems?

It is only two years since Harry Maguire was considering his future at Hull City having been unable to hold down a starting spot during their promotion-winning Championship campaign. There was interest from Middlesbrough and even talk of a transfer request. Hull rated him highly but would they give him the playing time he wanted in the Premier League?

Maguire was 23 at the time and could not have imagined the trajectory his career was about to follow. The decision to stay at Hull was vindicated as he earned a £17m move to Leicester City the following summer, and a year on from that he is a World Cup semi-finalist and a £65m transfer target for Jose Mourinho's Manchester United.

United face a major challenge to convince Leicester to sell, but there are other questions to consider too. Is Maguire the right man to reinforce Mourinho's defence? And is he ready for another step up? Nick Wright takes a look with help from Michael Appleton, who worked with him closely as Leicester's assistant manager last season.

Aerial prowess

One area in which Maguire would undoubtedly help United is in the air. 'Slabhead', as he is affectionately nicknamed by team-mates at both Leicester and England, stands at 6ft 4ins and offers formidable aerial strength in both boxes.

It's an attribute Mourinho values highly. From John Terry and Didier Drogba at Chelsea to Paul Pogba and Romelu Lukaku at Manchester United, the Portuguese has always shown a preference for physically imposing players who can dominate their opponents with and without the ball. At United, eight of his 11 signings so far have been at least six feet tall.

Maguire certainly fits the bill in that regard, and never has his ability in the air been more apparent than during England's World Cup campaign. The Leicester man was a revelation in Russia, winning more aerial duels (54) than any other defender in the tournament.

He was one of the main reasons why England were so effective from set pieces. Maguire seemed to get his head to practically everything, scoring from a header against Sweden and having more penalty-box efforts on goal than Harry Kane, Antoine Griezmann or Mario Mandzukic over the course of the tournament.

Mourinho would be eager to harness that set-piece threat at United, who rank a lowly 12th among Premier League sides for goals from corners and free kicks since his appointment in 2016. Maguire, who has scored four times and provided six assists in two seasons in the Premier League, would surely help to make them more potent.

Appleton agrees, but warns that Maguire's aerial prowess means he is already subjected to special treatment by Premier League defenders. "I think the defending from set pieces is much better in the Premier League than what we saw at the World Cup," he tells Sky Sports.

"I don't think the movement that got players free at the World Cup would work so well in the Premier League. But having said that, what you tend to find is that they know Harry is going to be the biggest threat, so he gets looked after by more than one player. Sometimes you use him as a decoy. He might make a run to the near post and free up space at the far post."

Mobility question

Maguire's aerial ability is exceptional but one of the question marks over his suitability to an elite team is whether he is mobile enough. In an interview with Sky Sports last season, Mike Phelan, his former coach at Hull, described Maguire as a "big structure" who has had to work hard to learn how to manage his sizeable frame.

"He had to work on footwork, technique and the physicality of the game," said Phelan. "Carrying a big frame around with you for 90-odd minutes isn't easy. He had to train hard and work at things like nutrition and diet. Once he felt able to manage all those things, his ability began to come through."

Maguire is usually able to keep pace with opponents when facing the same direction, but Appleton admits his size can make him vulnerable on the turn.

"You look at him and he doesn't often get done for pace," says Appleton. "But when people talk about mobility, I think they mean side-to-side, the twisting and turning. He's a big lad, so it's not always easy for him to manoeuvre his body in that way."

That weakness is not often exposed at Leicester, who tend to sit deep and hit teams on the counter-attack, but Manchester United are more likely to dominate the ball and play higher up the pitch, leaving space behind their defence. That's where Maguire, who averaged fewer sprints per 90 minutes last season than every United centre-back except Phil Jones, could run into trouble.

Versatility

Maguire has shown himself to be adaptable and versatile. He played on the left of a central defensive pair for Leicester last season, but Mourinho will also have noted that he shone in a back three for England at the World Cup. Maguire is a tactically intelligent player who can perform in a variety of different systems.

Maguire is even capable of playing in defensive midfield. He was often seen carrying the ball into midfield during the World Cup, but Mourinho will take greater encouragement from how he curbed his attacking instincts at Leicester, learning when to step up and when to play things safe. It's the kind of positional discipline he craves.

"That's one thing we worked on with him, recognising when to step into midfield, because it's different in different games," says Appleton. "When we played the bigger teams we naturally played on the counter-attack, because our opponents had all of the ball, so we would instruct Harry to hold his position.

"But against the smaller sides, he learned to understand that he could play with a bit more freedom. He would step into the middle of the park and one of Wilfried Ndidi or Vincent Iborra would slot back in behind him. He is capable of popping the ball into a midfielder and playing a give-and-go, but he knows when to go and when to stay."

Passing

Another of Maguire's strengths is his distribution. The 25-year-old has a fine range of passing and brings composure on the ball. "That's one of his best attributes, I think," says Appleton. "I think the reason he is so calm on the ball is because he is so calm as a character. It takes a lot to ruffle his feathers and get him wound up."

Maguire is capable of building attacks from deep but the statistics suggest he would have to adapt his style if he were to join Manchester United. While Maguire completed just 78.4 per cent of his passes for Leicester last season, none of United's centre-backs completed less than 82 per cent, with Jones and Victor Lindelof completing more than 90 per cent of theirs.

It is partly down to Leicester's more direct approach, but Mourinho would demand a similar level of efficiency from Maguire at United, and he can take encouragement from how the Leicester man adapted for England at the World Cup. Over the course of the tournament with Southgate's side, Maguire completed 88.8 per cent of his passes.

Maguire is capable of finding the feet of midfielders and forwards in attacking positions, but he is also capable of picking out team-mates from long-range. Last season, he completed more than three times as many accurate long passes (173) than any United centre-back. It's a weapon which could be useful to Mourinho.

Conclusion

It is not difficult to see why Mourinho is interested in Maguire. Buying off the back of a World Cup campaign is a historically risky strategy, but his performances in Russia provided another example of his ability to take new challenges in his stride.

His aerial ability, composure and distribution could improve United, but his mobility is potentially problematic, and there are also question marks about his relative inexperience. After only two full seasons as a Premier League player, is Maguire ready to step into Manchester United's defence?

"I think Leicester will do their absolute utmost to make sure he stays there this year and I think that would be a good decision for him," says Appleton. "He's only had two seasons in the Premier League and it wouldn't do him any harm to have another one with Leicester.

"The reality is that the Leicester owners are very ambitious. They have won the title already and they believe they are capable of competing with the top teams on a regular basis. If Harry is going to be in and around the top eight, then he's still at an age where there is plenty of time to work his way further up the ladder in the future.

"As for whether he could play for a team like United now, it's a difficult one. If you had asked me two years ago I probably would have said I couldn't see it, but that's because he had never really had the opportunity to play in the Premier League. That's the thing with a lot of players, you never really know until you give them the opportunity."

Mourinho, it seems, is willing to take that gamble.

Credit: Skysports.com

Mata: Manchester United must be consistent to have chance of Premier League title

Juan Mata says Manchester United must be more consistent if they are to have any chance of usurping rivals Manchester City as Premier League champions.

United finished 19 points behind Pep Guardiola's side last season and Mata knows they must make a sustained effort if they are to win the top-flight for the first time since 2013.

"I know what Manchester United fans want, they want to win trophies, be proud of the team and enjoy us when they watch us play and we want the same," he told Sky Sports News.

"The team that wins the Premier League is the most consistent, winning points and points, week in, week out. We need to do that if we want to win.

"Obviously there is the Champions League, FA Cup and League Cup, so we have many tournaments to play for and hopefully we can go to the end in all of them.

"We want a positive season, to try and play good football and try and win some trophies.

"We have this magnificent fanbase, all around the world. We want to make them proud and win things for them in a good style."

Jose Mourinho's side are currently on tour in the USA, where they will face old adversaries Liverpool in Michigan on Saturday night.

With so many United players still on holiday after being involved in the World Cup, the club's youngsters have the chance to impress and Mata believes they will benefit from being involved with the first team players who are on tour.

"We don't have a lot of players from the first team squad from last year but I think it's great for the club to have so many youngsters," he added.

"I think it speaks well for the academy and how that works that they are bringing so many players to the first team.

"These guys are having a chance now and they are learning so much by training with us and realising what Manchester United means."

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Shaw: I have never been out of shape

Manchester United defender Luke Shaw has hit back over criticism of his conditioning and says he is keen to earn a new deal.

The full-back has been in and out of the United side since he was signed in the summer of 2014 and is entering the last year of his contract.

However, he looks poised to figure at the start of the upcoming Premier League campaign, having started all three of United's games on their tour of the USA so far.

Shaw has been questioned over his conditioning and fitness for much of his time at United but says such criticism is misplaced.

"Of course people can say I'm fat, but I know my own body," said Shaw.

"I always look big because I'm bigger built and I have, you could say, a Wayne Rooney type of body.

"I guess you've just got to take it, because there's always going to be negative criticism and positive (words), but both of them can make you stronger.

"The first season when I came, I didn't realise how big a step up it was. I was doing work, but I didn't realise I needed to push it a bit more.

"I think I've been unlucky because I've had a few ups and downs with different managers and sometimes people don't think I'm as fit as I am.

"I would say I have never been out of shape.

"I feel really good and I am raring to go. The minutes (in pre-season matches) are only going to help me become fitter."

United manager Jose Mourinho has criticised Shaw on occasion in the past but sent messages of support this summer as Shaw worked hard in Dubai.

"It was a breath of fresh air when he texted me," said Shaw. "I wasn't expecting it.

"I spoke to him and it was really positive. It made me feel confident about the upcoming season."

Shaw is now targeting a new United contract, adding: "You don't want to be in this situation (last year of a deal) but I know I have got the quality to become a (regular) Manchester United player.

"I want to earn a contract. I don't want a contract because, in the next year I'm a free agent, so they might look to tie me down.

"I know the club believe me. If they really wanted to, they could've cashed in. I'm going to fight for it this year and I want to be in that starting team."

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Ibrahimovic: Manchester United need to win trophies

Zlatan Ibrahimovic says his former team Manchester United must win a trophy this season.

Ibrahimovic joined United in 2016 and won the League Cup and Europa League in his only full season at the club.

He signed a new one-year deal at Old Trafford in 2017 but it was terminated in March and he moved to the MLS with LA Galaxy.

United failed to win a trophy last season, losing 1-0 in the FA Cup final to Chelsea and Ibrahimovic told Sky Sports News their manager Jose Mourinho needs to put that right this year.

"The coach Mourinho, everybody knows him," the former Sweden captain said. "He will always be in the game of winning trophies.

"Last year he didn't win but it's not often he finishes a season without winning a trophy. But he is in a club and he has a team that is able to win and is used to winning."

United have not won the Premier League since 2013 - the season when Sir Alex Ferguson retired.

Pep Guardiola's Manchester City finished 19 points clear of second-placed United as they won the 2017/18 title but Ibrahimovic believes Mourinho's side will have a good year.

"He is preparing for the season and I think they can have a good season," he added.

"They have some new players coming in and the normal transfer market - players come, players go and you build that up.

"I wish them all the luck, I hope they'll win something because they have the ability, they have the quality and the club is in need of winning."

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Mourinho faces a tough task to deliver at Manchester United

Manchester United fans have high hopes but the mood music is not good ahead of a crunch season for Jose Mourinho, writes Adam Bate.

So much for the power of positivity. As Jose Mourinho prepares for a defining season as Manchester United manager, his list of frustrations is growing and he has not been afraid to share his concerns publicly. "Pre-season is very bad, I have to say that," he told reporters out on the club's summer tour of the United States. "Everything is really bad."

The range of complaints include annoyances with the tour itinerary and grievances over the start date of the Premier League season. Disrupted preparation is the main reason for his agitation. "I'm worried," he explained. "I have to be worried. I'm worried because I'm not training and then go to the Premier League without lots of players."

With key men Paul Pogba and Romelu Lukaku involved in the World Cup until the final weekend, it has not been a straightforward build-up for United. "We are not a team," said Mourinho after watching his side's goalless draw with San Jose Earthquakes in front of a sparse crowd in California. "We're a group of players from different teams."

Some of those concerns are short term. "Against Leicester and Brighton the situation is not amazing for us," he said this week of the first two Premier League fixtures. But Mourinho's words and demeanour are not only down to the immediate difficulties ahead of him. There are longer-term problems too. He has refused to even discuss the club's title prospects.

It is easy to see why he might be downbeat. It is not at all obvious that this United team is evolving in the manner that many had anticipated. In Mourinho's previous post at Chelsea, it took him only a season to assess what was needed before bringing in Cesc Fabregas and Diego Costa to address the issues. The Premier League title was duly delivered.

From the outset, Mourinho insisted this particular job was a much bigger challenge and so it has proved. With the exception of a top-class goalkeeper in David de Gea, albeit one coming off the back of a miserable World Cup experience, this Manchester United squad still requires major surgery despite the money spent. All over the pitch there is uncertainty.

Defence has so often been the basis on which Mourinho's most successful sides were built. But despite spending in excess of £30m on each of Eric Bailly and Victor Lindelof, there is little suggestion that United have found the centre-back partnership that can carry them to glory. Harry Maguire is now a target but is he really in the same bracket as Toby Alderweireld or, dare it be said, Liverpool's Virgil van Dijk?

It is now over five years since Sir Alex Ferguson retired but it is not inconceivable that Mourinho could again rely on a back four comprised entirely of the Scot's signings - Antonio Valencia, Chris Smalling, Phil Jones and 33-year-old Ashley Young. Energy in the full-back areas still looks to be a key differential between United and their top-six rivals.

Mourinho is still searching for the right blend in the middle of the pitch too. Maximising the talents of Pogba remains a priority but his role has been a source of tension between player and manager. Perhaps the signing of Fred will help to ensure everything falls into place but the age profile of United's other midfielders means that decline is as likely as progress.

Nemanja Matic and Marouane Fellaini will both be the wrong side of 30 when the season starts. Ander Herrera is only one year younger than them. Alexis Sanchez is another who turns 30 during the season, further underlining the fact that the time is now for this squad. Sanchez must surely improve on a return of three goals in 18 games last season.

There is greater hope that Lukaku can kick on after an encouraging first year at Old Trafford. He will be the central figure in attack but will need support from elsewhere. Can Marcus Rashford and the apparently unsettled Anthony Martial be the ones to provide it? Supporters seem rather more convinced of that than the manager himself.

That is the crux of it. It is, of course, possible to put a more positive spin on things. Despite Mourinho's fears, the fixture list has been relatively kind in the first few weeks of the season. United do not play away against a top-six rival until the other side of the October international break. The opportunity is there to build some momentum.

But Mourinho does not seem to see it that way. He sees a situation that means putting his trust in Luke Shaw to deliver. It means putting his trust in Martial too. The signs are that he is not comfortable with that and the message is being sent loud and clear to supporters that he is up against it. He is downplaying expectations before the season has even begun.

Mourinho will be acutely aware that this is a massive year for him and the club, one that will shape how his time at United is perceived. The first season began and ended with trophy celebrations and included a League Cup win in the middle. Failure to deliver silverware second time around was tolerated on the basis of progression in the league.

It is a bit different now. The owners may be content with a top-four finish but supporters will want more. "There is a gap between our true potential and the expectations we create," said Mourinho back in March 2017. "That gap is the most difficult thing." The biggest fear at Manchester United right now is that it's a gap that's growing rather than closing.

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Manchester United make approach for Harry Maguire

Manchester United have approached Leicester City over the sale of their England centre-back Harry Maguire, Sky Sports News understands.

However, with a fortnight of the summer transfer window remaining, it looks like Jose Mourinho will have a battle on his hands, with Leicester adamant their star defender is staying at the King Power Stadium.

SSN understands United value the player, who starred in England's summer World Cup campaign, at around £65m.

Maguire is due to return from holiday in the next few days.

However, Leicester have already lost Riyad Mahrez in this window and Sky Sports News has been told Maguire is not for sale and will not be leaving the club this window.

Maguire won Leicester's Player of the Year award after an outstanding first season at the club and still has four years left on his current deal, having joined from Hull for £17m last summer.

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Alderweireld valuation between Man Utd and Tottenham remains far apart

Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur remain far apart in their valuation of a deal for Toby Alderweireld, according to Sky sources.

Sky Sports News understands United are interested in the Belgium international, with Spurs pricing the defender in excess of £50m.

The 29-year-old has one year left on his current contract, with an option for a one-year extension that includes a £25m release clause for next summer, but talks over a new deal have continued to stall.

At this stage, sources understand United forward Anthony Martial, who has told Jose Mourinho he wants to leave, is unlikely to end up at Spurs despite the club's long-standing interest in him, meaning United would need to meet the full asking price for Alderweireld.

However, United do not share Spurs' valuation of a player with a year left on his current contract.

Any potential move for Alderweireld is expected to go to the final days of the window, which closes on August 9 for Premier League clubs.

Earlier this month, Alderweireld said his prolonged spell out of Tottenham's first-team last season was "unjustified", while he admitted he was still unsure about his future.

Another potential outcome is that Alderweireld and Tottenham could yet agree terms on a new contract but that is looking increasingly unlikely, according to Sky sources.

Jose Mourinho is looking to bolster his defensive options ahead of the new season. On Wednesday, Sky Sports News reported United have approached Leicester regarding England centre-back Harry Maguire.

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Friday, July 27, 2018

Our best day on tour so far

Thursday - the day after Manchester United beat Milan in that epic penalty shootout - was the best day so far on Tour 2018, presented by Aon.

Why? Because the whole tour party woke up to see Sir Alex Ferguson’s video message on ManUtd.com.

Checking your phone seems to be the first thing most people do these days, even if it means immediately being exposed to work emails and a list of tasks to be done that day. But today, the phone-check wasn't a chore, it was a pleasure. What a boost it was for us all to see the great man looking so well and pledging to be back at Old Trafford in the new season.

The morning was a quiet one of rest and recovery for the players after their exertions against Milan. Twenty-six penalties! I’ve never commentated on a shootout like that and I was in severe danger of losing track of the score before confirming to our MUTV viewers that United had, in fact, won 9-8.

After a long night at the StubHub Center, the subsequent training session was switched from the morning to the afternoon at UCLA so the players were fresher.

It was the penultimate session at an amazing facility that has become United’s second home, but it was also a first workout for new signing Fred who has just joined us on tour. The Brazilian put in a shift in an individual session with strength and conditioning coach Gary Walker.

David De Gea is also now with us after arriving in Los Angeles and it was great to see him and the warm welcome he received from his team-mates.

The players were also delighted to meet wrestler Rey Mysterio, a United fan, who was our latest special guest at training. I'm not sure my fellow MUTV presenter Mark Sullivan was as pleased to see him, at least not when the masked grappler was urged by Bojan Djordic to perform a manoeuvre on him!

Meanwhile, United legends Denis Irwin and Bryan Robson were whisked away for a tour of Fox Studios, where they joined me in seeing film sets, the sound stage and the costume department. For example, I was thrilled to see Nakatomo Tower from Die Hard. Sadly there was no sign of Hans Gruber, the German villain who was played in the famous action movie by the late, great British actor Alan Rickman.

To round off the day, a number of us took the opportunity to see the Los Angeles derby as Major League Soccer's new boys LA FC took on Zlatan Ibrahimovic’s LA Galaxy at the amazing Banc of California Stadium. Our former striker, who came to see us at UCLA earlier this week of course, didn't hit the net but it was great to see him play the full 90 as his side scored in the 82nd and 86th minutes to come back from 2-0 down and draw 2-2.

The next match for us? Well, it's the small matter of United facing our old friends from just up the road, Liverpool, at the Big House, Ann Arbor at 5pm on Saturday. That's a perfect time to watch if you're reading this back home - 10pm on Saturday night, live on MUTV.

That's got to be worth switching over for, even if Die Hard happens to be on another channel.

The opinions expressed in this article are personal to the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Manchester United.

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A message from Sir Alex

Following his recent illness, Manchester United's legendary former manager Sir Alex Ferguson has asked us to share a personal message, to pass on his gratitude for all the support he’s received during his recovery.

Sir Alex said: “Hello. Just a quick message, first of all to thank the medical staff at Macclesfield, Salford Royal and Alexandra hospitals.

”Believe me, without those people, who gave me such great care, I would not be sitting here today. So thank you from me and my family, thank you very much.

“It's made me feel so humble, as have all the messages I've received from all over the world, wishing me the best. And the good wishes do resonate very, very strongly with me. So thank you for that support you've given me.

”Lastly, I'll be back later in the season to watch the team. In the meantime, all the best to Jose and the players. Thank you very much.“

We're all looking forward to seeing you back in your seat at Old Trafford very soon, Sir Alex.

Thursday, July 26, 2018

Jose: Klopp's change in transfer policy at Liverpool is 'funny'

Jose Mourinho believes Liverpool's summer spending means they face immense pressure to win the Premier League, with the Manchester United boss labelling Jurgen Klopp's change in transfer policy as "funny".

Klopp has been forced to defend Liverpool's expenditure on players, which topped £170m after signing goalkeeper Alisson last week, two years after the Liverpool boss was critical of United's £90m move for Paul Pogba.

Speaking after the friendly against AC Milan - which United won 9-8 in a shootout after a 1-1 draw - Mourinho was in a jovial mood when asked about Liverpool's transfer business, but stressed there will now be a "demand" for the club to end their 28-year wait for a league title.

"I think if you have the money, if you invest well, it is better than to have it in the bank. Because the interest rates are very low," Mourinho said.


"The problem is you have to invest well and honestly I think they did very well, because every player they bought are quality players. I'm happy for them.


"And I'm also happy to smile [about Klopp's previous comments] and to see that, you know, you can change your opinion and change as a person, it's funny.

"That's okay, but maybe this season finally you demand that they win. I think you have to be fair and now you have to demand [they win the league].

"You have to say the team, with the investments not just this season, last season, that you made in January, that you make now, because that will probably be the record for the Premier League this season, I can't see anyone else getting close to spending what they have.

"A team that was a finalist in the Champions League, you have to say you are a big candidate, you have to win."

United and Liverpool go head to head in the International Champions Cup on Sunday at the Michigan Stadium.

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Andreas Pereira praises Manchester United coach Michael Carrick

Manchester United midfielder Andreas Pereira says he feels lucky to have former player Michael Carrick as his coach.

Pereira, who spent the last two seasons out on loan at Granada and Valencia, has been involved in United's pre-season tour of the US.

The 22-year-old has started both games so far and impressed in the holding midfield role against San Jose Earthquakes - the same position Carrick, who retired at the end of last season to take up a first-team coaching position, played in.

"He is very good with me," Pereira said of Carrick. "He always tells me what to do and helps me in training. If I do something wrong, he will tell me.

"Even if I do something good, he will tell me as well. It is very useful as well because he played in the same position.


"It is very easy to learn off him. So if he tells you something, it is so easy to pick it up because you understand it straight away. I am very lucky he is there for me."

Pereira made his United debut in August 2014 but has only made 12 first-team appearances since then.

Despite going out on loan twice - the midfielder insists he wants to push for first-team football in the Premier League.

"It is my intention to stay here and help the club and team," he said. "That is my first intention. I want to everything I can to stay at the club and help United this season.

"I have always been a midfielder and when I was young I always played as a midfielder but anywhere the manager tells me to play I will play and try to do my best.

"So now I am playing the No 6 role, I can play the No 8 role as well. I am just picking it up and learning in training from Carrick and the manager himself. They are helping a lot and I will try to do my best to play there."

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Shaw hopes to start the Premier League season

Luke Shaw hopes to earn a place in the starting XI for Manchester United's opening Premier League fixture against Leicester City, at the start of what will hopefully be a positive season for the left-back.

Now entering his fifth campaign with the Reds, the 23-year-old has suffered numerous injuries and in particular a broken leg which was sustained in 2015.

Yet Shaw has appeared fit and raring to go throughout Tour 2018, presented by Aon, and he is enthused about the challenges ahead.

“I'm really excited,” Shaw told us in Los Angeles. “This is what you work towards, the start of the season, during pre-season. I'm really looking forward to it and hopefully when the first game comes, I'm ready and I can get to start a game.

”I want to play as many games as possible this season. Hopefully I can cement a place and play many more games than I did last season because, at the end of the day, I want to be playing football matches and hopefully I can do that this season.“

Tour 2018 has seen several youngsters accompany the first-team regulars to the United States. If the first two pre-season games are anything to go on, the prospects have not shied away from opportunities.

Shaw feels the experienced members of the squad have made the Academy players feel welcome, not just on the pitch but off it as well.

“It's nice to get to know the young ones,” Luke told us. “For the young lads, it's great to get to know them a bit more and help them settle in - everyone's enjoying it.

”There's a bit of table tennis, so everyone's playing that, and FIFA and there's also a bit of Fortnite going on. I was playing with the two young ones yesterday, Jimmy [Garner] and Mason [Greenwood]. It's a bit of banter and it's a competition, everyone wants to win. It's good energy and good fun.“

We also quizzed Luke on who the funniest, loudest and best-dressed players of the squad were - with some unlikely names receiving the honours...

“Anthony [Martial] makes me laugh, in his own way. But I'd have to say Andreas Pereira, he's funny. I can't explain why he's so funny, but the way he acts and says things, it makes me laugh.

“In terms of the loudest, I'd say Tim Fosu-Mensah. You'd think he's quite a quiet person, but when he's talking and when he's around the place he seems to be quite loud, so I'd say Timmo is the loudest.

”You'd always have to put yourself up there,“ when asked about the best-dressed player. ”Granty looks decent, so does Chris, so I don't know, it's a hard one. Right now, I'd have to say Granty is edging it for me.“

Mourinho mulls over right-back dilemma

Jose Mourinho has admitted he has a selection issue at right-back for Manchester United’s remaining pre-season games.

Regular captain Antonio Valencia has left the squad in the United States to return home after picking up what is believed to be a calf injury in the first half of the goalless draw with San Jose Earthquakes, which is expected to sideline the Ecuadorian for the start of the 2018/19 campaign.

Ashley Young and Victor Lindelof, who both fulfilled the role at times last season, are still away on holiday after reaching the latter stages of the World Cup with England and Sweden respectively.

The boss has already suggested that summer signing Diogo Dalot isn’t expected to be available until September as he recovers from the injury he sustained while at his former club FC Porto.

Speaking after the Reds beat AC Milan on penalties in our International Champions Cup opener in California, Mourinho confirmed that Matteo Darmian, who has featured in all three of the Reds’pre-season fixtures so far, has expressed a desire to leave and he won’t stand in the Italian’s way if the club receives the right offer.

“Matteo wants to leave and I think when a player wants to leave, if the right offer arrives, you have to be human and let the player follow his instincts but not at any price obviously and, until now, the offers we’ve got for Matteo are not even close to being accepted,” said Jose in his post-match press conference.

While assessing his options for the right-back berth, the boss also confirmed that Lindelof will return to training next week, ahead of his second full season at the club.

“Valencia is injured and he’ll be injured for the beginning of the Premier League [season]. Diogo Dalot is also in [the] recovering phase, he’ll not be ready for the beginning of the Premier League.“

Jose went on: “Ashley Young, who is a possibility to play [at] right-back, is on holiday. I don’t know if he fancies to be back before that and to put himself available for the team or if he prefers to stay on holiday, I don’t know.

“Victor Lindelof is another possibility to play right-back. He’s not a right-back, but it’s a possibility to play and Victor starts training next Monday. I will send people to Manchester to start training with Victor.

“For him, it doesn’t make sense to come to the US on Monday when we leave on Tuesday. So, if Matteo leaves, he leaves because the right offer arrives. If Matteo stays, I’m very happy, and then yes, you are right, if he stays he can be important for us.”

The boss handed the captain’s armband to Darmian against AC Milan, the club where he started his career, and praised the defender’s professionalism during his three years with the Reds so far.

“First of all [I gave him] the captaincy because he’s a fantastic guy and a tremendous professional in my two years and also I believe with Mr [Louis] van Gaal before me. He’s the kind of guy that’s always ready to give what he has.

“He grew up at AC Milan and for him, to play against his childhood club and to be the captain has a nice meaning, even in a friendly.”

Should Darmian not be available, it effectively leaves Tim Fosu-Mensah, who played regularly at right-back on loan at Crystal Palace last season, as probably the only option to the boss for the Reds’ final three warm-up matches before our Premier League opener against Leicester City on 10 August. Axel Tuanzebe and Ro-Shaun Williams have also operated in the position in the past.