
EPL Index
·30 giugno 2025
Another unwanted player returns to complicate Man Utd summer

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·30 giugno 2025
Manchester United’s long-awaited summer rebuild is once again being tested by the realities of modern football economics. Tyrell Malacia, the club’s first signing under Erik ten Hag, has returned to Carrington after PSV Eindhoven declined to make his loan permanent, despite a modest £8.5 million option.
Photo IMAGO
It is a move that underlines the difficulty United face this window: a squad full of players who do not fit the current manager’s vision, but who remain costly to retain and difficult to sell.
Malacia, now 25, has endured a torrid time since arriving at Old Trafford. Injuries have limited him to just three league appearances since a promising debut season, with his career derailed by a series of complications following a meniscus tear.
Unsurprisingly, interest is minimal. His fitness record alone makes him a gamble, and with United eager to clear space and trim the wage bill, there is little optimism that a significant fee can be recovered.
Photo IMAGO
This situation is not unique to Malacia. The club’s inability to shift high-profile underperformers has become an increasingly damaging theme. As The Mirror reports, the futures of Marcus Rashford, Antony and Jadon Sancho are far from resolved. All three were considered central assets just 18 months ago. Now, none appear to be part of Ruben Amorim’s preferred plans.
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Despite signing Matheus Cunha, United’s business is at risk of being defined not by who they bring in, but who they fail to move out. Subsidising wages or releasing players on cut-price deals may become a necessity.
The sense of drift is magnified when juxtaposed with off-field behaviour. Alejandro Garnacho wearing an Aston Villa shirt with Rashford’s name on the back while on holiday has irritated club bosses. United are now contending with optics as well as performance — a symbolic reminder that player power and club control are not yet aligned.
Garnacho: Instagram
Ruben Amorim has been brought in to instil discipline and direction. But without movement on departures, he will be forced to carry passengers into the season — a situation that risks undermining both morale and tactical clarity.
Photo IMAGO
Manchester United’s challenges are not just financial or physical, they are philosophical. A reset of the squad requires difficult decisions, acceptance of loss, and a willingness to clear paths for those who fit the new structure.
The club have done it before — allowing players to join rivals in order to balance the books. They may need to do it again, and quickly, if this rebuild is to avoid repeating the familiar mistakes of summers past.
For United fans, this latest update is as frustrating as it is familiar. They’ve been here before: ambitious plans overshadowed by an inability to shift dead weight. Tyrell Malacia’s situation is just the tip of the iceberg.
There is genuine concern that Amorim will start the season hamstrung by a squad bloated with players who don’t belong in the project. Rashford, Antony, Sancho — these were once the future. Now they represent a logistical problem as much as a footballing one.
Photo: IMAGO
The Garnacho situation doesn’t help either. It’s not just about discipline, it’s about tone. What message does it send when a player at one of the world’s biggest clubs is happy to flaunt rival colours? It suggests a culture that still hasn’t been reset.
United have made a decent start in the market with Cunha, but it’s hard to feel excitement when the deadwood is still so visible. If they want to move forward, they need to be bold, even if it means taking financial hits. Keep delaying, and they’ll just keep running in circles.
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