Keep or sell? Every Manchester United player assessed ahead of Ruben Amorim transfer overhaul

Red Devils squad set for major transformation as new boss gets to work at Old Trafford

featured-image

is officially set to arrive at . The 39-year-old will start work this week and one of his first jobs will be to assess the players he has inherited from Erik ten Hag. His target is clear: to assemble a squad capable of getting United back to the top of English football and challenging for major trophies.

There will inevitably be new signings and player departures at Old Trafford. Despite the odd high-profile error, he can make superb saves on his day and is worth sticking with. A decent back-up option.



Money should be spent elsewhere rather than on a new No2. He will be 39 by the time his contract expires next summer. Could be a key beneficiary of Amorim’s preference for playing a back three.

Still a player in there. Remains to be seen whether Amorim feels he can use Mazraoui as a wing-back, but unlikely to be moved on so soon after signing. Will be out of contract in July 2025, when he turns 31.

A steady head but not an elite centre-back. His start to life at Old Trafford has been disrupted by an ankle injury but he looks a real talent. Prone to injury but one of United’s best centre-backs and a player who could thrive under Amorim.

The 17-year-old could be one of the key winners from Amorim’s appointment, as a left-back who is more than capable of playing further up as a wing-back. Has had a tough time of it at United with an injury-ravaged few years. A really poor start to his United career may be more to do with how bad things got under Ten Hag than a reflection of the Dutchman.

Too early to sell in any case. KEEP A well-balanced full-back, but questions remain over whether he can step up and become a flying full-back the like of which Amorim tends to use. Jury is out but keep for now.

One of Europe’s best left-backs when he is on it, but his biggest issue is staying fit. Can play wing-back, though, and that could prove valuable in a 3-4-3 system. Kept on as an emergency option but this surely has to be it.

His deal expires next summer, when it will be time for United to move on once and for all. The £60m signing has not hit anything like the heights he did at Chelsea, and is regularly unavailable for selection through injury. An important player under Amorim at Sporting, the Uruguayan was used sparingly by Ten Hag but looks set to benefit from the new manager’s arrival.

Shoulders a lot of the flack when the Red Devils are not doing well but is the best player at the club. Old enough that he once played against his new manager. His contract is up next summer and, given he will be 33, perhaps time for United to move on from a player with high wages.

Has shown glimpses of his talent in cameos here and there. Worth loaning out in order to experience more first-team football. A similar situation to Collyer.

Also 20, needs more game time in order for the club to accurately know how good a player they have got. One of very few players to have seen his stock rise over the first few months of the season. A capable wide player.

Would be an obvious sell but his deal ends in 2026 so perhaps best sticking with him until then. Easily the most exciting player to have been produced by United’s Carrington academy in years. His £36.

5million summer move from Bologna is not working out. Caught between being a striker, winger and No10 but good enough at none of them for United’s desired level. One of the men whose performances suffered under Ten Hag.

Needs to give more in terms of tracking back, but can be a game-changer on his day. At 18, Wheatley is a promising young forward who is still very much at the developmental stage of his career. Has by no means been a flop since joining United, but they cannot return to the top with a striker who is a seven out of 10.

They should sell Hojlund and target Sporting star . Has had a very frustrating start to the season but was United’s best performer last term and is a talented player. Hopelessly one-footed, his £86.

3m move from Ajax was Ten Hag’s biggest transfer failure. United will lose money on him, and probably a lot..