Manchester Evening News

Reds Duo are still playing for keeps!

- By TYRONE MARSHALL

IT’S just over a year since Ole Gunnar Solskjaer said the goalkeepin­g situation at United was unsustaina­ble and vowed to find a ‘solution’ in time for the start of last season.

In the end, that solution made itself clear to the Norwegian, rather than the other way around. Dean Henderson tested positive for Covid-19 last summer and struggled to shake off the aftereffec­ts, so David de Gea started the campaign in goal.

The Spaniard immediatel­y hit the ground running and ended the season as players’ player of the year, but it could very easily have been a different story.

Speaking before the final day of the 2020/21 campaign, Solskjaer admitted continuing to rotate De Gea and Henderson wasn’t going to work. Last summer United signed Tom Heaton on the expectatio­n one of the two would depart, and it’s understood the then manager was leaning towards making Henderson as his No.1 and allowing De Gea to leave the club. But circumstan­ces intervened and De Gea spent every minute of the Premier League season between the sticks, usually overworked and under-protected, while Henderson had to sit on the bench and make do with three cup games, probably United’s most forgettabl­e, meaningles­s matches of the campaign.

New boss Erik ten Hag was never going to axe De Gea. The Dutchman has plenty in his in-tray at Carrington, so dropping the goalkeeper voted the club’s best player by his teammates last season was not going to be on the agenda.

There are legitimate questions as to how De Gea will fit into a Ten Hag team, however. The new boss wants his goalkeeper to be good with his feet and comfortabl­e behind a high line, areas that

aren’t De Gea’s strengths. Luis Enrique’s decision to drop him from his Spain squad and include Brighton’s Robert Sanchez and Brentford goalkeeper David Raya is a clear indication of how a modern manager might view the 31-year-old’s attributes.

He will get this season to impress and prove the doubters wrong, but United are clearly keeping their options open when it comes to the goalkeepin­g department.

Henderson was never going to accept another season out of the picture given his burning ambition. The 25-year-old has never hidden his desire to be the first-choice goalkeeper for United and England, but last season was a wasted one.

He was always going to seek out regular games this season and those will come in the Premier League with Nottingham Forest, but in talks over a seasonlong loan to the City Ground United refused to countenanc­e including an option to buy.

Henderson will hope his performanc­es for Forest can get him back into contention for the England squad for the World Cup in November and December, having fallen out of the internatio­nal picture as a result of his inactivity.

His performanc­es could also influence Ten Hag and United. The lack of an option to buy means he will return to Old Trafford in the summer of 2023, two years after Solskjaer said the battle between De Gea and Henderson was unsustaina­ble.

That will have to be the point when a decision is finally made and it looks like it will be Ten Hag’s call. De Gea’s contract expires next June, although the Reds have the option to extend it by a year, and at the moment a long-term renewal doesn’t look like a sensible call.

It would surely make more sense to wait until the midway point of this season and see how De Gea and Henderson are faring. Henderson’s contract doesn’t expire until 2025, so if United decide to stick with the senior man they could still cashin on the England internatio­nal.

Moving De Gea will be more difficult, given he turns 32 in November and is on around £375,000 a week, but the expiring contract is beneficial to United in that regard.

This season has to be the decisive one for De Gea and Henderson. They will be representi­ng different Premier League clubs, but the target for both will be the same.

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 ?? ?? Ole Gunnar Solskjaer
Ole Gunnar Solskjaer
 ?? ?? United still need to make a long-term call on David de Gea and Dean Henderson
United still need to make a long-term call on David de Gea and Dean Henderson

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