Irish Independent

United cannot rule while agents are let call tune Paying an alleged £367k-a-week to Ibrahimovi­c reveals how desperate club have become, writes Paul Hayward

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A CLAIM that Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c has been on £367,640 a week confirms that Manchester United entered an age of desperatio­n, in which ‘super agents’ dangled them on a string. This summer will tell us whether Britain’s biggest club can reclaim its independen­ce and identity.

According to a book called ‘Football Leaks: The Dirty Business of Football’, based on investigat­e work by the ‘Der Spiegel’ journalist­s Rafael Buschmann and Michael Wulzinger, Mino Raiola, Paul Pogba’s agent, could earn as much as £41m from his client’s time in a United shirt: a £23m cut of the £89m transfer fee and five further payments of £16.39m spread over Pogba’s fiveyear deal.

‘Der Spiegel’ also claims that Ibrahimovi­c, who joined on a free transfer, signed for a salary of £19m a year, with a £2.86m goals bonus – while Pogba accepted a lower weekly wage of £165,000, but with a 41-page contract loaded with incentives, including a “loyalty bonus” after just two seasons.

Last night it was revealed that Pogba’s world record deal is being investigat­ed by Fifa.

These astronomic­al sums confirm how loaded the top end of the market has become in favour of the most powerful agents. Without these Faustian pacts, the top clubs will tell you, the best players would not cross the threshold. But they also say a lot about United’s tortured history since they last won the league in 2013.

MARQUEE

Jose Mourinho’s club had missed out on a succession of marquee names and therefore signed their name in blood for Pogba and Ibrahimovi­c. The sense of drift post-Louis van Gaal was no longer tenable, and the Glazer family needed gesture acquisitio­ns to show United were still up there with the behemoths.

So how is all this shaping up? Not well, if you count their 51 goals in 35 fixtures, or consider the unedifying spectacle of the 13time Premier League champions fielding a weakened team at Arsenal for the sake of a European tie four days hence. A European tie, mark you, against a mediocre Celta Vigo side who had already been beaten 1-0 in Spain.

Jose Mourinho’s supporters say this was a rational calculatio­n. United’s chances of reaching next year’s Champions League were higher through the Europa League route.

That case can be made. But surely United should not be sending weakened teams to Arsenal, where battle is meant to rage? If Mourinho was playing politics with his own board (a variation on, ‘Give me the tools and I’ll complete the job’) he can hardly accuse Old Trafford’s overlords of parsimony in the transfer market.

Sunday’s 2-0 defeat will of course return to haunt Mourinho should the Europa League master plan not work out, especially as United were so negative. It was a performanc­e to make the club’s followers doubt all over again whether he is the right man for the rebirth.

Curiously, Mourinho is heading for his first non-top-three finish in English football. But there is a counterpoi­nt, as the Pogba and Ibrahimovi­c figures show. As a club, United have been chasing their losses. Pogba’s £89m fee was gesture politics after Gareth Bale and Neymar stayed out of reach. Ed Woodward, the chief executive, had taken enough hard knocks in the transfer labyrinth and needed to get a grip.

He did so by overpaying for Pogba and giving Ibrahimovi­c whatever he asked for to solve United’s striker shortage – itself caused by excessive generosity to Wayne Rooney and an inflated estimate of Anthony Martial’s talent. Hence the desperatio­n, last summer: the subservien­ce to Raiola, and the previous eagerness to please Jorge Mendes, Mourinho’s agent.

None of this is healthy. United cannot dominate English football again if their transfer business is shaped solely by agent power, or the need to correct past errors. And those errors were plentiful, especially under Van Gaal.

Memphis Depay, Morgan Schneiderl­in, Luke Shaw, Bastian Schweinste­iger, Daley Blind and arguably Martial were all low-impact buys. Or no impact, in Depay’s case.

An area where Mourinho deserves credit is the improvemen­t in several of the players he has worked with this term: Marcos Rojo, Ander Herrera, Jesse Lingard, Eric Bailly and Marcus Rashford.

Mourinho is on largely new territory: that of clearing up someone else’s mess. His janitorial style, though, is testing the patience of the crowd, who suspect he is temperamen­tally averse to bold, creative play. This week he has been unfavourab­ly compared to Chelsea’s Antonio Conte, a zealot defensivel­y but also a manager who demands fast, high-intensity attacking.

Thirteen draws for United – 10 at home – tend to suggest inbuilt caution.

Part of the answer, as ever, is Himalayan spending, and if United are indeed on course to report record revenue of £540m and a £180m profit then they can afford to throw £200m at Willian, Michael Keane, Antoine Griezmann and Eric Dier. Or even Gareth Bale. All are reported transfer targets.

Any additions United make will have to be correct football judgments, not leaps into the arms of agents.

After one top-four finish in four seasons (probably), corporate and commercial considerat­ions can no longer shape United’s transfer trading. If they stop making mistakes, they will stop needing to correct them. (© Daily Telegraph, London)

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