EPL Index
·14 luglio 2026
Report: Aston Villa have made their first move to sign Man United star

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsEPL Index
·14 luglio 2026

Aston Villa needed a quick response in the market. Instead, they have run into another closed door. According to TeamTalk, Villa made contact with Manchester United over Mason Mount, only to be told there is no deal to be done.
That matters because Villa’s midfield picture has changed sharply. Amadou Onana’s ruptured cruciate knee ligament, suffered at the World Cup, leaves a major hole for most of the coming season. On top of that, Youri Tielemans is heading to Old Trafford after Manchester United triggered his £35m release clause. For Unai Emery, this is no minor reshuffle. It is a problem in the centre of the pitch, and it needs fixing properly.

Photo IMAGO
Mount looked like a sensible enquiry. He is 27, he knows the Premier League, and he still has the technical quality to fit into an ambitious side. His Manchester United career has been damaged by injuries since his £60m move from Chelsea in 2023, with only 72 appearances and seven goals across three seasons. Even so, the idea that United would simply wave him through never fully rang true.
He has two years left on a contract worth £250,000 a week, and the latest line is that he wants to stay and fight for his place. United, under Michael Carrick, are rebuilding parts of the midfield and clearly see Mount as someone worth keeping around for a season where Champions League football should create more demand for rotation and depth.
Villa have already moved for Johan Manzambi in a £52.4m deal from SC Freiburg, and the player arrives with a growing reputation after a strong World Cup. That is positive, but it does not solve everything. He is still stepping into a higher level, and asking him to absorb the pressure of replacing proven Premier League output straight away is risky.
This is where the concern becomes obvious. Villa had an excellent campaign, winning the Europa League and finishing fourth in the Premier League, but good seasons do not protect you from bad squad planning. Jadon Sancho has gone after his loan spell, the midfield has been weakened, and finances are tight enough to complicate every move.
That is why the Mason Mount rejection stings. Not because he was a perfect answer, but because he was one of the few available names who made immediate sense. Villa now need to move quickly, decisively and without sentiment. Emery has raised standards. The recruitment team have to match them.
If they do not, the danger is simple. A club that worked hard to get into a strong position could waste momentum before the season has properly started. In modern football, that is how progress disappears.
As a worried Aston Villa supporter, this report reads like another warning siren. You can dress it up however you like, but losing Onana for most of the season and seeing Tielemans go for £35m is a brutal hit. That is experience, control and physical presence gone from the middle of the park. If the answer is one exciting signing and a rejected enquiry, that is not enough.
Mount may not have been flawless, and his injury record would have worried plenty of us, but at least the logic was there. He has pedigree, he has quality, and he could have helped straight away. Being knocked back is fine, that happens. The bigger issue is whether Villa have enough alternatives lined up. Serious clubs do not wait around after a setback.
Emery has earned trust, no question. He has transformed the club and given supporters nights to remember. But he cannot perform miracles every year if the squad starts going backwards. Champions League level football punishes weakness quickly. If Villa enter the season short in midfield, then all the optimism from last year starts to look fragile. Supporters will back the team, but they will also expect urgency, competence and a bit more imagination than this.
Source: TeamTalk







































