
Donny van de Beek points the finger over Man Utd struggles after exit
Donny van de Beek has claimed his injury struggles date back to his time warming the bench at Manchester United. The Dutchman was signed in 2020 but was unable to ever make himself a regular.
Ole Gunnar Solskjaer spent £35million to land the versatile attacker, but only made us of him sporadically as Van de Beek's frustration mounted. He scored on his debut but was rarely preferred to Bruno Fernandes with his minutes very much at a premium.
He's since left, joining Girona in Spain, but has continued to battle an Achilles issue. The Dutchman has enjoyed far more minutes than he did at Old Trafford but clearly still has a chip on his shoulder when it comes to his underwhelming stint in Manchester.
Solskjaer continued to defend his lack of use of the player, but in the years since Van de Beek's health has been a battle. He confessed that the time he spent as a sub means his body was less accustomed to the intensity of playing regularly.
He told SportBible: "It's difficult to build rhythm and confidence when you're constantly being sidelined. It's hard to be at your best when you're in and out of the team, and I think when you're not playing regularly. Your body isn't used to the intensity and you become more prone to injuries. The lack of consistent minutes didn't help either."
Van de Beek's goal on his debut did little to aid his cause and even when he would impress he was quickly returned to his bench role. He also admits the random cameos did nothing for his case with bit part minutes not helping him become a regular.
He said: "I think I deserved more chances, especially in my first year. I didn't play all the time, but when I did, I had some good games. I was convinced I would get more opportunities. I felt good, and thought, 'Okay, my time will come' but for some reason, it didn't happen. After a year or two, it gets harder because if you don't get a longer run of games then it's difficult to prove yourself."
Van de Beek would score the last goal of the Solskjaer era as he came off the bench to score what would be a consolation during a 4-1 loss at Watford. The Norwegian was forced to defend his use of the player on several occasions and claimed leaving him on the bench spoke to the quality of the squad.
"I think it says a lot about our depth of quality in the squad that we don't have to use him every single game," he said.
Despite that claim Van de Beek would make just four starts in his only full season under Solskjaer and things didn't change when Erik ten Hag, who coached him at Ajax, came on board before he eventually left Manchester.

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Daily Mirror
5 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
Liverpool new boys impress before Cody Gakpo steals the show vs Bilbao
LIVERPOOL 3-2 ATHLETIC BILBAO: Cody Gakpo scored twice at the right end and once at the wrong one as Liverpool ran out winners over Athletic Bilbao in their second match of the night You couldn't keep Cody Gakpo out of the action as Liverpool won their second of two friendlies on the same evening against Athletic Bilbao. After a second string side, inspired by teenager Rio Ngumoha, had won the opening friendly of the night 4-1, Gakpo scored twice at the right end and once at the wrong one in an eventful 15 minute period in the second half. Earlier Mo Salah had given the Reds the lead after being teed up by Hugo Ekitike, before Oihan Sancet levelled. In the second period Gakpo pounced after Unai Simon spilled a Ryan Gravenberch effort, and after he inadvertently headed Maroan Sannadi's effort into his own net, the Dutchman fired through Simon's grasp for what proved to be the winner, although there was still time for Salah to miss a penalty. Here are the game's main talking points. 1. You can't take your eyes off Florian Wirtz There are some players who just move differently, and Florian Wirtz is one of them. The German is obviously going to become a focal point of the way Liverpool attack, and with one swivel of the hips in the opening exchanges he seemed to fool half of the crowd as well as the Athletic defenders. Playing with his socks rolled down, there is a old school look and feel about him, but amid the excitement over the possible move for Alexander Isak it shouldn't be forgotten that the Reds have already secured one of world football's premier attackers this summer. He twice came close to scoring early on, and he promises to be a lot of fun. 2. Hugo Ekitike makes his mark... and Mo Salah will be impressed If there is one thing that you can do to endear yourself to the Anfield crowd it is give your all. If there is one thing you can do to endear yourself to Mo Salah it is give him an assist. Hugo Ekitike managed to do both of those things in opening 15 minutes here, impressing supporters with his strength and energy and then demonstrating both as he teed up Salah for the opener. He might still end up being a work in progress, but the raw materials are clearly there for him to make an immediate Premier League impact. 3. The defensive question isn't going away With Virgil van Dijk sitting both friendlies out with illness, and given there's still no sight of Joe Gomez, Ibrahima Konate was the last recognised central defender standing across the 180 minutes. Andy Robertson and Trey Nyoni had done the job in the first game and Wataru Endo was stationed alongside Konate for the second, but Arne Slot would not to be starting a meaningful game with any of those players at centre-back, and so a new addition in the role is crucial. The Reds did not cover themselves in glory for either Athletic goal, particularly the second, and concerns are sure to be raised. Sporting director Richard Hughes, seen watching on in Anfield's Main Stand, has some big business to do in the next month. 4. Dominik Szoboszlai and Cody Gakpo are set for big seasons Some players kick on after lifting major honours and take their games up a gear, and that could well end up being the case for Dominik Szoboszlai and Cody Gakpo. The arrival of Wirtz had led many to claim that the Hungarian would be the man to miss out in the Liverpool midfield, but his versatility means he could actually end up playing more matches. Stationed in a deeper role, he was aggressive and always looking to put Liverpool on the front foot, with one particular piece of skill bringing the crowd to its feet. Gakpo, too, dominated the left hand side of the attack and was a constant menace, scoring two goals - either side of his own goal - and looking like he's enjoying the knowledge that he'll be the first pick on the left with Luis Diaz gone. 5. Anfield pauses to remember Diogo Jota This was, of course, Liverpool's first match match at Anfield since the tragic passing of Diogo Jota last month, and the Portuguese was on the minds of many both before and during both friendlies. The most touching tributes came in the 20th minute of both, when the action stopped and both sets of players led the crowd in an ovation for the Portuguese as Jota's chant boomed all around Anfield. Reds defender Kostas Tsimikas was also sporting a new tattoo he's had done in honour of Jota in the first match, reading 'Wish you were here' with the No.20. Join our new WhatsApp community and receive your daily dose of Mirror Football content. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice.


The Guardian
18 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Analyzing preseason friendlies is maddening, but right now it's all we have
Glory for Manchester United, who lifted the Premier League summer series on Sunday despite twice being pegged back by Everton to draw 2-2 in Atlanta. A degree of relief for West Ham, who beat Bournemouth to finish second in the competition despite all the gloomy prognostications about their campaign to come. In Seoul, meanwhile, there was a very Tottenham moment as they followed the glee of last week's 1-0 win over Arsenal with a 1-1 draw against Newcastle in which James Maddison was stretchered off with a knee injury described by his manager Thomas Frank as 'bad'. It all looks real, it sounds real and yet everybody knows it isn't real. That even now, in this age of data and minute analysis, there remains an element of randomness, is one of soccer's great joys as a sport. But that tendency is magnified in pre-season. The Premier League has been away for 10 weeks now. For those hooked on its soap opera, the wait is intolerable. The Club World Cup, the England men's team being dreadful in June as they so often are, the Under-21s continuing their unfamiliar excellence, even the women's Euros … none of it quite offers the same hit. Obsessing over transfers suffices only for so long; eventually there is a need to see them play. And so there are pre-season games, and there is is analysis. The best of it is skeptical, acknowledging the absurdity of making judgements on 45 minutes. The worst of it is breathlessly insistent – of Bryan Mbeumo and Matheus Cunha, the two senior players United have managed to sign, appearing together against Everton. What does it mean that Rasmus Højlund was only on the bench? Does that mean Benjamin Šeško is more likely to sign? The front three, with Mbeumo dropping deep and Cunha and Bruno Fernandes at times running beyond him, looked fluent. Fernandes and Mbuemo set up Amad Diallo, overlapping from wing-back to score the opener. This is the way Ruben Amorim's 3-4-3 is supposed to work. In that, at least, there is a sense of something tangible, a United that is, at last, able to execute their manager's attacking plan. But Ayden Heaven's own goal was a reminder that United remain as self-destructive as ever. Perhaps more significant was the equaliser conceded after Manuel Ugarte lost possession, the lack of urgency to get back. Did this happen because it was only a friendly and United are nowhere near peak fitness yet? Or because this is an irredeemably feckless bunch of players? This is smoke on a foggy day. Will any of it be relevant when the season begins for real? United fans will remember ruefully just how good they looked in pre-season under Louis van Gaal in 2014, only for the season itself to prove anticlimactic. The problem with assessing pre-season games is that different sides are at different stages of readiness. Some expect to hit the ground running from week one; others are building to peak in March or April, the differences magnified two weeks before the opening day. Some managers are working on specific plans and are less bothered by the whole, some are just hoping to get semi-competitive minutes into their players' legs. Sign up to Soccer with Jonathan Wilson Jonathan Wilson brings expert analysis on the biggest stories from European soccer after newsletter promotion In the old days, before Premier League teams went on foreign tours and everybody was desperately promoting themselves to a global audience, pre-season was about team bonding as much as anything else: the team that drinks together wins together, as the adage had it. The stories are legion: the Everton winger Peter Beagrie driving a motorbike through a plateglass window in San Sebastián; Sunderland's diminutive but extremely tough full-back John Kay terrifying a much larger local who had threatened him by casually eating the antiseptic cubes from a urinal in Bristol; Arsenal's French midfielder Gilles Grimandi joining five of his English teammates on a night out in Switzerland where the first round comprised 35 pints of lager and a dry white wine. Many managers, you suspect, would quite relish a return to the days, if not of booze, then at least of pre-season being a largely private affair rather than a projection of the club to the world. Very occasionally something consequential happens, such as Chelsea conceding four in the second half to an experimental New York Red Bulls led by Jesse Marsch in the summer of 2015, the first sign that something had gone badly wrong for José Mourinho's side since winning the Premier League two months earlier; within five months, Mourinho had been sacked. (It was also the debut first-team appearance for Bournemouth and US national team midfielder Tyler Adams, then 16 years old.) Pre-season is very much the phoney war, the jockeying, the probing. It matters to the clubs, but to outsiders it is essentially like watching an artist mix his paints. There's anticipation and a vague technical interest, but it means nothing until it starts being applied to the canvas. This is an extract from Soccer with Jonathan Wilson, a weekly look from the Guardian US at the game in Europe and beyond. Subscribe for free here. Have a question for Jonathan? Email soccerwithjw@ and he'll answer the best in a future edition.


Daily Mail
35 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Wayne Rooney endures a bumpy ride AWAY from the dugout as he joins wife Coleen and son Kai on the dodgems at Irish amusement park - after clip of Tom Brady questioning his work ethic went viral
Wayne Rooney has endured another bumpy ride - but this time it was nowhere near the football dugout. The former footballer and wife Coleen were taking a break from watching their son Kai, 15, playing for Manchester United's academy side in Northern Ireland when they visited a local amusement park. Locals were stunned to see them enjoying the dodgems at nearby Curry's Fun Park in Portrush, County Antrim. Wayne - wearing a black baseball cap and shades - let his lad Kit do the driving, while Coleen was seen laughing as she opted for her own bumper car. The video was captured by former BBC radio presenter Alan Simpson, who invited the Rooney's, both 39, to enjoy the amusements. He tagged the pair online and posted: 'You just never know who you will bump into at Curry's Fun Park Portrush.' Speaking afterwards, he said the famous faces were 'down-to-earth' and revealed he had facilitated the visit. Alan explained: 'Coleen had expressed an interest in bringing them along on their off days from the cup. I was absolutely more than happy to accommodate. 'Herself, Wayne and the kids came down and had a great time interacting with the other punters and being big kids, as everyone does at Curry's. 'They had a lot of fun for a few hours. No matter who comes to Portrush — footballers, golfers, whoever — we try to make sure they have a good time.' In a post on Facebook, Curry's revealed that the Rooneys spent two hours at the park and also tried other rides including the Ghost Train. They said: 'On Friday we were delighted to welcome one of the true superstars of the game Wayne Rooney, his wife Coleen alongside Northern Ireland's own Corey Evans and their families for a fun afternoon spending a couple of hours enjoying everything from the Ghost Train to the Cyclone and the bumper cars. 'The A-list couple certainly turned heads as they joined their kids on the rides. Remarked one Cookstown couple, "It's not everyday you literally bump into Wayne and Coleen Rooney on the bumper cars in Portrush. 'The owners of Curry's, Jacqueline and Owen Curry, were happy to meet and see the Rooneys enjoying their family day out. 'Jacqueline shared fashion tips with Coleen while Owen, a lifelong Crystal Palace fan couldn't resist reminding Wayne of the recent 4-0 victory for Palace. 'The Rooneys chatted about how much they enjoyed their visit to the North Coast, the warmth of the welcome and especially their time sampling the Portmagic.' Their eldest boy Kai, 15, had been starring in the Super Cup NI youth football tournament for United, a competition Wayne also played at in 2000. Wayne, Manchester United's record goalscorer, and Coleen, were seen watching a game in the stands at the Coleraine Showgrounds on Tuesday. Other football stars spotted at the tournament included Michael Carrick, Jamie Redknapp and Corey Evans. Kai and his teammates made it to the boys' premier final, where they lost to Southampton 1-0. Afterwards former England ace Wayne posted on social media: 'Great few days in Coleraine for the SuperCupNI. 'Well done to Kai and the Manchester United lads on a brilliant effort throughout the tournament. 'Congratulations to Southampton on the win. Thanks to everyone for the warm welcome.' Wayne's work ethic during a disastrous stint as manager of Birmingham City has been questioned by minority owner Tom Brady in scenes from a new Amazon Prime series. The remarkable admission from the NFL legend has been revealed in an upcoming five-part series Built in Birmingham: Brady and the Blues. In it, Brady admits to being worried about the dedication of the Manchester United legend during his disastrous spell at St Andrews. Wayne was sacked in January last year, lasting just 15 matches in the Blues' dugout. Under his management, the Blues took 10 points from a possible 45, losing nine and winning just two. The fly-on-the-wall documentary, being released on Friday, shows Brady visiting the Birmingham training ground to observe Wayne's team meeting and training session. While driving away, he tells his business manager Ben Rawitz: 'I'm a little worried about our head coach's work ethic.' Rawitz replies: 'Comes across as lackadaisical.' Wayne began in management immediately after his playing days were over, hanging up his boots while playing in the Championship for Derby to take the reins at Pride Park. Manchester United's all-time leading scorer received plaudits for the work he did in extremely challenging circumstances, with the club struggling to compete amid their mountain of financial issues. He then made the surprise move to MLS and coached another of his former sides, DC United. But he lasted just 12 months Stateside - half the time he spent in charge of the Rams - as interest in his services came from the newly minted Blues. Birmingham - backed by the riches of Knighthead Capital and boasting Brady as an investor - replaced the beloved John Eustace with the former England hero, even though the club was pushing for a play-off spot. Rather predictably, this proved to be a massive mistake. The documentary also sees Brady admit his error in replacing Eustace with the former England international and reveal that he was warned against making 'sweeping changes' so early in his time with the club.