
Four months in, no answer. Michael Carrick is managing Manchester United, the Stretford End is arguing about whether he should keep doing it, and the people who actually make the decision are — reportedly — leaning toward a third option nobody asked for.
Ask one half of Old Trafford and Carrick deserves the job. He inherited the wreckage of Ruben Amorim's sacking, steadied the dressing room, and has done it without the fanfare that tends to follow big-name appointments. That counts for something. Ask the other half and they want a name — a proven operator, someone whose appointment feels like a statement of intent rather than a holding pattern with a familiar face.
Both positions are reasonable. That's what makes this genuinely uncomfortable.
Omar Berrada and Jason Wilcox, operating inside a structure that is still finding its own shape, are reportedly not firmly in either camp. Not Carrick confirmed, not a marquee external hire — somewhere in the middle, which in football usually means the decision gets made for you by circumstance rather than conviction. The Glazers, still present, still influential, are said to be aligned with that same non-position.
The next eight weeks, United's sources suggest, are the window. Results matter. Performances matter. The feel of the place matters. Carrick knows this — he's been around long enough to understand what a soft deadline looks like.
He didn't celebrate. He looked at the floor for four full seconds after the final whistle in his first home game in charge — which tells you something about the weight he's carrying and the way he's choosing to carry it.
Carrick is not a romantic appointment. He's a serious football man who has managed in difficult circumstances before, at Middlesbrough, and built something real. The argument against him isn't that he's bad — it's that United, in their current state, might need someone whose name alone shifts the mood. Whether that logic holds up under scrutiny is another matter entirely.
The timeline is tight and the stakes are obvious. If results turn, the conversation about a 'name' quietly disappears. If they don't, Carrick becomes the answer to a question United will pretend they were never really asking. The Stretford End will keep arguing in the meantime — which, at least, means they still care enough to have the argument.
Four months in, no answer. Michael Carrick is managing Manchester United, the Stretford End is arguing about whether he should keep doing it, and the people who actually make the decision are — reportedly
Bronnen
Manchester Evening News
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“Stays on Manchester United — different angle, same beat.”
OPINIONNobody grows up wanting to be a caretaker manager. You don't get the pre-season, you don't get the transfer window, and you almost certainly don't get the job at the end of it — but for a few weeks or
“Stays on Manchester United — different angle, same beat.”
OPINIONNobody grows up wanting to be a caretaker manager. You don't get the pre-season, you don't get the transfer window, and you almost certainly don't get the job at the end of it — but for a few weeks or