Fiorentina star on Man Utd radar after 19-goal breakthrough season
Kean's evolution in Florence reopens Premier League doors
Football often holds an unforgiving memory. For Moise Kean, the image etched into the collective Premier League consciousness remains that winter afternoon at Old Trafford in 2019. Brought on by Duncan Ferguson as a second-half substitute, then swiftly taken off within 18 minutes. It was a damning symbol, a visual shorthand for potential misread and squandered.
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Now, five years later, Manchester United are among the clubs monitoring the Fiorentina forward's progress. As reported in The Athletic, Kean has a €52 million release clause active until July 15. It marks an unlikely, even ironic return to the narrative, Old Trafford potentially becoming the stage for his resurgence.
And the resurgence is no mirage. Kean's 2024-25 campaign under Raffaele Palladino in Serie A was not just productive, it was transformative.
Structure and trust deliver Kean's best form
Much of Kean's early club career was spent bouncing between systems, roles and leagues. Juventus gave him little rhythm. Everton even less. A short loan at PSG flashed promise, but consistency evaded him.
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Florence changed that. Palladino placed trust in him as the focal point of Fiorentina's attack and allowed Kean to operate where he is most effective, centrally, on the shoulder of the last defender, rather than drifting wide or reacting to tactical emergency.
Photo: IMAGO
Palladino was emphatic. 'Both I and the club have faith in Moise, and that might seem banal, but it is fundamental for a player.' The clarity of that belief translated into 19 Serie A goals, second only to Mateo Retegui of Atalanta.
Only one of those strikes came from outside the box, and even that was a gift, a backpass snaffled before a calm finish past Yann Sommer. But that, in a way, said everything about Kean's game now. Direct, instinctive, rarely wasteful.
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His presence in the penalty area has grown. Six shots on target per 100 touches last season was the highest rate in Serie A. It placed him well ahead of Rasmus Hojlund (2.2) and Joshua Zirkzee (2.45), two forwards United have heavily invested in or considered.
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Where Hojlund struggled to convert limited service and Zirkzee offered fleeting moments of guile, Kean gave Fiorentina relentless movement. Tracking data showed 39 per cent of his runs were made in behind defensive lines. It's the hallmark of a forward thinking a fraction quicker than his marker.
Style of play and tactical identity
Kean's hat-trick against Verona encapsulated his evolution. A clever diagonal run for his first, a strong aerial finish for his second, then a slaloming solo effort from the left channel for his third.
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He is now a forward who asks questions of defenders, rather than reacting to what's given. The variety in his finishes illustrates a striker no longer trying to do too much, but simply doing what matters.
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What might be more significant for Manchester United is what this reveals about Fiorentina's role in that improvement. It is not simply that Kean became more prolific, but that the team around him understood how to extract his strengths. Regular minutes, repetition, an understanding of his movement patterns. This is where coaching and recruitment philosophies either collide or coalesce.
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For United's head coach Ruben Amorim, that poses an interesting question. Does Kean offer the kind of pressing, linking and multi-phase involvement his system demands? Or does the Italian provide something more direct, a kind of explosive Plan B when combinations fail?
There is no clear answer. What is evident is that Kean is not the player many remember. He is not the brooding teenager trudging off at Old Trafford, nor the Everton enigma shadowed by systemic dysfunction. He is 25, a player with identity and purpose, who knows where to be in the box and how to finish.
Photo IMAGO
English memory and the risk of misjudgement
Kean's Premier League past has unfairly clouded his potential. English football often preserves reductive versions of players. Iago Aspas is remembered for one misplaced corner, not for nine seasons of prolific returns at Celta Vigo.
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That sort of memory trap risks repeating itself. Kean was a teenager in 2019. His substitution by Ferguson, as ignominious as it appeared, said more about managerial instinct than footballing ability. The broader narrative ignored context, growth and age.
Now, he is emerging from the shadows, but in a different light. There is nuance to his game, and strength in his simplicity. He plays within his limits, not constrained by them.
For United, there is intrigue. Not just in whether Kean fits their tactical needs, but in whether their cultural instincts can move past a single snapshot of perceived failure.
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United fans will remember Moise Kean for those 18 miserable minutes. That moment at Old Trafford became one of those viral clips passed around every time a debate sparked about young talent not cutting it in England. So the idea of him returning, not just to the Premier League but potentially to United, feels oddly dissonant.
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There's also the scepticism that comes with good numbers abroad. Nineteen goals in Serie A, yes, but is Serie A's pace and quality comparable? Will he adapt to the pressing intensity? Will he track back like Amorim wants his forwards to? Or is this another Memphis Depay scenario waiting to happen, all promise, minimal delivery?
Even the reported fee gives cause for pause. £45 million is a considerable amount for a striker who has not yet delivered in English football. United have had their fingers burned enough times to hesitate. Wout Weghorst, Odion Ighalo, even Hojlund for now, all brought in to fill a No 9 void and all still leaving fans craving more.
If Kean signs, he will need to hit the ground sprinting, not just running. Old memories will not fade easily. But if he can match the Serie A sharpness with Premier League application, he might just surprise supporters.
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