How Youth Is Driving Manchester United's Transfer Policy

 Among the Manchester United signings are (from left): Hannibal; Facundo Pellistri, here in action for Peñarol; and Amad Diallo, pictured playing for Atalanta. Composite: Getty Images
Among the Manchester United signings are (from left): Hannibal; Facundo Pellistri, here in action for Peñarol; and Amad Diallo, pictured playing for Atalanta. Composite: Getty Images
TT

How Youth Is Driving Manchester United's Transfer Policy

 Among the Manchester United signings are (from left): Hannibal; Facundo Pellistri, here in action for Peñarol; and Amad Diallo, pictured playing for Atalanta. Composite: Getty Images
Among the Manchester United signings are (from left): Hannibal; Facundo Pellistri, here in action for Peñarol; and Amad Diallo, pictured playing for Atalanta. Composite: Getty Images

Facundo Pellistri from Atlético Peñarol for £10m and Amad Diallo from Atalanta for £19m: in two 18-year-olds signed on deadline day the fresh front opened in Manchester United’s youth policy is illuminated.

The club’s renowned academy has had a representative in every matchday squad since 1937 – more than 4,000 – and has become a destination for some of the world’s finest prospects. Real Madrid, Barcelona, Paris Saint-Germain, Juventus, Monaco, Liverpool, Manchester City, Chelsea and Arsenal are rivals recently rejected in favor of United by members of the fresh wave.

The strategy dates from when Nicky Butt became academy head in 2016 and is being used after United identified a new difficulty in acquiring A-list footballers when so-called lesser clubs no longer have to sell – Borussia Dortmund’s refusal to go below €120m for Jadon Sancho a prime example.

At 18 Pellistri and Diallo are actually outliers. Of the other 17 recruited from outside since the start of 2019 to swell United’s nursery ranks all but one have been 16. In Ed Woodward’s August 2019 £4.5m payment to Monaco for Hannibal the United executive vice-chairman acquired a poster boy for the recruitment drive. Chased by Arsenal, Liverpool and Barcelona, the 16-year-old Hannibal quickly moved from United’s under-18s (13 appearances, one goal, three assists) to the under-23s (10, two, six).

As with all juniors the club’s desired path is for the midfielder to become a member of Ole Gunnar Solskjær’s squad, as Mason Greenwood and Brandon Williams have done – and, ultimately, be part of a title-winning side. In February Butt, now the head of youth-team development, said: “You can judge me and the people who develop for the first team in hopefully two or three years when we’re challenging for titles. If you’re challenging for titles and getting players in the first team, that’s when you know you’re doing an unbelievable job.”

Pleasing for United is how an unwanted trend is also being reversed. Sir Alex Ferguson’s retirement as manager in 2013 precipitated a slide of the senior side that was mirrored by a youth set-up in which the son of the former defender Phil Neville, Harvey, switched to City’s academy, a route also followed by Charlie McNeil seven years ago.

Neville and McNeil are back at United. The latter did not come cheap, again pointing to the ambition to invest in a gilded future. The prolific striker cost about £650,000, though the fee could rise to more than £1m. McNeil is a hot prospect having scored more than 600 goals at City.

McNeill is an illustration of how United also search within the UK. Omari Forson was a 15-year-old signed from Tottenham in July 2019 for a compensation fee of about £80,000. The defender Logan Pye and the rangy striker Joe Hugill arrived from Sunderland in May, the latter for about £300,000, leaving Arsenal and Tottenham disappointed.

Among the overseas contingent Dillon Hoogewerf was acquired from Ajax in July 2019 for about £100,000, the forward having played for their under-19s at 15, and the same summer his countryman Bjorn Hardley, a defender, was bought for £189,000 from Breda. They were joined by Martin Svidersky, a Slovakian midfielder reportedly trialled by Liverpool, Chelsea, City, Internazionale and Borussia Dortmund. Svidersky cost about £130,000, as did Mateo Mejia, a Spanish forward who joined from Real Zaragoza, United beating off interest from Real Madrid and Arsenal. The French attacker Noam Emeran cost up to £80,000, as did Johan Guadagno, a goalkeeper who reportedly claimed he turned down Inter and Anderlecht.

This year Radek Vitek’s departure from Sigma Olomouc meant another keeper bolstered the group, and in June Marc Jurado, a defender who rejected a contract with Barcelona, arrived in a £400,000 transfer, the first player recruited by United from the Catalan club since Gerard Piqué 16 years ago. Jurado was complemented by Alejandro Garnacho, a wide player for whom about £80,000 was paid to Atlético Madrid, and Álvaro Fernández Carreras, a full-back, signed for free.

As with Jurado, Carreras was effusive about the Spanish team he left, underlining the significance of the decision. “I have made the decision to leave this great club – I wanted to thank all my teammates, and the coaching staff at Real Madrid for making me a better person and footballer,” he said.

At the start of this month the center-back Willy Kambwala left Sochaux after United paid about £3.5m for the France Under-17 captain, the Norwegian midfielder Isak Hansen-Aarøen, who made his professional debut for Tromso at 15, having preceded him in September.

All of the above, excluding Pellistri and Diallo, represents a minimum £11m investment, relative chicken feed for a club of United’s global reach. The club purport their success in the youth market to be down to three factors: the storied tradition of an academy that housed George Best, Ryan Giggs and Marcus Rashford; the coaching, facilities and proven route to the first team, Solskjær last season giving eight debuts to home-reared players, the most since the Busby Babe crop of 1952-53; and the financial incentives on offer.

There is little risk for United. Rashford, to proffer one example, is worth about £100m, having cost nothing, and even if none of the latest 19 from the pipeline emulate him, Greenwood, Williams et al, United are sure to recoup the outlay via sales of those who make careers elsewhere.

Yet the odds and United’s track record suggest one or more may well become a prominent first-team player. It seems a smart policy from Woodward and United’s football brains trust.

The Guardian Sport



Saudi National Team Heads to Atlanta for World Cup’s Spain Match

Saudi Arabia continues preparations to face Spain on Sunday in its second Group H match. SPA
Saudi Arabia continues preparations to face Spain on Sunday in its second Group H match. SPA
TT

Saudi National Team Heads to Atlanta for World Cup’s Spain Match

Saudi Arabia continues preparations to face Spain on Sunday in its second Group H match. SPA
Saudi Arabia continues preparations to face Spain on Sunday in its second Group H match. SPA

The Saudi national football team will leave Austin, its US base, for Atlanta, Georgia, on Friday after a closed training session at Q2 Stadium, as it continues preparations to face Spain on Sunday in its second Group H match at the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

Saudi Arabia drew this week 1-1 with Uruguay in their opening game.

"A very good ⁠team defensively ⁠that will try to take advantage of their counter-attacking options," Spain defender Marc Cucurella said of Saudi Arabia, who at the 2022 World Cup pulled off a stunning 2-1 victory over eventual champions Argentina.


Lionel Messi's Family Pleads for 'Humanity' as the Argentina Captain's Father Undergoes Treatment

TOPSHOT - Argentina's forward #10 Lionel Messi enters the pitch ahead of the 2026 World Cup Group J football match between Argentina and Algeria at the Kansas City Stadium in Kansas City on June 16, 2026.  (Photo by ROBERTO SCHMIDT / AFP)
TOPSHOT - Argentina's forward #10 Lionel Messi enters the pitch ahead of the 2026 World Cup Group J football match between Argentina and Algeria at the Kansas City Stadium in Kansas City on June 16, 2026. (Photo by ROBERTO SCHMIDT / AFP)
TT

Lionel Messi's Family Pleads for 'Humanity' as the Argentina Captain's Father Undergoes Treatment

TOPSHOT - Argentina's forward #10 Lionel Messi enters the pitch ahead of the 2026 World Cup Group J football match between Argentina and Algeria at the Kansas City Stadium in Kansas City on June 16, 2026.  (Photo by ROBERTO SCHMIDT / AFP)
TOPSHOT - Argentina's forward #10 Lionel Messi enters the pitch ahead of the 2026 World Cup Group J football match between Argentina and Algeria at the Kansas City Stadium in Kansas City on June 16, 2026. (Photo by ROBERTO SCHMIDT / AFP)

Lionel Messi's father is undergoing medical treatment for an undisclosed illness and his family asked the media for “humanity” on Thursday amid rumors about Jorge Messi's health while his son competes at the World Cup.

The family did not specify the illness that the 68-year-old Jorge Messi is suffering from, The Associated Press said.

“Jorge is going through a health situation,” the Messi family said in a statement. “He is currently under medical observation, recovering and progressing favorably within his current condition.”

The 38-year-old Messi said after Argentina's 3-0 victory over Algeria in the team's opening World Cup match that he was going through a difficult personal situation. He was very emotional after scoring the first of his three goals, which allowed him to equal Miroslav Klose as the all-time leading scorer in World Cup history with 16 goals.

“My tears after the first goal? I’ve had some tough days. It wasn’t related to soccer. And those feelings were because of that,” Messi said. “I thank my teammates, the coaching staff and the delegation for helping me.”

The family statement, released by Messi’s media office, came on the same day that reports of Jorge Messi’s death circulated in Argentina.

“At times like these, we ask for responsibility, prudence and humanity,” the family said. “A person’s health and the peace of mind of their loved ones should not be the subject of speculation or irresponsible media interest.”

The statement said any further developments would be communicated by the family.

Jorge Messi played a key role in his third son’s soccer career, acting as his agent and managing his business affairs off the field.

He accompanied the young Messi to Barcelona in the early 2000s for a tryout at La Masia, the Spanish club’s youth academy.

His father also negotiated Messi's contracts with Barcelona and then his transfers to Paris Saint-Germain and Inter Miami, while also managing his son’s image rights and several investments in real estate, hotels and restaurants.

In 2016, Messi and his father were convicted in Spain on tax evasion charges but avoided prison time because the sentence was less than two years.

While Messi is with his teammates at Argentina's base camp in Kansas City awaiting their second group match against Austria on Monday in Dallas, his family expressed their “sincere gratitude for the outpouring of affection, respect and concern received.”

“We request that the privacy and confidentiality of Jorge and his entire family be respected during this process,” the statement said.


'Pico' Lopes -- Cape Verde Defender's Journey from Ireland to World Cup

Pointing the way: Cape Verde defender Pico Lopes (C) takes part in a training session at their World Cup base in Tampa, Florida. PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA / AFP
Pointing the way: Cape Verde defender Pico Lopes (C) takes part in a training session at their World Cup base in Tampa, Florida. PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA / AFP
TT

'Pico' Lopes -- Cape Verde Defender's Journey from Ireland to World Cup

Pointing the way: Cape Verde defender Pico Lopes (C) takes part in a training session at their World Cup base in Tampa, Florida. PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA / AFP
Pointing the way: Cape Verde defender Pico Lopes (C) takes part in a training session at their World Cup base in Tampa, Florida. PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA / AFP

Roberto 'Pico' Lopes might have been whiling away his time as a mortgage advisor in Ireland instead of preparing to face Uruguay in the World Cup on Sunday had Shamrock Rovers not come calling.

The 34-year-old's outstanding defensive performance for Cape Verde in the 0-0 draw with European champions Spain on Monday justified his decision to cut short working in the bank in 2017 and bet the house on making it as a professional footballer.

At the time he was combining his job with playing for Bohemians in the League of Ireland when their wealthier Dublin rivals Shamrock Rovers offered him a professional contract, AFP said.

The World Cup has catapulted him to a different level of exposure, appearing on US TV following the impressive World Cup debut by the African volcanic archipelago of just 525,000 people.

Lopes, born in Ireland to Cape Verdean father Carlos and Irish mother Judy, was invited on to James Corden's World Cup show on broadcaster Fox.

He said it was "the stuff of dreams" and it certainly has been since he belatedly put a message he received in 2018 from then Cape Verde coach Rui Aguas on LinkedIn, into Google Translate.

Aguas had got back in touch nine months later to ask him if he had considered his offer.

"He said they were interested in getting new players into the national team and asked if it would be of interest," Lopes told AFP in 2024.

"I said absolutely and apologized profusely, and that if the opportunity was still there, I would love to be a part of it."

- 'A dreamer' -

Lopes said looking back he had thought the offer was a wind-up.

"I grew up in an era of prank phone calls and prank messages so I was always a bit skeptical," he told the Irish Sun.

"I never thought an international call-up would come that way."

Since making his debut in 2019 Lopes has been to two Africa Cup of Nations -- reaching the quarter-finals in the 2023 edition -- and now the pinnacle of any footballer's career, the World Cup.

His performance against Spain was followed by several generations of his family, including his 98-year-old grandfather in Cape Verde.

His parents and two brothers, along with his wife Leah and baby son Diego were at the match in Atlanta.

"He (Diego) slept through most of the match -- it shows you how boring Spain was," chuckled Lopes.

While Lopes, who has won five Irish titles with Shamrock Rovers, has been in a bubble at the squad's base, his family have been hailed in the streets by Cape Verde supporters.

"They've seen us on TV, they've been approaching us on the street saying, 'We recognize you', all the way from Crumlin (the neighborhood in Dublin where the family live), can you believe it?" Judy told RTE.

Lopes is still glad he went to college in Dublin, just in case the football career all grinds to a halt one day.

"If I didn't go to college or I didn't pursue education, I wouldn't have known what LinkedIn was," he told The Irish Sun.

"Your education is just as important.

"I've been able to balance (the job and football) and then get to a stage where I've left employment to go to full-time football."

However, he recalls that even before he turned professional, he imagined playing for Cape Verde when he watched them in their maiden Africa Cup of Nations appearance in 2013.

"I am a dreamer. You watch anything yourself . . . 'Could that be me? I wonder if that would ever happen to me?'"

The answer was yes and thirteen years later he is living the dream at the 'Beautiful Game's' showpiece event.