Leeds United: Fans react to Kalvin Phillips’ big moment in centenary game

Marking Leeds United’s 100-year anniversary as a football club, it’s only fitting that Leeds-born youngster Kalvin Phillips scores the winning goal on an occasion to remember. 

Not only was United’s 1-0 victory at home to Birmingham crucial in keeping up the race for promotion, but it was also a wonderful way to celebrate your landmark centenary year as a football club.

Marcelo Bielsa’s side pressed repeatedly to break the deadlock for the majority of the game, and just when Leeds fans were thinking it may not be their side’s day, Phillips stepped up to the plate and sent Elland Road into party mode.

Taking advantage of some sloppy play out from the back by the visitors, Man City loanee Jack Harrison latched onto a loose ball and fed Phillips for the only goal of the game.

Celebrating a monumental occasion, Lilywhites supporters took to social media to praise the local lad for delivering on such a special day.

Southgate to Spurs would be immensely damaging for international football

The trajectory of an England national football coach is usually a straightforward affair. First they cut their managerial teeth at an ‘unfashionable’ club. In Graham Taylor’s case that was Lincoln City. For Glenn Hoddle it was Swindon Town. For both Sir Alf Ramsey and Sir Bobby Robson it was at Ipswich’s Portman Road where they first learned the ropes, made their mistakes and eventually achieved enormous success.

Indeed so successful were the respective duo that they each went straight from Suffolk to Lancaster Gate, with the former having taken the Tractor Boys on an incredible journey all the way from the Third Division South right up to being crowned as English champions. Robson meanwhile fashioned a side that consistently punched above their weight, twice finishing runner-up in Division One and in 1981 winning the UEFA Cup.

Before Graham Taylor was given the national reins it was necessary for him to prove himself at bigger clubs – with a decade at Watford and a decent spell at Aston Villa – because with all due respect to the Imps you cannot expect to be awarded a job traditionally considered equal in importance to the Prime Minister merely by excelling in the lower leagues. The same thinking applied to Hoddle at Swindon despite him turning the Robins around and achieving promotion to the top flight. First he needed three good years at glamorous Chelsea before England came calling.

This makes sense. Of course it does. Nobody expects to be promoted to foreman after doing well as a teaboy. Nobody takes a shortcut to being made CEO no matter how much they shine on the ground floor.

In the instance of Gareth Southgate however this time-honoured timeline is all messed up. After hanging up his boots in 2006 he was soon after given the top job at a Premier League club for his first forays into the technical area. If this in itself is unusual that pales to what followed next because at Middlesbrough he was initially underwhelming and consequently deemed a failure. If that sounds harsh it is less so when his three seasons in charge are broken down. For the first two campaigns Boro bobbed along, not really doing much at all. Then they got relegated.

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A sacking duly followed whereupon Southgate wandered into the wilderness for a short while until he was entrusted with the England Under 21 set-up in 2013. Here again he underwhelmed, taking a promising cache of youngsters that included John Stones and Harry Kane to the 2015 Euros only to see them finish rock bottom of Group B.

It was a surprise then that Southgate was subsequently awarded the most prestigious job in his field, that of national coach, though perhaps it was less of a shock when we consider the circumstances. In light of Sam Allardyce’s controversial departure the FA clearly felt the need to install a proverbial safe pair of hands at the wheel; a ‘company man’ if you will.

Still, this was a route undertaken that is essentially the polar opposite of all who preceded him. Whereas they excelled at club level, thus proving themselves highly capable and more so an outstanding candidate among their peers Southgate had previously only shown relative ineptitude. Now here he was, England’s manager.

We all know what came next. The upturn in results and the routine qualification for the 2018 World Cup. The reaching of a semi-final and the waistcoat.

The emergence of a young and vibrant team and the attaining of another semi-final, this time in the Nations League. From these successes Southgate doubled down on distancing himself from his predecessors because, while they forged a reputation that saw them eventually rewarded with the prized position of national coach, it was in the prized position where his reputation was made. That’s going about things the wrong way around. That’s unheard of.

With that in mind the rumours recently linking him to the Spurs job should Mauricio Pochettino move on brings with it a fascinating scenario, one that sadly illustrates the diminishing of international football’s standing in the modern game. Because for the first time since 1977 when Don Revie left his England post for a lucrative contract in the UAE the FA will have lost their man – not of their own volition and very much reluctantly – to club football, and this after creating him as their own.

The Tottenham crisis deepens even further in the video below…

Now, were we feeling mischievous we might say this would be a long overdue taste of their own medicine. For decades the FA have lured managers from clubs who were flying high and they were flying high because that club dared to take a risk on the individual in question. England simply swooped in and reaped the benefit.

But the role reversal should Southgate indeed be tempted by a switch to north London would go far deeper than that. It would in fact be the summation of a worrying trend that has seen the all-encompassing, box-office big five leagues of Europe relegate their international equivalents to that of a cottage industry by comparison.

Can you imagine Jurgen Klopp leaving Anfield to take on the Germany job? The proposition is ludicrous yet years ago if the German DFB reached out Liverpool would be justifiably concerned. Is it feasible that Brendan Rodgers will become Northern Ireland manager anytime soon? Perhaps in semi-retirement and only then.

Bluntly, Northern Ireland, Wales, Scotland, and yes England too are now way down the pecking order when it comes to a manager’s wish-list. They are jobs to take in order to revive a career, or in Southgate’s case, to make your name in the first place.

Here’s a stark fact: where once the home nations were bossed by the best at that point their country had produced – with a roll-call in living memory that includes Bobby Robson, Jock Stein, John Toshack and Terry Venables – now collectively the four managers in charge have three club trophies on their C.V. All come courtesy of Michael O’Neill, who took Shamrock Rovers to two League of Ireland titles and also won the Setanta Sports Cup.

Should Gareth Southgate leave behind all of his fantastic work with England for the bright lights of the Premier League, it will be the final confirmation that the lustre of leading your country is now akin to bossing Burnley or even coaching Charlton.

Ok, not quite, but it will be a damning indictment nonetheless, particularly given the steps he has taken to reunite a nation that had become completely disenchanted with international football prior to his appointment.

Where once it was deemed on a par with residing in 10 Downing Street, the England job would merely resemble a stepping stone onto bigger and better things if Spurs were to put him in the hot seat.

Liverpool will never see Wijnaldum’s goalscoring side under Jurgen Klopp’s system

This article is part of Football FanCast’s The Chalkboard series, which provides a tactical insight into teams, players, managers, potential signings and more… 

Georginio Wijnaldum has been in stunning form for the Netherlands recently, but there are two reasons he will never replicate that form for Liverpool.

The names of those two reasons? Trent Alexander-Arnold and Andy Robertson.

Wijnaldum left Reds fans baffled as to how he can look like two completely different players again during this latest international break, as he scored twice in a Dutch victory over Belarus.

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His first strike was a deft header after some clever movement, and his second was an absolutely thunderous effort from outside the box.

He now has six goals and three assists in his last 11 international appearances after only scoring 14 in 151 Liverpool games, leaving some fans to wonder why on Earth he doesn’t replicate that form at Anfield.

Quite simply though, the £25m man will never produce those sorts of numbers for Liverpool because Jurgen Klopp’s system does not allow him to.

As has been pointed out in the past by Sky Sports, Liverpool’s style under Klopp relies heavily on the creativity of Robertson and Alexander-Arnold, leaving the midfield trio to string things together, switch the play, trigger counter attacks and stop opposition counters.

While it would be harsh to say Robertson and Alexander-Arnold racked up a combined 28 assists last season due solely to their advanced positions in Klopp’s formation, they certainly could not have produced those sorts of numbers if they were forever having to stay back because Wijnaldum or the other midfielders had ventured too far forward in search of goals.

The heat-maps below show Liverpool’s full-back duo’s average touch position across their last three wins, against Leicester, RB Salzburg and Sheffield United (WhoScored).

Not only do the pair rack up over 200 combined touches in all three games, they get on the ball in very advanced positions, almost playing as if they are wing-backs in front of a back three. They are only able to do this because the likes of Fabinho and Wijnaldum shield the centre-backs and prevent counter attacks.

In Wijnaldum’s two-goal display against Belarus, his full-backs were Daley Blind and Joel Veltman, hardly the type to bomb forward and rack up assists, playing much further back than the Liverpool pair and allowing their midfield trio to be more adventurous.

Of course, Winaldum did score at Bramall Lane due to a goalkeeping error, but if any Liverpool fans are hoping that is going to become a regular occurrence because of his international form, they are sadly mistaken.

Klopp’s system forces the former Newcastle ace to be more conservative, and with the Reds sitting top of the league with 24 points from 24, a certain saying about not fixing things that aren’t broken comes to mind.

Man Utd fans drool over Robert Lewandowski’s goal-scoring display against Spurs

After having to sit through Marcus Rashford’s woeful display against Arsenal, it’s little surprise to see Manchester United fans looking on with envy at some of European football’s best strikers.

In a truly forgettable performance at Old Trafford on Monday night, Rashford saw none of his three shots find the back of the net, whilst his most most memorable moment of the match came when he managed to get his legs in a tangle whilst clean through on goal.

While the Red Devils may not be involved in the Champions League themselves, that didn’t stop some United fans tuning into Bayern Munich’s ruthless demolition of Tottenham on Tuesday night.

The Bavarian giants ran out 7-2 winners, and Robert Lewandowski underlined his credentials as one of the world’s most feared marksmen with two goals.

The Poland international was reported to have been of interest to United earlier this summer, but a move to Old Trafford failed to materialise.

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After seeing the 31-year-old’s display in north London, Red Devils fans flooded to Twitter to share their thoughts about the striker.

Many supporters of the Manchester side urged the club to sign the Polish striker, and insisted he would be a far better option than what they already have at the club.

Some fans even bemoaned how they missed out on him previously, with one fan in particular suggesting they should have gone for him instead of Romelu Lukaku back in 2017.

Check out some of the reaction of United fans below:

Manchester City: Fans want Riyad Mahrez to be first-choice right-winger

Riyad Mahrez’s 24th-minute goal set Manchester City on their way to a 3-0 win over Shakhtar Donetsk in the Champions League last night. [via Sky Sports]

The Algeria winger also ended the game with an assist, setting up Ilkay Gundogan’s goal to make it 2-0 to the visitors shortly before half-time. [via Sky Sports]

In addition to his contribution last night, the 28-year-old has provided three assists in the Premier League already this season, but has started just two of their five league matches so far in 2019/20 and had 308 minutes of game time. [via TransferMarkt.co.uk]

Mahrez’s main competition on the right-wing has been Bernardo Silva, who has started three of their first five league games and played for 347 minutes so far this season. However, the Portugal forward has only one goal and one assist to his name in 2019/20 and had to be content with a late appearance off the bench against Shakhtar.

These Manchester City fans on Twitter feel that Mahrez should be Pep Guardiola’s first-choice right-winger instead of Bernardo Silva:

Do you think Mahrez or Bernardo Silva should be Manchester City’s main option on the right wing? Join in the discussion by commenting below!

Liverpool fans react to Virgil van Dijk contract report

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Lots of Liverpool fans have taken to Twitter to react to the news that Virgil van Dijk has committed his future to the club by agreeing a new six-year contract.

The Mirror report that the Netherlands international’s current deal was not meant to expire until 2023 as per the five-year deal he signed upon joining the club in a £75m move from Southampton.

Van Dijk’s new terms will see him net a weekly wage closer to £200k-a-week, having previously earned £125k-a-week at Anfield with bonuses for clean sheets and appearances.

After agreeing the new deal, the former Celtic man will remain at Anfield until 2025 with Liverpool tying the player down for the best years of his career.

Having just won the Champions League and UEFA Super Cup, as well as being named UEFA Men’s Player of the Year ahead of Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo, this is incredibly exciting news for the Merseysiders.

Let’s see how the Liverpool fans on Twitter reacted…

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Arsenal’s Unai Emery doesn’t have a plan, according to Simon Jordan

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Simon Jordan has slammed Unai Emery and has questioned whether he has what it takes to manage a top Premier League club.

What did he say?

Arsenal started the season well, beating Newcastle United and Burnley in their first two Premier League games 1-0 and 2-1 respectively.

However, they were then defeated 3-1 by Liverpool on Saturday, and easily so. New signing David Luiz was amongst the Gunners’ worst performers, but there were plenty of culprits on the day.

And former Crystal Palace chairman Jordan has questioned Emery’s credentials after the loss. Talking on talkSPORT’s Press Box, he said:

“I’ve got this image in my mind of Unai Emery, thinking that there is something about him. But maybe there just isn’t?

“Because I have got Sevilla in my mind and the Europa League and what he has done there, but maybe there just isn’t.

“I think there’s a plan, but when I see transactions like Luiz I think ‘no, there is not a plan’.”

AFTV’s Robbie has his say on Arsenal’s owners in the video below…

Give him time

It may have been a disappointing result for the Gunners at Anfield, but there is still plenty to be positive about. After all, they are not really competing with the Reds at the moment because, along with Manchester City, Jurgen Klopp’s side were miles ahead of the pack last season.

Against the Toon and the Clarets, Arsenal picked up wins in the sort of matches they wouldn’t have always done in the past. They were both tight affairs against awkward opposition, yet Emery’s men stayed strong to pick up maximum points, and the manager deserves credit for that.

It must also not be forgotten that the former PSG boss is attempting to integrate several players into his side. New signings Dani Ceballos and Nicolas Pepe are yet to fully adjust to the Premier League, whilst Joe Willock and Reiss Nelson are far from regulars at the Emirates Stadium. Luiz’s performance can be questioned, but he has the experience and the CV to indicate that he will be an important player for the Gunners.

Winning three Europa Leagues is no mean feat and should not be taken lightly. Once the new players adjust, the Gunners could be a very difficult proposition.

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'We knew the team was rattled … the bowlers were saying 'we are actually scared''

In the final part of a series in conjunction with BT Sport, we look at how the fearsome Gabba holds the key to England’s hopes of retaining the Ashes in Australia

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‘Australia realise that The Gabba is their fortress’

As England’s cricketers went through the motions in their final four-day warm-up in Townsville last week, they did so in the knowledge that nothing they have experienced comes close to replicating what awaits when the Ashes get underway in Brisbane on Thursday.”We’re going to be tested a hell of a lot more,” said England’s first centurion of the tour, Mark Stoneman – with “hell” being the operative word so far as the legend of the “Gabbatoir” is concerned. This infamous venue has been Australia’s impenetrable fortress for nigh on three decades, and for those who have played there in recent Ashes contests, it represents the single biggest obstacle to England’s hopes of retaining the urn.”Brisbane is intimidating,” says Michael Vaughan, England’s Ashes-winning captain in 2005 and now a BT Sport commentator. “The pitch is quicker and the Australians just seem to be more … Australian than across the whole of the country. If you can come through Brisbane, as a team and a person, you’ve got a chance.”That is, however, the biggest ‘if’ in the world of Test cricket. England have not won a Test at the Gabba since 1986-87, when Ian Botham’s last hurrah kickstarted Mike Gatting’s Ashes-winning campaign, and had it not been for an opportune thunderstorm on the 1998-99 tour, they would have been trounced in six of their last seven visits. And moreover, each of those defeats was immediately followed up by another timid loss in the second Test – 2-0 down in the blink of an eye, the series all but over.Mitchell Johnson claimed nine wickets at the Gabba in 2013•Getty Images”The Gabba is an intimidating Test-match full stop, because of Australia’s record there and because it is the first match of the series,” says ESPN’s Mark Butcher. “The build-up to an Ashes series is unlike any other, particularly if you’ve never played in one before. So you’ve gone through the whole thing of being virtually strip-searched at customs when you arrive, to the constant pressure and barracking from guys in the reception at hotels to the newspapers. A combination of all those things makes the Gabba particularly intimidating.””Brisbane can completely unlock your team, your culture, your ethic,” says Vaughan, who experienced a brutal baptism on the 2002-03 tour. “Your individuals within the team can suddenly become scared and fearful of the Australians. Because Australia, I think, realise what they’ve got in Brisbane. I think they realise that is their cauldron. For that week of cricket, two days of preparations, five days of a Test match, they hold the key to winning any series that they play.”In fact, its reputation is so fearsome that, twice in recent Gabba history, England’s challenge has effectively been over before a legal delivery has been bowled. In 2002-03, Nasser Hussain infamously won the toss and chose to bowl first – a tacit admission that his team were not up to the challenge, and Australia’s first-day scoreline of 364 for 2 amply reinforced that point.”You have to get your mentality right for the Gabba,” says Vaughan. “I remember Matthew Hayden smacking Andrew Caddick in about the third over. I dropped a catch, and fumbled one early because I was a bit panicky and nervous.”And then there was the Simon Jones incident,” Vaughan adds, recalling the horrific moment on the first morning of the match, when Jones slid on the boundary’s edge and ruptured the ligaments in his right knee. “The crowd gave him nothing. There was no sympathy until they realised it was serious. But for two or three minutes, it was like ‘c’mon Jones, get up mate!’ Get up and bowl. But the kid’s struggling.”And then, four years later, another England fast bowler was in the spotlight. Armed with the new ball and with the eyes of the cricket world zeroed in on him, Steve Harmison’s first delivery of the 2006-07 series was such a yawning wide that it ended up in the hands of Andrew Flintoff at second slip. The contrast with Harmison’s hostility on the opening day of the previous series, at Lord’s in 2005, was stark and stunningly dispiriting for England and their followers.Steve Harmison’s first ball heads for second slip•Getty ImagesLooking back, however, Kevin Pietersen wasn’t quite so convinced of the moment’s significance. “I didn’t see it as big a deal as bowling to second slip or third slip, who cares?” he says. “Anyone can bowl that ball; my only issue with that day was that we bowled so much that was short and wide. I was at backward point, and at the end of that day my legs were broken, I was running out to that boundary, fetching so many balls.”The exception to the rule of English misery at the Gabba was truly exceptional. England’s triumphant tour of 2010-11 was forged on the final day of the first Test, when Alastair Cook’s double-hundred guided England to the remarkable second-innings scoreline of 517 for 1. And yet, even on that occasion, the best-drilled Ashes tourists in recent memory were debilitated by stage fright on the opening day of the contest, when Andrew Strauss, their captain, holed out for a second-ball duck, before Peter Siddle’s hat-trick ripped the roof off a passionate and pumped-up stadium.”There’s just something about Brisbane,” says Vaughan. “At Adelaide, there’s a festival atmosphere of cricket. It’s almost like going to the races, you feel you’re at an occasion of joy.”Brisbane is not an occasion of joy. The dressing rooms for a start, they are down underneath, so it’s like you are like locked into the dungeon, then you get released into this concrete jungle and the heat … the heat just hits you as you come through the tunnel from an air-conditioned dressing-room.”And that heat, as you can imagine, is not simply restricted to the weather. In 1974-75, the Gabba was the venue for one of the great Ashes muggings of all time, when Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson were unleashed on England’s unwitting tourists with the entire venue screaming them on. And that sensation was repeated, in no uncertain terms, on England’s most recent visit in 2013-14, when Mitchell Johnson – a figure of fun on the previous tour – unleashed fire and damnation, the like of which has rarely been witnessed.Johnson terrorised England’s batting with nine wickets in the match, including second-innings figures of 5 for 42, and left collateral damage strewn across England’s campaign, most notably in the case of Jonathan Trott, whose tour ended immediately after the match as he flew home from the tour with a stress-related condition.For Pietersen, that match had been his third visit to the Gabba, and even a player of his stature had never seen anything like Johnson’s bowling.”We knew that the team was rattled,” says Pietersen. “The bowlers were walking around saying ‘we are actually scared’.”I saw a few balls to Trotty and I was like ‘am I seeing things here, or is this ridiculously fast?’ So I took Mushtaq Ahmed [England’s spin coach] into the indoor nets before lunch, wet the tennis balls, and I said ‘Mushy, literally clean me out here, do whatever you can, from 10-12 yards away, just take me out!'””I’d never witnessed a spell of bowling from one individual with 40,000 people baying for blood,” says Vaughan, who watched the carnage unfold from the press box. “That noise of the run-up, then the quietness in that split-second of the release of the ball, and then noise again as the whole crowd all went “ooh!” You felt that every England batsman who went out there wasn’t just facing 90mph, they were facing 40,000 people. And that was as hostile as I’ve ever seen.”Forewarned is forearmed for this year’s England tourists. There’s no challenge quite like the one that they are about to begin.

Transfer hint? Neymar tells Lionel Messi & Luis Suarez ‘I wish I were there too’ amid talk of ex-Barcelona stars reforming ‘MSN’ strike partnership in MLS at Inter Miami

Neymar may have hinted at an Inter Miami transfer being possible, with the Brazilian telling Lionel Messi and Luis Suarez: “I wish I were there too.”

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  • Brazilian plying his trade in Saudi Arabia
  • Talk of contract being terminated
  • Has seen move to America speculated on
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    For now, South American superstar Neymar is plying his trade in the Saudi Pro League for Al-Hilal. He has, however, endured an injury-ravaged spell in the Middle East – with another knock being picked up shortly after returning from 12 months out with knee ligament damage.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    It is being suggested that Neymar’s lucrative contract could be terminated, allowing him to take on another challenge. There has been talk of him returning to his roots at Santos and plenty of rumours to suggest that he would be open to reforming Barcelona’s famous ‘MSN’ strike partnership alongside Messi and Suarez at MLS side Inter Miami.

  • WHAT NEYMAR SAID

    Neymar has been reunited with Messi and Suarez as part of a promotional campaign for eFootball, with the trio turning the clock back as they enter the world of virtual gaming and compete as an iconic Barcelona team that they once all graced. At the end of the video, Neymar tells his former team-mates – who are now turning out in Florida: “I wish I were there too”.

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  • WHAT NEXT?

    Inter Miami would need to free up space in their squad and salary cap in order to bring Neymar on board, but they do have plenty of time on their hands when it comes to planning for 2025. That is because another bid for MLS Cup glory has come to a close after suffering a shock play-off defeat to Atlanta United.

Contact made: Man Utd can follow Yoro coup with huge McTominay upgrade

The start of the new Premier League season remains just under a month away, yet Manchester United appear keen to get their business done swiftly now that Euro 2024 and the Copa America have drawn to a close, with Leny Yoro edging closer to becoming the club's second signing of the window.

Shock horror, the teenage centre-back – who is set to sign on an initial £52m deal from Ligue 1 side Lille – is neither Dutch nor has any prior Eredivisie connections, with this high-profile coup looking like a deal that has INEOS, rather than Erik ten Hag, written all over it.

Yoro's 2023/24 Ligue 1 season in numbers

32 games (30 starts)

2 goals

0 assists

92% pass accuracy rate

13 clean sheets

1.1 tackles per game

1.1 interceptions per game

3.9 balls recovered per game

65% aerial duels won

63% total duels won

Stats via Sofascore

With the 18-year-old's impending arrival set to follow the £36.5m capture of Bologna's Joshua Zirkzee, it remains to be seen what Dan Ashworth and co will have left in the coffers to pursue further targets, although that has not prevented speculation regarding additional recruits making their way to Manchester.

With the backline and the attacking ranks having already been strengthened, the next issue now appears to be bolstering the midfield unit, with the ageing duo of Casemiro and Christian Eriksen seemingly up for grabs, while Scott McTominay is believed to be generating significant interest at present.

As per Sky Sports, the Red Devils have reportedly rejected a bid of around £17m from Fulham for the Scotland international, with the Cottagers now debating whether to return with an improved offer for the 27-year-old.

This piece adds that with McTominay's future in doubt, United continue to keep tabs on Paris Saint-Germain star, Manuel Ugarte, having kept up contact with the French outfit over the potential signing of the £38m Uruguayan.

How Ugarte compares to Scott McTominay

Now, it must be said off the bat that Ugarte would not necessarily represent a direct replacement for McTominay in the centre of the park, with the latter man having typically operated in a more advanced attacking berth last season – culminating in career-best figures of ten goals in all competitions.

That said, much of the in-demand talent's work for the Old Trafford side has come at the base of the midfield in years gone by, while it is difficult to see him ousting either Bruno Fernandes or Kobbie Mainoo in those more advanced roles on a permanent basis.

As such, the main hope of McTominay nailing a starting berth would be in place of Casemiro in front of the back four, yet in that regard, Ugarte – who has been lauded for his "relentless" approach by writer Zach Lowy – would represent a significant upgrade.

That can be seen by the fact that in relation to his peers across Europe's top five leagues, the former Sporting CP warrior ranks in the top 1% for interceptions and the top 4% for tackles made per 90, with McTominay, meanwhile, ranking in just bottom 51% and the bottom 17% for those same two metrics, respectively.

What also sets the PSG man apart is the innate quality that he showcases on the ball, ranking in the top 5% across the last 365 days for pass completion (91.2% average), with his United counterpart ranking in just the bottom 44% (81% average) in that regard.

As Lowy also noted, there are games where it "seems he’s doing the defensive work of two players", such is Ugarte's presence as that midfield pivot, with such an addition no doubt needed after United were repeatedly left exposed last season – the midfield having been described as "non-existent" by Gary Neville at one stage.

With Ugarte a more natural fit to operate as a defensive-minded asset – while McTominay is something of an all-action, box-crashing threat – there would be wisdom in cashing in on the academy graduate to fund the Red Devils' pursuit.

Man Utd want to sign £84m "superstar" who's more exciting than Yoro

Manchester United are closing in on their second signing of the summer.

By
Matt Dawson

Jul 17, 2024

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