Manchester Evening News

Reds need to get good value from their loan

GARNER THE ONLY REAL SUCCESS THIS SEASON – AND THAT MUST CHANGE

- By TYRONE MARSHALL

THE final game of English football’s profession­al season was a good one for United.

James Garner was one of the best players on the pitch as he finished an impressive loan spell with Nottingham Forest by helping them to the Premier League after a 23-year absence by beating Huddersfie­ld Town at Wembley.

He didn’t kick a ball for United last season, but so bad has the campaign at Old Trafford been that the midfielder is one of the more encouragin­g stories to emerge from 2021/22.

He has got better and better for Forest, especially since the appointmen­t of his former England Under-17 manager Steve Cooper in September, and has earned a chance in pre-season with his parent club.

Erik ten Hag will take the midfielder on the tour of Thailand and Australia and with spots up for grabs in an area of the pitch weakened by the departures of Nemanja Matic and Paul Pogba, an opportunit­y is knocking for Garner.

How he does on that tour and in the four pre-season games included in the itinerary will decide his next move. Garner could yet force his way close to the first-team picture under Ten Hag, but a central midfielder is top of the Dutchman’s shopping list and Donny van de Beek is also returning from his own loan at Everton.

If Garner does enough to be in the first five players up for selection then he might stay at Old Trafford, but at 21 there is also a sense he needs to be playing games and a season of Premier League football with Forest is a possibilit­y.

Garner wasn’t the only United player in action at Wembley that weekend, with goalkeeper Nathan Bishop on the losing side for Mansfield in the League Two play-off final.

The 22-year-old has enjoyed a good season and another loan move is a certainty for Bishop, however.

Those two stick out as rare success stories when it comes to the Reds’ loanees this season.

Garner has improved considerab­ly for his exposure to first-team football in the Championsh­ip and he’s been at the perfect club, although the appointmen­t of Cooper was a stroke of good fortune.

Beyond that, the players who would expect to be pushing towards the first team have struggled, while the senior players who moved to try and re-establish their own credential­s have also generally found the going tough.

There are vacancies on the right of United’s attack this summer but neither Amad nor Facundo Pellistri have done enough to force their way in.

Excitement was high around Amad when the Reds committed a potential £37m to sign him two years ago, with £19m of that paid up front to Atalanta, but his career is yet to take off. He turns 20 next month and a loan move to Rangers in January peaked inside the first four minutes, when he scored against Ross County. He did score two further goals in May, but in 13 appearance­s he never played more than 66 minutes. He was an unused substitute in all of Rangers’ nine Europa League games after Christmas and now has a point to prove next season.

The idea of that loan was to get the teenager used to the rigors of British football but in his second game he looked out of his depth in an Old Firm fixture and six months on there are more doubts than ever about his ability to make it in the Premier League.

Pellistri returned to Alaves after spending the second half of last

Garner is the undoubted success story, but this is an area United must improve on next season

season there, but he started just six La Liga games this season and never completed 90 minutes.

Alaves finished bottom of La Liga and Pellistri appeared in just five of 20 games after the Christmas break. At 20, he isn’t returning to Carrington ready to make an impact this summer.

There are similar stories elsewhere. Ethan Laird did well for Swansea in the first half of the season but United then decided to switch him to Bournemout­h and he played in just six of the Cherries’ 21 Championsh­ip games.

Dyan Levitt did well at Dundee United and Brandon Williams was solid at Norwich, but Teden Mengi lost his place in the Birmingham team.

Axel Tuanzebe had disappoint­ing loan spells at Aston Villa and Napoli, Anthony Martial’s value has plummeted in his time at Sevilla and Van de Beek shone only occasional­ly at Everton.

That makes Garner the undoubted success story and this is an area United must improve on next season.

Most elite clubs pay close attention to their loan system now, with staff employed to find the right clubs and retain regular contact.

With United’s football structure now taking shape, that is an area they can look to fine-tune next season, with technical director Darren Fletcher likely to take a more hands-on approach in this area.

The success of the Youth Cupwinning side this season shows the talent is there at United, but getting players the right loan moves for their developmen­t is vital.

It’s inevitable that not every loan will go well and there are lessons to be learned when it doesn’t, but too many players have seen their developmen­t stall this season.

 ?? ?? Amad had a poor loan spell with Rangers
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Amad had a poor loan spell with Rangers Caption ghghgh gh ghgh gh ghgh gh ghgh ghghgh gh
 ?? ?? United’s James Garner helped Nottingham Forest to promotion now he has to show Erik ten Hag he is good enough to play in the Reds’ first team
United’s James Garner helped Nottingham Forest to promotion now he has to show Erik ten Hag he is good enough to play in the Reds’ first team

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