Irish Daily Mail

I didn’t think Jesse would make it but he proved me wrong

W HEN I first saw Jesse Lingard I thought he would never make it at Manchester United.

- BRYAN ROBSON

He was small, he was light and he didn’t show enough to make me believe he could be anything more than a squad player. It is to his eternal credit that he has proved me wrong.

This kid has worked so hard at his game that he’s an example to any young player who gets a few knocks and questions whether they can make it. Now he is playing for England in a World Cup.

As an ambassador for United, I used to go to the training ground quite a bit and watch the academy players and reserves and I would get to see the likes of Jesse up close.

My first impression was, he is not going to make it here, at best he’ll get in the squad or be someone the club loan out and then sell on. I just didn’t see enough quality. Sometimes, though, a player goes out on loan and it changes them.

It can be the making or breaking of a player and for Jesse it made him. You can go away, play well for another club and think, ‘OK, this will do, I’ll settle for this’, or you think, ‘I like the taste of this . . . but it would be even better if I was playing for Manchester United’. That’s when the work begins and I think the penny dropped with Jesse.

He did well on loan at Birmingham City and Derby County but when he came back to Manchester United he appreciate­d the chance that he had. He put the extra work in, improved his fitness levels and got his break.

Jesse’s gone on to score some very important goals for the club, helped them win big competitio­ns and now he’s in England’s World Cup team. He deserves it.

He is well suited to Gareth Southgate’s formation and I class him as an attacking midfielder. He’s not a Terry McDermott or Frank Lampard, more like Steve McManaman in style. He can bring the ball forward at pace, is intelligen­t with his interlinki­ng play and scores some fantastic goals.

He’s not as good a defender as maybe Ryan Giggs was and not as strong but he has a work ethic and great character to hang in there.

There’s definitely room for improvemen­t but you know he recognises that. He gets goals but should score even more. He needs to find that bit of composure.

England cannot afford to keep missing the chances we did against Tunisia. It’s simple, if we do, we go home. If Jesse can get those extra goals into his game he will be a great player. Thankfully, he still wants to learn.

When I talk to the likes of Nicky Butt at United he says Jesse is a level-headed kid. He comes across as bubbly and lively but he’s respectful, not some irritant.

He has learnt from people like Giggs and David Beckham about what is required from you when you’re a United player and there are certain demands of you. He doesn’t moan about it, he accepts the importance of supporters and sponsors. Fans connect with that. Marcus Rashford is the same.

I was at a United event with Marcus and there were a lot of questions about flash footballer­s buying flash cars. I asked Marcus what he’d bought and he said a Mercedes. I thought, that’s good enough for me. A good car, not a flash Ferrari, Lamborghin­i or Porsche. He’s another who may have got his chance by fortune but deserves his place.

We have seen young strikers come in and do well at United, only to disappear, but Marcus had that special something that made you believe he was here to stay and I think he’ll be with United and England for years to come.

Rashford’s understand­ing of the forward position has been helped by the fact he started out as a winger and he fits perfectly into Southgate’s system.

He’s a strong kid and I am sure he will cause Panama and others a lot of problems.

 ?? ?? Red-hot: Lingard slips past two Tunisia defendersP­A
Red-hot: Lingard slips past two Tunisia defendersP­A
 ?? ?? Former Manchester United and England captain
Former Manchester United and England captain

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