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Cristiano Ronaldo debacle proves how far Manchester United have fallen - The Warm-Up

Marcus Foley

Updated 17/08/2022 at 08:02 GMT

Thirteen-time Premier League winners Manchester United limp from one unsavoury crisis to another as Cristiano Ronaldo takes to social media to hit out at what he calls lies. Dele Alli looks set for a career-defining move to Besiktas and Ineos-backed Nice are putting together some gang on the French Riviera as Ben Brereton Diaz looks set to join Kasper Schmeichel and Aaron Ramsey at the club.

Ten Hag still unsure whether Ronaldo will remain at Man Utd

WEDNESDAY'S BIG STORIES

Manchester United have zero direction

Here is a timeline of Cristiano Ronaldo wanting to leave Manchester United:
23/06/22: Reports first emerge that Ronaldo wants out of Old Trafford.
02/07/22: Said reports are firmed up when Duncan Castles - revered for breaking Jorges Mendes-owned GestiFute-related news - reports in The Times that Ronaldo wants to play Champions League football next season.
28/07/22: Reports emerge that Jorge Mendes had made contact with Sporting Lisbon in an attempt to seal an emotional homecoming to the Champions League-competing team.
30/07/22: Ronaldo starts against Rayo Vallecano, plays just the first half - he leaves before the end of the match.
07/08/22: Ronaldo is a second-half substitute as Manchester United begin the season with a 2-1 loss against Brighton.
16/08/22: Manchester United - presumably - brief that Ronaldo has become a "negative presence at the club" who "hardly communicates with his team-mates in the canteen" and the club would consider allowing him to leave without lining up a replacement.
The above report prompted Ronaldo to reply to a fan account on social media.
“They know the truth when they interview [me] in a couple weeks,” the Portugal captain said.
“The media is telling lies. I have a notebook and in the last few months of the 100 news [stories] I made, only 5 were right. Imagine how it is. Stick with that tip.”
It is all a bit unsavoury. And unnecessary. And it could have been cleaner. In fact, a Big Club™ dictates the terms of a Transfer Saga™. As soon as it was clear Ronaldo wanted out - that would be 02/07/22, some 41 days ago - the club should have put the wheels in motion for a smooth face-saving exit.
The Noisy Neighbours™ Manchester City 20-odd minutes up the road have form here. When a player wants out - say Ferran Torres - they let them go, establishing the concept that No Player Is Bigger Than The Club™.
Here is Pep Guardiola on Torres wanting to leave:
“If you want to leave because you’re not happy here, you believe you’ll be happy in another place, you have to go. The career is short. One day, it’s over.”
Ultimately, cohesion at a football club is as integral as talent, and Big Clubs™ and Well-Run Clubs™ understand this. That Manchester United did not understand this makes them neither a Big Club™ nor a Well-Run Club™ anymore.
That we are two games into the season, and United are now willing to let Ronaldo go - such is his negative impact at the club - and risk not getting a replacement in just underlines how far United have fallen.
They are a mess. They have been since Sir Alex Ferguson left in 2013. This however may be the messiest they have been. They are a club without direction, limping from one mess to another.

Pep Guardiola is right - football is a short career and Dele Alli proves it

Dele Alli looks set to move to Besiktas. His fall has been swift.
The 26-year-old is an exceptionally gifted player. Yet, to try to categorise him is tricky. He is neither a conventional midfielder nor a conventional striker. He is somewhere in between.
He was at his best when he played 'off' Harry Kane at Tottenham. During the 2017-18 season, he scored 18 goals in 35 Premier League starts, or 22 goals in 50 games in all competitions.
When Tottenham moved away from a system that facilitated that, his form dipped. There will be other factors at play - like injuries - but he has never been the same player since Tottenham - and football in general - moved away from systems that suited his skillset.
A move to Everton failed to reignite his career, and so it looks as though his next step will see him move to the Vodafone Park with Besiktas. An uptick in performances must follow otherwise a career that at one point saw him learning Spanish in anticipation of a move to Real Madrid could fade into relative obscurity.
It is a reminder that a football career is relatively short, and at just 26, Dele is already fighting to sustain his.

Nice are putting some gang together

For the uninitiated, Nice are owned by Ineos. That is the same crowd that run the Ineos Grenadiers. They are the fourth largest energy company in the world and are putting - or attempting to - together an interesting collection of players on the French Riviera.
This summer alone, they have acquired Kasper Schmeichel and Aaron Ramsey as well as Marcin Bulka, Rares Ilie, Alexis Beka Beka and Mattia Viti. And are now looking to add cult figure Ben Brereton Diaz to their ranks.
They finished fifth last season, just three points off a Champions League berth.
They have aligned these moves in the transfer market with the return to the club of Lucien Favre, who led them into the champions League in 2017.

HAT-TIP

Manchester United are the new Arsenal, but the decline does not have to be terminal, writes James McNicholas at The Athletic.
The primary sensation for any Arsenal fans watching Manchester United’s 4-0 defeat at Brentford would have been one of schadenfreude. Supporters still carry the scars of the intense rivalry of the 1990s and early 2000s and there are few teams they enjoy seeing suffer more. But there will have been another feeling accompanying that delight: relief. Relief it is now United, rather than Arsenal, who are currently the butt of the Premier League’s jokes. Watching United at the Gtech Community Stadium, there would have been some familiar sights for Arsenal fans: overpaid yet under-performing players; a muddled squad-building strategy; a disgruntled fanbase; a goalkeeper incapable of playing the passing game the coach demands. Not so long ago, this was Arsenal.

RETRO CORNER

Lukas Isaac Paul Jutkiewicz continues to ply his trade in the EFL for Birmingham City. However, way back when, in 2010, he was playing for Motherwell in the SPL when he scored the below.
He is currently 33 and if he plays until he is 333, he'll never score a better goal than this. Not only was this a verifiable biff, it came in the 94th minute to level draw his at SIX goals apiece with Hibernian.

COMING UP

It is Champions League play-off time. Coming up tonight: Maccabi Haifa v Crvena zvezda and Dynamo Kyiv v Benfica.
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