Manchester Evening News

Solskjaer will need to look after new star Greenwood

- By TYRONE MARSHALL

YOU only have to take one look at Mason Greenwood to understand what he’s been doing during lockdown. This is a teenager who appears to have spent more time in the gym than he did on Netflix binges and Zoom quizzes.

Greenwood has evidently bulked up during his time out of the spotlight and the 18-year-old is benefiting from that now. He looks physically ready for Premier League football now and he’s made a stunning impact since the season returned.

But the developmen­t of precocious teenage footballer­s never runs in a straight line and they need careful management, in a physical sense as much as an emotional one.

Right now Greenwood is one of the Premier League’s hottest properties, but don’t be surprised if he’s back on the bench for United soon, even if it’s only briefly.

He has played 355 minutes since the return to action on June 14. The 18-year-old has never had a workload like that before and while he has the advantage of youth and the fitness work he’s been doing on his side, the developmen­t that his body has gone through in the last few months will take some getting used to as well.

This a time when young footballer­s can be susceptibl­e to injury. Right now Greenwood is clearly part of United’s best XI and that’s unlikely to change for a very long time, but that doesn’t mean he will be starting every week, something Ole Gunnar Solskjaer twice hinted at after the forward scored against Bournemout­h on Saturday. Greenwood now has 15 goals for the season, a fantastic return for an 18-year-old, but his game relies on explosiven­ess, whether through his turn of pace or the brutal power he can unleash when shooting with either foot. That has to be protected.

Speaking straight after Saturday’s game, Solskjaer said: “He is a very, very talented boy and we will

Greenwood is one of the league’s hottest properties, but don’t be surprised if he’s on the bench for United soon

nurture him and manage him as well as we can and give him more and more minutes.

“He’s a humble boy, he wants to learn, he listens, he’s worked hard; you can see his fitness is getting better and better.

“He’s just a young boy who will fill out. He’s exciting to work with and we’ll keep on building him up in the gym and on the pitch.”

The key phrases from the Norwegian here are ‘manage him as well as we can’ and ‘keep on building him up in the gym.’ Solskjaer knows Greenwood isn’t the finished article physically. How can he be when he doesn’t turn 19 until October?

Comparison­s are difficult between young players, but the Premier League has seen Michael Owen and Wayne Rooney emerge as generation­al talents only to slow down as they got older, in part due to the amount of first-team football they played as teenagers.

There are caveats there, Owen had hamstring problems which robbed him of his best asset, his pace, while Rooney didn’t look after his body as he perhaps should have done, although as United and England’s record goalscorer he didn’t too badly either.

Injuries at this stage of a career can have a significan­t impact, however. Greenwood’s developmen­t arc is peaking now, he has been handled perfectly by United so far, but Solskjaer will be wary of putting too much pressure on him.

That’s why we might see the precocious attacker back on the bench in the next week, with Daniel James getting a start instead.

In the long-term Greenwood might well develop into a No. 9, but for now his developmen­t is served by the wide right role. He offers better balance to the side than James, but it’s the long-term Solskjaer will be looking at if he does leave the 18-year-old out.

 ??  ?? Michael Owen saw his career blighted by injuries
Michael Owen saw his career blighted by injuries
 ??  ?? Wayne Rooney
Mason Greenwood has had a very impressive season for Ole Gunnar Solskjaer
Wayne Rooney Mason Greenwood has had a very impressive season for Ole Gunnar Solskjaer

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