EPL Index
·17 de janeiro de 2026
Report: Man United considering move to appoint Premier League manager

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Yahoo sportsEPL Index
·17 de janeiro de 2026

Credit to The Mirror for the original reporting that has sent a familiar tremor through the Premier League. Oliver Glasner confirming his Crystal Palace departure at the end of the season feels less like a routine contract decision and more like a stone dropped into already restless water at Old Trafford.
Glasner’s announcement was calm, measured, and revealing. “I already informed the club months ago that I wanted a new challenge,” he explained, adding, “Steve and I want the best for Crystal Palace.” There is no rancour here, just clarity, and in modern football that alone makes the story resonate.
Palace have enjoyed tangible success under the Austrian, most notably last season’s FA Cup triumph, yet momentum has ebbed. A nine game winless run, a damaging FA Cup exit to Macclesfield, and the likely departure of Marc Guehi point towards a natural pause. Glasner stepping away now feels deliberate rather than reactive.
Manchester United’s interest is hardly subtle. With Michael Carrick installed as interim head coach and Ruben Amorim dismissed earlier this month, the club is again scanning the managerial horizon. Glasner’s name sits neatly within that shortlist, alongside Thomas Tuchel, Gareth Southgate, and Carrick himself.

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What sharpens the focus is tactical alignment. Glasner favours a 3-4-3 system, the same framework Amorim attempted to embed. That continuity may appeal to United’s hierarchy, led by Omar Berrada and Jason Wilcox, who are tasked with restoring coherence to a club that has lacked it.
Glasner’s reflections on contracts were quietly striking. “I can sign today, or a player can sign a contract extension today and leave in summer.” It was a reminder that contracts now signal intent less than timing. Stability is provisional, loyalty increasingly fluid.
That outlook mirrors the modern elite game, where managers are judged not just on results but on suitability to long term vision. United’s dilemma is not simply who comes next, but what they are building towards.
Palace sit 13th, drifting rather than falling. Glasner’s 41 wins from 95 matches tell a story of competence and progression, yet football rarely waits. His decision to leave before uncertainty deepens may be his most calculated move yet.
For United, it reads like opportunity.
From a Manchester United supporter’s perspective, Glasner’s availability provokes cautious curiosity rather than outright excitement. There is an appeal in a coach who has delivered silverware without the resources of an elite club, and who speaks with clarity rather than spin. That FA Cup win with Palace will resonate, not for its glamour, but for what it suggested about organisation and belief.
Yet doubts linger. Palace’s current run, winless in nine, cannot be ignored. United supporters have grown weary of managers whose ideas sound compelling but unravel under pressure. Glasner’s 3-4-3 system also raises questions about squad fit. Does this group of players truly suit wing backs and structural discipline, or does it demand another painful rebuild?
Glasner feels like a manager United could appoint with logic rather than romance. Whether that is enough, at a club still wrestling with its identity, remains the defining question.









































