Another one bites the dust. Ruben Amorim’s doomed Manchester United reign is over, sacked after just 14 months and leaving Old Trafford in a deeper mess than he found it. The brutal truth is this: it doesn’t matter who’s in the dugout. The problems at United are now so deep, so systemic, that no manager on earth can revive this corpse of a club.
Amorim, hailed as a tactical genius when he arrived from Sporting Lisbon, is just the latest patsy. He won 25 of 63 games and leaves United staring at their worst league finish in 50 years. He clung to his stubborn 3-4-3 system like a life raft, even when it was clear the players couldn’t swim. “Not even the Pope could get me to change,” he famously said. In the end, not even the Pope could save him.
The cracks were everywhere. His final, tetchy press conference said it all. “I was appointed to be the manager, not just the coach,” he snapped, a blatant dig at director of football Jason Wilcox. Another transfer window, another £200m spent on Bryan Mbeumo, Matheus Cunha, Benjamin Sesko and still the team got worse. The board throws cash at problems it created, then wonders why the chemistry’s all wrong.
Then there’s the kids. United’s famed academy, the lifeblood of the club, has been left to rot. Kobbie Mainoo, a star for England last summer, can’t get a Premier League start. When youngsters like Harry Amass dared to question him online, Amorim moaned about a “feeling of entitlement”. He’s missed the point entirely. The entitlement stinks from the top, not the academy.
They prioritised the Europa League last season and lost the final. They crashed out the League Cup to Grimsby Town. They’ve just drawn with Wolves and Leeds. This is the grim reality. A club run by committees, leaking authority, with no clear plan beyond the next headline.
So where does this leave them? Sixth in the table, miles off the pace, searching for a SEVENTH permanent boss since Fergie left. Amorim was meant to be the modern saviour. Instead, he’s just the latest name on the casualty list, proof that the poison at United isn’t in the manager’s office. It’s in the boardroom, the scouting department, the very soul of the place. Until that changes, they can hire Pep Guardiola tomorrow. And he’d fail, too.