Mauricio Pochettino’s Big Dilemma: United Job His If He Wants It

 Mauricio Pochettino was overlooked for José Mourinho by Manchester United in 2016 and the club are keen to rectify what is seen as a blunder this time round. Photograph: Michael Zemanek/BPI/Rex/Shutterstock
Mauricio Pochettino was overlooked for José Mourinho by Manchester United in 2016 and the club are keen to rectify what is seen as a blunder this time round. Photograph: Michael Zemanek/BPI/Rex/Shutterstock
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Mauricio Pochettino’s Big Dilemma: United Job His If He Wants It

 Mauricio Pochettino was overlooked for José Mourinho by Manchester United in 2016 and the club are keen to rectify what is seen as a blunder this time round. Photograph: Michael Zemanek/BPI/Rex/Shutterstock
Mauricio Pochettino was overlooked for José Mourinho by Manchester United in 2016 and the club are keen to rectify what is seen as a blunder this time round. Photograph: Michael Zemanek/BPI/Rex/Shutterstock

There is no question that Manchester United have identified the right man to fill the Old Trafford vacancy in Mauricio Pochettino; the Tottenham manager is an even more impressive candidate now than he was in 2016, when he was shortlisted as a replacement for Louis van Gaal but considered riskier than José Mourinho because of his lack of trophies.

If that has come to be viewed as a blunder, then United are in a position to correct it, even if it ends up costing north of £40m and Pochettino would be leaving a better team and more stable club behind at Spurs. The Argentinian has an extremely difficult decision to make but until he chooses his next course of action the list of alternatives merely forms a backup plan. Trophies or not, the fact that United and Real Madrid are both interested in the same manager says everything that needs to be said about Pochettino’s pedigree and potential.

Many would advise a young, progressive manager against a move to Madrid, because while the glamour is real the expectations are immense and the club has a reputation for burning through well-qualified coaches at a wasteful rate. The concern at the moment is that the same might be becoming true of Manchester United.

It is easy on the one hand to suggest that none of the last three permanent managers was a perfect fit. Each had flaws that were only magnified at the biggest club in the country. On the other it could be the case that United really are ungovernable now, too big and too demanding for one man to bring under control, with the glories of the recent past condemning virtually any aspirant to fall short in trying to match them.

Now Mourinho has joined David Moyes and Van Gaal on the failure list, with Liverpool resurgent and Manchester City still gliding along under Pep Guardiola, it is not difficult to understand why United might view £40m as a price worth paying for a coach considered capable of restoring the club’s battered pride. Yet this is not 1986. United are no longer a sleeping giant waiting for someone with the drive and determination to show everyone else in the division what a modern club looks like.

The division is full of high achievers now, there is money all around and United’s size alone will not trump City’s wealth, Liverpool’s vibrancy or the newfound consistency of the leading clubs in London. If United want their new manager to emulate what Pochettino has achieved at Spurs, then fair enough. But they will have to give him a similar amount of time and not fret too much if the trophies do not start raining in immediately.

The mistake would be to expect their new appointment to emulate what Sir Alex Ferguson achieved, because that is unrealistic. The Premier League is not currently designed to allow one club to get so far ahead of the rest on an almost permanent basis. While City may seem poised to reign supreme for the foreseeable future, with due respect to Liverpool, much depends on how long Guardiola stays. Chelsea were once in a similar position under Mourinho, yet already that was 11 managers ago.

An idea is abroad at the moment that managers are only highly paid stooges in any case, there to act as a buffer between the players and the public and to shield the owners from the flak when things start to go wrong. There is no doubt their influence is frequently overstated, especially in an age when players and their agents seem to call most of the shots, though one has only to look at Pochettino and Spurs to appreciate that the right man at the right club can still make a huge difference.

Looking further back, it was clever of Arsenal to appoint Arsène Wenger when they did because his knowledge of continental football allowed them to tap in to a market that others could not reach and build a title-winning side without having to compete directly with the financial might of United.

Mourinho was ideal for Chelsea first time round because his tactical rigour corrected years of unfocused inconsistency. Coming back to the present, it would be churlish to deny Jürgen Klopp has made an enormous impact at Liverpool, in terms of defining the way the team play, bringing in players to suit the system and proving his high-energy style can produce results.

United need something clever right now, a new angle of attack. They have tried the Ferguson clone (too much had changed after more than two decades) and the safe pair of hands (too safe, too sedate) and have now parted with the obvious expert in the field who also leaves without enhancing his reputation.

Old Trafford is not yet a graveyard for managerial promise, though one could easily see how it might happen, particularly when one considers how long Liverpool have had to wait for the good times to return once their period of domination was over. The next permanent appointment is a chance to put down a marker.

Does the club wish to rediscover continuity or will it allow a constant churn of managers to become a distracting sideshow? United know the importance of patience better than most – Ferguson’s long wait for a breakthrough is part of the history carved into the stadium walls – but the key now might be to understand that the process is cyclical.

For the first time in more than 20 years United are not in a position to trade on their name and reputation, at least not on the pitch. They have money to spend, though they are not at present as attractive a destination as some of their rivals.

The task facing a new manager will be to build again and bring the club together, and in that sense it is legitimate to wonder whether Zinedine Zidane’s three Champions League successes in a row qualify him for the job, or whether Antonio Conte can seriously be considered after his fractious time at Chelsea. Ole Gunnar Solskjær could put himself in a good position if he does well in the next few months and, though United would not normally be looking to pinch the manager of Molde, this is not a normal situation: most of the regular solutions have been auditioned and found wanting.

What Solskjær has in his favour is an obvious connection with the club and a willingness to stay for the long haul if things work out, which is what Ferguson wanted in the first place. Yet Pochettino is a stayer, too, and has the experience and the proven record, in the Premier League and in Europe. The only question appears to be whether he has the stomach for another major construction project so soon after the new White Hart Lane.

The Guardian Sport



Saliba Ruled Out of France Squad, Lacroix Called up as Replacement

Soccer Football - Premier League - Arsenal v Chelsea - Emirates Stadium, London, Britain - March 1, 2026 Arsenal's William Saliba celebrates scoring their first goal. (Action Images via Reuters)
Soccer Football - Premier League - Arsenal v Chelsea - Emirates Stadium, London, Britain - March 1, 2026 Arsenal's William Saliba celebrates scoring their first goal. (Action Images via Reuters)
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Saliba Ruled Out of France Squad, Lacroix Called up as Replacement

Soccer Football - Premier League - Arsenal v Chelsea - Emirates Stadium, London, Britain - March 1, 2026 Arsenal's William Saliba celebrates scoring their first goal. (Action Images via Reuters)
Soccer Football - Premier League - Arsenal v Chelsea - Emirates Stadium, London, Britain - March 1, 2026 Arsenal's William Saliba celebrates scoring their first goal. (Action Images via Reuters)

Defender William ‌Saliba has been ruled out of France's squad due to injury ahead of this month’s friendlies against Brazil and Colombia, with Maxence Lacroix called up to replace him, the country's football federation (FFF) said on Sunday.

Arsenal's Saliba played the full 90 minutes in a ‌2-0 defeat ‌by Manchester City in ‌Sunday's ⁠League Cup final, ⁠before the FFF announced his injury.

"The Arsenal center back is suffering from recurring pain in his left ankle, requiring treatment and a minimum rest period of ⁠10 days," it said in ‌a statement.

"National ‌coach Didier Deschamps has decided to replace ‌him with Maxence Lacroix," the ‌FFF added.

The Crystal Palace defender, 25, has earned his first France call-up, ahead of the 2026 World Cup. ‌He has played 43 games in all competitions this season.

Saliba ⁠was ⁠among the expanded 27-man France squad announced by Deschamps on Thursday.

France will face Brazil in Boston on March 26 before taking on Colombia in Washington on March 29.

The 2022 World Cup runners-up are in Group I at this year's tournament with Senegal, Norway and a winner from the inter-confederation playoffs.


Akliouche Shines as Resurgent Monaco Beats Slumping Lyon and Lille Wins at Marseille

 Monaco's French midfielder #11 Maghnes Akliouche (R) celebrates with his teammates after scoring a goal during the French L1 football match between Olympique Lyonnais (OL) and AS Monaco (ASM) at the Groupama Stadium in Decines-Charpieu, central-eastern France on March 22, 2026. (AFP)
Monaco's French midfielder #11 Maghnes Akliouche (R) celebrates with his teammates after scoring a goal during the French L1 football match between Olympique Lyonnais (OL) and AS Monaco (ASM) at the Groupama Stadium in Decines-Charpieu, central-eastern France on March 22, 2026. (AFP)
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Akliouche Shines as Resurgent Monaco Beats Slumping Lyon and Lille Wins at Marseille

 Monaco's French midfielder #11 Maghnes Akliouche (R) celebrates with his teammates after scoring a goal during the French L1 football match between Olympique Lyonnais (OL) and AS Monaco (ASM) at the Groupama Stadium in Decines-Charpieu, central-eastern France on March 22, 2026. (AFP)
Monaco's French midfielder #11 Maghnes Akliouche (R) celebrates with his teammates after scoring a goal during the French L1 football match between Olympique Lyonnais (OL) and AS Monaco (ASM) at the Groupama Stadium in Decines-Charpieu, central-eastern France on March 22, 2026. (AFP)

Maghnes Akliouche scored a brilliant individual goal and American forward Folarin Balogun netted a penalty as Monaco rallied to win 2-1 at Lyon on Sunday for a sixth straight league victory.

Coach Paulo Fonseca's slumping Lyon side is seven games without a win overall having equaled a club record with 13 straight victories.

Sixth-place Monaco is only one point behind fourth-place Lyon and fifth-place Lille in the race for a Champions League spot next season and faces third-place Marseille after the international break.

The top three qualify directly for the Champions League and the team finishing fourth goes through qualifying.

Marseille opens the door

Marseille lost 2-1 at home to Lille, which scored a late winner through Olivier Giroud. Monaco can move level on points with Marseille if it wins their match on April 5.

Marseille forward Mason Greenwood went off early on after being barged over at full speed by Calvin Verdonk. He was replaced by Ethan Nwaneri, who scored with a neat half-volley from Igor Paixão's left-wing cross. The 19-year-old Nwaneri is on loan from Premier League leader Arsenal.

Lille goalkeeper Berke Özer went off in first-half stoppage time after taking an accidental blow to the face from Marseille striker Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang as they challenged for the ball. Özer was replaced by Arnaud Bodart.

Another high-profile error from Marseille defender Leonardo Balerdi gifted Lille a 49th-minute equalizer. Balerdi's misjudged clearance hit the foot of Thomas Meunier and went in.

Meunier then set up Giroud in the 86th with a pinpoint cross which the veteran striker met with a typical downward header.

Lyon's slump continues

Things looked good for Lyon when Brazil forward Endrick set up midfielder Pavel Šulc in the 42nd minute, skipping past two defenders down the right before cutting the ball back to the Czech midfielder near the penalty spot.

But Endrick went for goal himself in the 57th and saw his shot cleared near the line with teammate Corentin Tolisso unmarked.

Akliouche equalized five minutes later when he controlled a long pass with one touch to cut inside Clinton Mata and curled a shot into the top-right corner. Akliouche then won a penalty after drawing a foul from Tolisso and Balogun sent the goalkeeper the wrong way.

The penalty was awarded despite a video review showing Endrick had his jersey pulled by Monaco captain Denis Zakaria in the buildup to the penalty.

It was a second error from the officials, who failed to spot a headbutt from Lyon left back Nicolas Tagliafico to the side of Akliouche's head. Tagliafico raised his right arm as he was running alongside Akliouche as if to disguise the intent.

Tagliafico was sent off in the 89th for a violent lunge on Lamine Camara, whose left foot buckled under him.

Immobile gets going

Veteran Italian striker Ciro Immobile finally got off the mark for new club Paris FC in a 3-2 home win over Le Havre.

It was a typical poacher's effort from the 36-year-old Immobile to put his side ahead. He latched onto a loose ball and drilled a low shot into the opposite corner. The win moved Paris FC up to 13th under new coach Antoine Kombouaré.

Rennes drew 0-0 at home to rock-bottom Metz and eighth-place Strasbourg won 3-2 at next-to-last Nantes with two late goals from Joaquín Panichelli.

The Argentina striker's brace moved him top of the Ligue 1 scoring charts with 16, one ahead of Greenwood.

On Saturday, Paris Saint-Germain won 4-0 at Nice to reclaim top spot from Lens.


Alcaraz Eyes Clay Court Season after Early Miami Exit

World number one Carlos Alcaraz will refocus on the clay court season after another early exit at the Miami Open. Rich Storry / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP
World number one Carlos Alcaraz will refocus on the clay court season after another early exit at the Miami Open. Rich Storry / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP
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Alcaraz Eyes Clay Court Season after Early Miami Exit

World number one Carlos Alcaraz will refocus on the clay court season after another early exit at the Miami Open. Rich Storry / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP
World number one Carlos Alcaraz will refocus on the clay court season after another early exit at the Miami Open. Rich Storry / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP

World number one Carlos Alcaraz remained confident his game is improving despite a third-round exit at the Miami Open, and after a few days to reset he'll be turning his attention to the clay court season.

"Probably I'm going to go back home," Alcaraz said after falling in three sets to 36th-ranked American Sebastian Korda on Sunday.

"Chilling with my family, with my friends a couple of days. I don't know how much my team are going to allow me to have rest and a day off.

"The clay season is around the corner. My mind right now is to take some days off, to reset my mind, reset the batteries, be ready and in good shape for the clay season."

Korda became the lowest-ranked man to defeat Alcaraz since 55th-ranked David Goffin ousted him in the second round at Miami last year.

The Spaniard had built a 73-6 record in the year since then, including a 16-0 run to start 2026 that included an Australian Open title that made the 22-year-old the youngest man to complete a career Grand Slam, said AFP.

He added a title in Doha before a semi-final defeat at Indian Wells, and he knows that every lower-ranked player comes out swinging freely against him.

"Obviously when you're winning tournaments and you have great record win/lose, everything is easier in the way of pressure to the opponents," he said. "I'm feeling they have more to win than to lose in those matches ... they're playing without pressure."

Alcaraz is trying to make sure he doesn't respond by piling pressure on himself.

"I'm not thinking about my pressure," he said. "I don't feel it at all. I'm trying to play my best."

That includes constant work to improve his game, and despite Sunday's result he's confident he's on the right track.

"I would say what I was practicing, you know, I think I just did it really well," he said. "Some couple things in previous tournaments that I just didn't feel comfortable, I think in this tournament, I started to feel better and better.

"I think the process has been good. Besides the loss today, I think I'm still in the right way."