DStv Channel 403 Thursday, 10 October 2024

Man Utd's Champions League return clouded by ownership uncertainty

Manchester United fans displayed "Glazers out" banners as they secured a return to Champions League football next season

LONDON - Manchester United are back in the Champions League but a bright future under Erik ten Hag remains clouded by uncertainty over the ownership of the English giants.

Ten Hag ensured a top-four finish in his first season in charge of the Red Devils on Thursday with a 4-1 demolition of Chelsea.

The Dutchman has also ended United's six-year trophy drought by lifting the League Cup in February and the best could even be yet to come should Ten Hag's men upset Manchester City's charge towards the treble at Wembley on June 3.

Ten Hag has performed a miraculous turnaround since getting off to the worst start of any United manager since 1921.

Embarrassing defeats to Brighton and Brentford in his first two matches are now long forgotten.

The former Ajax boss earned a reputation as a disciplinarian after making his players run 14 kilometres after the 4-0 humiliation at Brentford in August - the combined distance the Bees ran more than his players during the game.

Erik ten Hag has taken Manchester United back into the Premier League's top four in his first season in charge
AFP | Oli SCARFF

But Ten Hag's strict approach has paid dividends as he also won the club's backing in a standoff that saw Cristiano Ronaldo depart mid-season for Saudi Arabia.

"He's proved that he's got the seriousness, the confidence and the authority to be able to make big decisions," said former United captain Gary Neville on Ten Hag's man-management.

Yet, the United fanbase is torn between hope, at what their manager could achieve with the right backing, and helplessness as a drawn out process to sell the club threatens to drag well into the summer transfer window.

All the while, their rivals are able to forge ahead tying down targets in the transfer market.

United have gone a decade without a Premier League title and Ten Hag knows he needs support if he is to become the first man since Alex Ferguson to make them champions of England again.

"Now we are far away," he said on challenging Manchester City at the top end of the Premier League next season.

"We have a lot of work to do. We've made progress but we need better players to compete for the highest level."

The question remains who will be in place to deliver the quality Ten Hag craves in the coming months.

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