'It Wouldn't Be the End of the Journey': Solskjær Looks Beyond Top-Four Finish

 Ole Gunnar Solskjær has praised Bruno Fernandes for the impact he has made since joining Manchester United in January. Photograph: Peter Powell/NMC Pool/PA Wire/PA
Ole Gunnar Solskjær has praised Bruno Fernandes for the impact he has made since joining Manchester United in January. Photograph: Peter Powell/NMC Pool/PA Wire/PA
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'It Wouldn't Be the End of the Journey': Solskjær Looks Beyond Top-Four Finish

 Ole Gunnar Solskjær has praised Bruno Fernandes for the impact he has made since joining Manchester United in January. Photograph: Peter Powell/NMC Pool/PA Wire/PA
Ole Gunnar Solskjær has praised Bruno Fernandes for the impact he has made since joining Manchester United in January. Photograph: Peter Powell/NMC Pool/PA Wire/PA

The number of times Ole Gunnar Solskjær mentions the journey Manchester United have been on this season you would think he is employed as a travel guide rather than the manager, but though it is tempting to view Sunday’s showdown at Leicester as journey’s end, the Norwegian insists otherwise.

“We’ve not ended up anywhere yet,” Solskjær says of the chance to clinch third place in the Premier League table and Champions League qualification. “If we get a result against Leicester I think people will say we’ve not had a bad journey this season. But whatever happens, it won’t be the end of the journey because we’ve still got some catching up to do on the two teams ahead of us.”

That might be more in the nature of a trek, though there is no doubt Solskjær’s side are taking steps in the right direction. While at the start of the season they appeared to be going round in circles, seemingly destined for mid-table anonymity, they now look the part and would not be flattered by third place.

At least until the last couple of results United could even claim to be the form team among those sides chasing the last two Champions League positions, with Chelsea and Leicester both losing momentum in the final run-in, though Sunday’s game will put that to the test. Win or draw and Solskjær’s season will be judged a success. Lose, and possibly slip out of the top four after only a few days among the elite, and all the haunting questions about the club’s ambition and the manager’s suitability for the job will return.

“If you want to be part of Manchester United you have to get used to pressure in the final match of the season,” Solskjær says with a shrug. “It’s nothing new, it’s what this club has been built on. We have given ourselves a fantastic chance to end the season on a high, and now it’s up to us to take it.”

Solskjær may be inexperienced as a Premier League manager, but he is still far too canny to be lured into describing Sunday’s game as a make-or-break fixture. “It’s not the most important game of the season, it’s just the next game, and you can ask anyone in football, the next game is always the most important,” he says.

“The result won’t define our season because we’ve already had many defining moments this season. Bruno Fernandes coming in made a massive difference, and I think our overall fitness and mental robustness is so much better now than it was last season.”

The emergence of Mason Greenwood as a free-scoring addition to the frontline would also count as one of the positives this season, along with Paul Pogba’s encouraging form after returning from injury. While there are still questions over the defence, especially at centre-back and now goalkeeper, when United attack they do so with a conviction that has been missing for several seasons.

There are goals in the front three, as well as plenty of pace and movement, and Pogba and Fernandes provide drive and imagination in midfield. “We are getting better at going out to attack teams,” Solskjær says. “That’s how Manchester United should play, it’s how we always used to play, and we are now looking much more like the sort of Manchester United team I want to be in charge of.

“We want to play without fear, to take risks and show what we can do. We are not quite there yet, there is still work to do, but we want to go to the next level and this team is capable of it.”

Though Solskjær will not be drawn on the subject, there will doubtless be one or two additions to the squad before next season, by which time it will be clear whether United have recovered their Champions League status or not. With a 5-0 advantage over LASK of Austria and the home leg still to come early next month, United have all but booked themselves a place in the last eight of the Europa League, which represents a feasible but arduous route to the Champions League, though all concerned would vastly prefer to tie up the matter against Brendan Rodgers’ side on Sunday afternoon.

United could finish third or fourth, depending on what Chelsea do in their tricky last match against Wolves, though Leicester know they will probably need to win to ensure their own Champions League qualification, most likely at the expense of Sunday’s opponents.

When United beat Leicester through a Marcus Rashford penalty when the teams met at Old Trafford in September, it was only the third home match of the season and form was fluctuating wildly. After impressing everyone with a cavalier 4-0 defeat of Chelsea on the opening day, absorbing pressure and playing effectively on the counter, United managed to lose their next home game to Crystal Palace, so overcoming Leicester was a step towards solidity.

That process has continued all season, not always entirely smoothly, though Solskjær is right to acknowledge the impact made by the arrival of Fernandes in January. That key signing, coupled with the manager’s willingness to give young players a chance, has put United back on the right track, though Solskjær and his squad will still be glad of a few days’ rest before the Europa fixtures commence.

“It’s been a very strange season but a draining one, despite the long break,” he says. “You are always tired at this stage of the season but we’ve still got enough energy for the last 90 minutes.”

The Guardian Sport



Defending Champions Sabalenka, Sinner Advance in Rain-hit Cincinnati Open

13 August 2025, US, Mason: Belarusian tennis player Aryna Sabalenka plays a backhand return against Spain's Jessica Bouzas Maneiro during their women's singles fourth-round match on Day 7 of the Cincinnati Open at the Lindner Family Tennis Center. Photo: Marcin Cholewinski/ZUMA Press Wire/dpa
13 August 2025, US, Mason: Belarusian tennis player Aryna Sabalenka plays a backhand return against Spain's Jessica Bouzas Maneiro during their women's singles fourth-round match on Day 7 of the Cincinnati Open at the Lindner Family Tennis Center. Photo: Marcin Cholewinski/ZUMA Press Wire/dpa
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Defending Champions Sabalenka, Sinner Advance in Rain-hit Cincinnati Open

13 August 2025, US, Mason: Belarusian tennis player Aryna Sabalenka plays a backhand return against Spain's Jessica Bouzas Maneiro during their women's singles fourth-round match on Day 7 of the Cincinnati Open at the Lindner Family Tennis Center. Photo: Marcin Cholewinski/ZUMA Press Wire/dpa
13 August 2025, US, Mason: Belarusian tennis player Aryna Sabalenka plays a backhand return against Spain's Jessica Bouzas Maneiro during their women's singles fourth-round match on Day 7 of the Cincinnati Open at the Lindner Family Tennis Center. Photo: Marcin Cholewinski/ZUMA Press Wire/dpa

World number one Aryna Sabalenka cruised into the Cincinnati Open quarter-finals with a 6-1 7-5 victory over Jessica Bouzas Maneiro on Wednesday, while men's top seed Jannik Sinner beat Adrian Mannarino following a lengthy rain delay.

Fresh off a thrilling third-round battle with Emma Raducanu, women's reigning champion Sabalenka had an easier ride against the Spaniard Bouzas Maneiro, earning her tour-leading 50th win in one hour and 20 minutes.

"I was up a break, made a couple of mistakes and she broke me back," Reuters quoted Sabalenka as saying. "I'm glad to win in straight sets. I didn't want to stay for three hours."

The Belarusian will next meet 2022 Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina in a final-worthy showdown, as the ninth-seeded Kazakh rallied from a set down to beat Australian Open winner Madison Keys 6-7(3) 6-4 6-2.

Earlier, six-times Grand Slam champion Iga Swiatek reached the quarters with a 6-4 6-4 victory over Sorana Cirstea, with the third-seeded Pole extending her perfect record against the Romanian to 5-0.

"We played many tough matches, so I know Sorana can really hit the ball well, especially on faster surfaces," Swiatek said. "Not many of my first serves went in, but I was happy I was solid on my second serves."

Fellow Pole Magda Linette secured her second top-10 win of the season by upsetting American fourth seed Jessica Pegula 7-6 (5) 3-6 6-3 in a third-round match that extended over two days after Tuesday's suspension due to rain.

In the men's draw, defending champion Sinner kept his title defense on track, beating Frenchman Mannarino 6-4 7-6(4) after an almost three-hour rain interruption.

The Italian four-times Grand Slam champion struggled to find his rhythm, failing to serve out at 6-5 but sealing the tiebreak with back-to-back aces for his 24th consecutive hard-court victory.

"He is a very tough opponent. Very different from other opponents, not only because he is a lefty but how he hits the ball. It's very low," Sinner said. "I just tried to serve well and tried to see what I could do in the return games."

Sinner will face Canadian 23rd seed Felix Auger-Aliassime in his fifth quarter-final this year.

Spanish second seed Carlos Alcaraz booked his 18th Masters 1000 quarter-final by beating Italian Luca Nardi 6-1 6-4. The five-times major winner, into the last eight in Cincinnati for the third time, has now won 36 of his last 38 matches.

"This match was the best so far for me in this tournament," Alcaraz said. "I'm really happy with the way I felt the ball today and the way that I moved. I got used to the conditions, the humidity and heat. I'm happy to get through."

Alcaraz will next face Russian ninth seed Andrey Rublev, who beat Argentine Francisco Comesana 6-2 6-3.

Canadian Open champion Ben Shelton, whose match was also halted after the first set, progressed to the last 16 with a 7-6(3) 6-3 win over Spaniard Roberto Bautista Agut. The American fifth seed will face Czech Jiri Lehecka.

German third seed Alexander Zverev, who completed a 6-4 6-4 win over American Brandon Nakashima after the match was suspended overnight when he was leading 5-4 in the second set, progressed to the quarters after Russian Karen Khachanov was forced to retire due to injury while trailing 7-5 3-0.

French qualifier Terence Atmane earned the biggest win of his career by stunning American fourth seed Taylor Fritz 3-6 7-5 6-3, earning his first Masters 1000 quarter-final berth.

Atmane will meet Danish seventh seed Holger Rune, who advanced after American 10th seed Frances Tiafoe retired due to a back injury.