The circus continues. As the dust settles on Ruben Amorim’s sacking, the football world is arguing over who’d be daft enough to take the Manchester United hotseat next. Jamie Carragher reckons it’s still a plum job, but Gary Neville’s warned the club is staring into a managerial abyss with no elite candidates available.
“It’s one of the biggest clubs in the world and always will be,” the former Liverpool defender insisted on Sky Sports. “Imagine being the guy who gets it right. And someone sooner or later will get it right at United. The club is too big to consistently fail.”
But his old rival Neville slapped down that optimism with a heavy dose of reality. “I don’t think the manager pool is full right now in terms of great talents,” he said, pointing to Chelsea’s appointment of Liam Rosenior as proof of a shortage. “I am not sure where United would go but I think it’s clever to wait till the summer.”
The internal pressure is mounting. Former first team coach Rene Meulensteen urged the hierarchy to finally get a proven winner. “They need somebody with pedigree. Someone who understands the Premier League, who’s been successful in it,” he told BBC 5 Live. “Someone with a strong personality, with charisma. Because right now, it’s a complete mess.”
That “complete mess” line was echoed by ex keeper Mark Bosnich, who summed up the fans’ fury. “The supporters will be tearing their hair out because they want to know what’s going on and they deserve to know,” he said.
Amid the chaos, the players have started their farewells. Captain Bruno Fernandes led the tributes, posting “Thank you, sir!” online, a curious gesture from a player who recently revealed the club were willing to sell him to Saudi Arabia last summer. Harry Maguire also shared a photo, thanking Amorim for everything.
So the search begins again. But the question isn’t just who wants it. It’s whether any manager, no matter their pedigree, can survive the poison at the heart of Old Trafford. They’ve tried the bright young thing. They’ve tried the experienced hand. They’ve all been chewed up and spat out. The job might be “attractive” in theory, but in reality, it’s a graveyard.