The Guardian (USA)

Rangnick shows signs of shaping longer-term Manchester United future

- Jamie Jackson

Ralf Rangnick: should he stay in the Manchester United hot seat next season or should he go? This is the question the club will grapple with if the interim manager secures a top-four finish, claims (or just misses out on) FA Cup glory and shows well in the Champions League; basically, if he performs as an impressive mid-season Mr Fixit who deserves a chance to have a No 1’s contract drawn up.

The German is open to the full-time job, so might United’s incoming CEO, Richard Arnold, be minded to keep him by mid-May? After the best part of two months and nine matches a picture is forming of Rangnick and his managerial smarts. Wednesday, at Brentford, was particular­ly instructiv­e because, with United 2-0 up, the 63-year-old made Cristiano Ronaldo his fall guy and a 3-1 victory was the reward. It took the team to 35 points and maintained their status as back-runners hoping to overtake on the curve in the chase for a Champions League berth.

So, rewind to the moment in west London when Rangnick assesses United’s 2-0 lead, Mason Greenwood’s strike having been initiated by Ronaldo’s

clever chest-down pass, and decides the 36-year-old should be sacrificed for a back three to shut the shop in the way he failed to do at Aston Villa, when United slipped from 2-0 up to a careless 2-2 draw.

Ronaldo, as is his modus operandi, is not happy at being hooked on 71 minutes and, as a man on £490,000 a week who is a five-times Ballon d’Or winner with 801 career goals, demands a reason. “Why me?” he asks. Moments after Marcus Rashford – brought on for Greenwood (who does not demand an explanatio­n) – scores the third, Rangnick,

in the heat of battle when he should be focusing on the field, decides to explain. Later he tells the media what he told Ronaldo: that “it was for the good of the team”.

From here, zoom out to view the wider picture. The vignette at Brentford is a subplot, a two-man scene in the wider narrative of Rangnick, his style and what might become of him at the season end. For the moment, Rangnick is slated to move into a two-year, quasidirec­tor of football role, as a “consultant”, to use United’s terminolog­y.

The thinking was that hiring Rangnick

would allow United, led by Arnold, time to pursue the glitzier Paris SaintGerma­in manager, Mauricio Pochettino, who has been to a Champions League final with Tottenham. Or maybe Erik ten Hag, of the Dutch champions, Ajax. Or Brendan Rodgers, who took Liverpool close to the 2013-14 title, made Leicester Cup holders and whose team allowed two 90-plusminute Spurs strikes to lose 3-2 the same evening United beat Brentford.

But how about the “godfather of pressing” as a candidate to be United’s fifth permanent manager since Sir Alex Ferguson retired? The man whose handling of Ronaldo suggests a spine for the job, as does a penchant for dropping casual media-conference bombs, such as the claim Anthony Martial refused to travel to Villa (the player denies this), or that the £73m signing Jadon Sancho is struggling “psychologi­cally” to deal with playing for the world’s biggest club™. Or that Paul Pogba may be motivated to perform solely to attract suitors as his contract winds down.

On the field, too, there are signs Rangnick is patching up the mess he walked into. His record stands at five victories, three draws and one defeat; United are alive in two cups – the Champions League last-16 clash with Atlético

Madrid starts next month, and Middlesbro­ugh are fourth-round Cup visitors next Friday; and, before that, the tilt at Champions League qualificat­ion continues at Old Trafford on Saturday against West Ham.

Moyes’s fourth-placed side are the first of 17 Premier League opponents United need to take enough points from to force Rangnick’s paymasters to consider ending the search beyond the club for Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s full-time successor. If the Hammers are beaten, Rangnick’s side leapfrog them and go six points behind Thomas Tuchel’s flatlining Chelsea with a game in hand. It is not so simple, of course. Beyond having to win these matches – will the

consistent­ly inconsiste­nt United ever be consistent? – there are Tottenham and Arsenal, too. They are ahead of United having played fewer games.

These ifs, buts and maybes make the situation enticing. If Manchester City appear a shoo-in to retain the title, at least two Champions League places are in up-for-grabs-now territory. United, under Rangnick, may be stirring when required, with previously underwhelm­ing footballer­s now awakening. Greenwood’s sustained-performanc­e graph is still to surge up – as a lethal wide-man can he be United’s Mo Salah? – and the lesser-gifted Rashford has been lukewarm, but at Brentford each scored, as did Bruno Fernandes (twice) at Villa.

Their form and that of other disappoint­ments, who include Harry Maguire, Luke Shaw, Sancho and Pogba, will be vital for determinin­g where United’s campaign ends and whether next season’s Rangnick is to be United’s upstairs or still-downstairs man.

 ?? Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA ?? Ralf Rangnick clasps hands with Raphaël Varane after Manchester United’s win at Brentford.
Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA Ralf Rangnick clasps hands with Raphaël Varane after Manchester United’s win at Brentford.
 ?? ?? Ralf Rangnick takes off an unimpresse­d Cristiano Ronaldo at Brentford ‘for the good of the team’. Photograph: Dave Shopland/ Shuttersto­ck
Ralf Rangnick takes off an unimpresse­d Cristiano Ronaldo at Brentford ‘for the good of the team’. Photograph: Dave Shopland/ Shuttersto­ck

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