Manchester Evening News

Reds need to start opening the window

- By SAMUEL LUCKHURST

WITH nine days left in June, United have still not bought or sold anyone.

Liverpool, the benchmark for market manoeuvrin­gs, have already concluded their business for incomings and are about to shift their sole significan­t outgoing in Sadio Mane.

United are not the only top-six Premier League club yet to strengthen their squad but after a ‘f-----g nightmare’ of a season, in the words of chief executive Richard Arnold, their squad rebuild is not so much operating at a glacial pace as the glacier has not started to drift.

With no Champions League football to offer and no trophy since 2017, the club’s pull in the market is low and they are restricted to more specific profiles to target.

In an impromptu conversati­on with supporters at a Cheshire pub on Saturday, Arnold stressed the football director John Murtough and his team are working ‘round the clock’ preparing the groundwork for deals.

United sources say the club entered the summer transfer window with a clear plan they are not deviating from. There is an understand­able desire to complete deals as soon as possible, particular­ly as the Reds leave for their pre-season tour of Thailand and Australia two weeks on Friday.

United are unfavourab­ly compared with Liverpool and City, their attacks already reinforced by players who were of interest to the Reds.

Jurgen Klopp acted with alacrity to sign Darwin Nunez as they were certain to get a fee for Mane from Bayern Munich and had to replace him.

Although there was mutual agreement across the United board that Erling Haaland would be ideal, they were resigned to him joining either City or Real Madrid.

Despite standout signings made by their biggest rivals, the Reds have pointed out they are less than two weeks into a 12-week window. The elongated June internatio­nals have little bearing on a prospectiv­e signing’s start date as internatio­nals are permitted three weeks’ holiday.

Club sources insist they will not be panicked by the incessant noise surroundin­g the apparent inactivity. United believe had they signed Frenkie de Jong in the first week of the window they would have yielded to Barcelona too willingly, paid too much and so reduce their capacity to strengthen other areas of the squad.

The Reds have been accused of overpaying in the past and people at the club feel it is unfair for them to now cop criticism for negotiatin­g hard for fair deals.

In his chat that was surreptiti­ously recorded, Arnold admitted United had ‘burned through cash’ with their atrocious hit-rate in the transfer market. The new hierarchy are determined to spend more effectivel­y.

The departures of the executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward – who insisted he had nothing to do with recruitmen­t and then attempted to claim the glory for Cristiano Ronaldo’s re-signing – the director of football negotiatio­ns Matt Judge, the head of global scouting Marcel Bout, the chief scout Jim Lawlor and the interim-manager-cum-consultant Ralf Rangnick within four months have also contribute­d to the slow start.

United have not gone an entire June without a signing since 2010.

Barcelona will not accept a loss on the 25-year-old Netherland­s internatio­nal De Jong, who they signed for £65m three years ago and who is under contract until 2026.

Mindful of United’s desperatio­n to reinforce their midfield and Erik ten Hag’s plan to make De Jong the fulcrum of the team, as well as

Barca’s need to ease their financial burden, they are holding out for an inflated fee the Reds are reluctant to match.

United favoured a one-at-a-time strategy in previous windows and may struggle to execute deals concurrent­ly this summer. They are effectivel­y starting from scratch, going off Ten Hag’s shortlist and disregardi­ng most of the recommenda­tions from the scouting department, which is in the process of being revamped again.

Ten Hag was first interviewe­d by the Reds for the job on March 21 and his appointmen­t was not confirmed until April 21. United achieved their aim of hiring their new permanent manager before the end of last season but the Dutchman has entered an unstable structure.

Under previous leadership, the Reds finalised their shortlist of summer targets in January. Due to the managerial change and exodus of senior staff members, that has effectivel­y been scrapped.

The club’s non-internatio­nals are scheduled to report for pre-season training at Carrington on Monday. Several have outstayed their welcomes yet will be reluctantl­y welcomed back. Most of United’s dead wood are on long contracts and high wages, insurmount­able stumbling blocks to early departures.

Aaron Wan-Bissaka and Brandon Williams have been informed they are free to find a new club. Dean Henderson’s exit has been delayed until the Reds have a guaranteed back-up in place, the stocks of Eric Bailly and Phil Jones are so low interested clubs are not in a rush to test the waters as competitio­n is not intense.

Anthony Martial flopped at Sevilla and has had two dismal seasons, so is not as in-demand as he was in 2018 when he wanted out and his re-sale value was far higher.

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 ?? ?? Anthony Martial had a disappoint­ing loan spell with Sevilla
Anthony Martial had a disappoint­ing loan spell with Sevilla
 ?? ?? United are in talks with Barcelona over the signing of Frenkie de Jong
United are in talks with Barcelona over the signing of Frenkie de Jong

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