New Straits Times

Five challenges facing Solskjaer

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LONDON: Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has achieved his first target by landing the Manchester United manager’s role on a permanent basis but plenty of work remains for the Norwegian to do, starting with Watford’s visit to Old Trafford today.

looks at what comes next and the challenges that lie in wait for Solskjaer.

Since Solskjaer’s arrival, United have cut the gap to the Premier League’s top four from 11 points down to two but a strong finish to the campaign is still needed to secure Champions League football next season.

Beat Watford at Old Trafford and United will pull level on points with third-placed Spurs, who have taken just one point from their past four league games and travel to title-chasing Liverpool on Sunday.

Regardless of whether United are in the Champions League or Europa League next season, Solskjaer faces an intense summer of rebuilding.

England wonderkid Jadon Sancho of Borussia Dortmund has been widely reported as a top target for a club record fee but it is in defence that Solskjaer’s former teammate and United captain Gary Neville believes most change is needed.

“Defence is the main priority in terms of getting the centre-back pairings right because there have been so many changes,” he told Sky Sports.

Interest in Sancho casts even more doubt over Alexis Sanchez’s future.

The Chilean became the club’s highest earner in January 2018 but has scored just five goals for the club, only two of which have come in 23 appearance­s this season.

Unless the Norwegian can spark a revival in Sanchez, United will likely have to pick up some of the tab for his reported £14 million (RM74 million) a season wages just to ship him out.

Sanchez’s deal has not only been problemati­c given his own lack of form, but it set a new benchmark for United’s wage bill.

David de Gea’s contract expires in 2020 and the Spanish goalkeeper, who has won United’s player of the year award for four of the past five seasons, reportedly wants at least parity with Sanchez.

During a disappoint­ing period for the club under three previous managers, De Gea has been a rare shining light and keeping hold of one of their world-class talents is vital.

The Premier League title race makes for grim viewing for United fans as historical and local rivals Liverpool and Manchester City battle it out.

Solskjaer has made ending a title drought since Alex Ferguson retired in 2013 a top priority but is also realistic that there remains a huge gap to breach.

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