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Berrada Ready to Back Jason Wilcox Over Ruben Amorim After Man Utd Dispute

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Manchester United chief executive Omar Berrada is expected to back Jason Wilcox amid internal tension with Ruben Amorim, according to talkSPORT.

The Portuguese manager’s relationship with Wilcox has been described as ‘tense’ following United’s 1-1 draw at Leeds on Sunday, which saw the Manchester side fail to win for the fourth time in their last five Premier League games.

Amorim’s post-match remarks at Elland Road were the main talking point, with the 40-year-old sensationally claiming he joined United to be their manager, not their head coach, hinting at a power struggle behind the scenes at Old Trafford.

Amorim’s Old Trafford Future ‘in the Balance’

Ruben Amorim

According to talkSPORT, Amorim’s future at United is ‘in the balance’ following his explosive press conference, during which he strongly indicated he should be given more authority at the club.

His ‘fractured relationship’ with Wilcox is reportedly making his long-term prospects at Old Trafford difficult, with the director of football said to be displeased with Amorim’s lack of tactical flexibility.

Amorim, meanwhile, feels promises over the January transfer window have been broken, as United plan a quiet market after losing the race for Bournemouth star Antoine Semenyo, who looks likely to join Manchester City.

Berrada is reportedly expected to back Wilcox in what has been described as a ‘power struggle’ between the director of football and Amorim.

United are claimed to have reservations over Amorim’s prospects at the club, which may explain why they do not want to invest further in the squad after spending over £250m during the Portuguese manager’s tenure so far.

Amorim’s Explosive Post-Match Rant in Full

Manchester United manager Ruben Amorim shouts during the Bournemouth draw

Amorim was clearly unhappy when asked whether he still feels backed by the club’s board following Sunday’s 1-1 draw with Leeds.

The Portuguese tactician delivered a fiery response and even hinted that he will leave the club when his contract ends in June 2027.

“Guys, to stop with that, and I noticed that you received selective information about everything. I came here to be the manager of Manchester United, not to be the coach of Manchester United. That is clear.

“I know that my name is not Tuchel, is not Conte, is not Mourinho, but I’m the manager of Manchester United. It’s going to be like this for 18 months or when the board decided to change. That was my point. I want to finish with that. I’m not going to quit. I will do my job until other guy is coming here to replace me.

“I just want to say that I’m going to be the manager of this team, not just the coach. I was really clear on that. That is going to finish in 18 months, and then everyone is going to move on.

“That was the deal. That is my job, not to be a coach. If people cannot handle the Gary Nevilles and the criticises of everything, we need to change the club. No, no guys, I would say that I came here to be the manager of Manchester United, not to be the coach. Every department, the scouting department, the sporting director needs to do their job. I will do mine for 18 months and then we move on. Thank you, guys.”

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Crysencio Summerville Only Wants to Join Man Utd This Summer

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Manchester United are eyeing a number of players to come into their quad this summer and improve it, but they’re not restricting themselves to just midfielders.

Michael Carrick has made the centre of the pitch a priority to bolster following the departure of Casemiro at the end of his contract, while Manuel Ugarte has suffered a serious knee injury at the World Cup and is set for an extended period of time on the sidelines.

But while the club’s search for new midfielders has hit a wall, the club are also looking at bolstering their attack with a left-winger, and they have now been handed a major advantage in the race for one star.

Crysencio Summerville Wants to Join Man Utd

Crysencio Summerville

It was reported this week by GIVEMESPORT senior correspondent Ben Jacobs that Man Utd chiefs have opened club-to-club talks with West Ham over a deal to sign Crysencio Summerville.

The Netherlands international, who shone at the World Cup and has been described as ‘unstoppable’, is expected to leave the London Stadium following their relegation to the Championship, and United believe he could be an ideal addition to the side to round out the attack.

Fulham have been strongly linked with a move to hijack United’s bid, but it has now emerged that the 24-year-old is only keen on a move to Old Trafford.

According to X account The Touchline, which has more than 1.6m followers, the former Leeds star has told his representatives about his decision.

Summerville feels that United is a place where he can compete for the Champions League and Premier League trophies, having notched twice at the World Cup this summer and finished last season with seven goals for the Hammers.

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Summerville Would Be Perfect Winger Signing

Manchester United manager Michael Carrick looks on after Premier League win against Nottingham Forest

Man Utd have got some quality options in attack already, after spending over £200m to bring in Matheus Cunha, Bryan Mbeumo, and Benjamin Sesko last summer.

However, with more games to come this season after reaching the Champions League, the squad needs to be strengthened, and Summerville’s arrival would offer a new profile of direct winger, while also giving great quality depth and competition.

It’s understood that the ex-Leeds star has a release clause in his contract which would make him available at market value at around £40m, rather than the initial £50-70m that had been touted.

It could be a no-brainer of a signing to get over the line, and it’s now clear that the forward wants it to happen too.


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England’s Starting 11 For Euro 2028 Was Predicted in 2023

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Back in 2023, The Athletic’s writers were tasked with predicting England’s starting XI for a home European Championship five years down the line.

One selection leaned heavily on a side built around a young Jude Bellingham before working outwards. The picks blended established names with a handful of eyebrow-raising calls, mixing Premier League regulars with players who, at the time, had barely made a senior breakthrough.

Here’s a look back at exactly who was backed to lead England out at Euro 2028.

Goalkeeper and Defence

Aaron Ramsdale; Tino Livramento, John Stones, Levi Colwill, Calum Scanlon

Tino Livramento during a training session with England

In goal, Carl Anka predicted Aaron Ramsdale would no longer be at Arsenal by 2028, but felt he’d have developed into England’s number one regardless of his club situation. At full-back, Anka went with Tino Livramento to eventually win what he dubbed England’s “right-back war,” seeing him learn from Kieran Trippier and overtake Max Aarons, while questioning whether Trent Alexander-Arnold’s role would ever be settled, much like it is now.


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How rich every player in England’s current squad is based on their net worth

With injury concerns already surrounding Reece James and Ben Chilwell, he handed then-18-year-old Calum Scanlon the start at left-back. The Liverpool defender has currently played just 12 professional matches at 21 years old as it stands. John Stones, who is very much an England regular at present, got the nod alongside Chelsea’s Levi Colwill, who has been in and around the Three Lions setup as he’s dealt with a wave of injuries.

Midfield

Jude Bellingham, Declan Rice, Curtis Jones

Jude Bellingham for England at the 2026 World Cup Peter Cziborra via Reuters

Anka’s midfield isn’t far off what it currently looks like, pairing current England regulars Jude Bellingham and Declan Rice, with the latter tipped to inherit the captaincy from Harry Kane in the years that followed. He predicted a tight battle for the final midfield berth between the likes of Morgan Gibbs-White, Harvey Elliott and Jacob Ramsey, ultimately handing the role to Curtis Jones for his composure on the ball at Liverpool, with Angel Gomes pencilled in as a smart option off the bench.

Current England starter, Elliot Anderson, wasn’t a thought at the time. That’s likely due to him only just getting a handful of appearances in the Premier League in 2023, before his move to Nottingham Forest the following year.

Forwards

Anthony Gordon, Bukayo Saka, Eddie Nketiah

Eddie Nketiah Crystal Palace Shelbourne

Perhaps the boldest call came in attack, where he backed Eddie Nketiah to eventually succeed Kane as England’s central striker, pointing to the forward’s decision to knock back Ghana call-ups in the hope of representing his country of birth instead. It’s hardly been the career Nketiah would have hoped for since leaving Arsenal. The striker has scored just eight goals in 58 matches since leaving Arsenal in 2024, with most appearances coming from the bench for Crystal Palace. He did make one appearance for the Three Lions in October 2023, but hasn’t been involved since.


24 Players Born in England But Represent Other 2026 World Cup TeamsMixCollage-03-Jun-2026-11-31-AM-132


The 24 Players Born in England But Represent Other 2026 World Cup National Teams

England would have an unstoppable starting line-up if these players had chosen to represent the Three Lions

He would start with current England wingers Anthony Gordon and Bukayo Saka either side of him. Alongside Marcus Rashford, both have been consistent choices on the left and right flank. At the age of 24, Saka already has over 50 international caps, and Gordon, who has just sealed a big-money move to Barcelona, had his best performance in an England shirt at the 2026 World Cup, grabbing two assists against DR Congo in 25 minutes, to save England from an embarrassing defeat in the round of 32.

Manager and Coaches

Graham Potter, James Milner, Adam Lallana

West Ham United head coach Graham Potter on the touchline

Rounding things off, it was suggested Graham Potter, the former West Ham manager and current Sweden manager, would be in the England hotseat, working alongside recent retirees James Milner and Adam Lallana as his assistants. England’s current manager, Thomas Tuchel, would have been nowhere near anyone’s thoughts in 2023. The German was a surprise appointment in 2025 as it was, and was the Bayern Munich manager at the time of the picks being made.

As a whole, it’s a selection that’s somewhat of a mixed bag, with some picks ageing well, while others who are nowhere near the current squad were favoured ahead of today’s more established options.

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‘I’m an England World Cup Legend

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Gary Lineker has never been the type to sing his own praises. If anything, his move into broadcasting as the face of Match of the Day has often required him to play down just how accomplished he was as a footballer, particularly when helping shine a light on pundits whose playing careers were far less decorated than his own.

It is understandable, then, especially for anyone born after Lineker last kicked a ball professionally in 1994, that his brilliance as a player may not always be fully appreciated. The former Leicester City, Everton, Barcelona and Tottenham forward was outstanding at his peak.

Lineker is still regarded as one of England’s greatest ever strikers, with his most memorable tournament coming at the 1986 World Cup. He claimed the Golden Boot despite England exiting at the quarter-final stage after Diego Maradona scored two of the most famous goals football has ever seen.

His displays that year were rewarded with a second-place finish in the Ballon d’Or rankings, though Lineker believes he should’ve come first and taken home football’s most prestigious individual honour. Speaking to French outlet L’Equipe in 2023, he said:

“I should have won the Ballon d’Or in 1986. If there’s one thing I regret, it is that.”

Gary Lineker’s 1986 in Detail

Gary Lineker

Ah, 1986. It was an era when Madonna, Diana Ross and George Michael dominated the charts, England’s old First Division was still simply the First Division, and football had yet to be reshaped by the Bosman ruling, the backpass law or the Premier League. The sport looked very different before it became the enormous commercial machine fans know today.

It was also the year Lineker went from being one of English football’s finest centre-forwards to a striker recognised across the world. The England international arrived at the 1986 World Cup after an extraordinary debut campaign with Everton, having scored 40 goals in all competitions. That included 30 in the league, enough to earn him a second straight Golden Boot.

Lineker then took that form to the World Cup and lit up the tournament, scoring six times in only five matches. After England failed to find the net in either of their first two group fixtures, he responded with a hat-trick against Poland, two more goals against Paraguay and another against Argentina. That effort, though, was eclipsed by Maradona producing arguably the most infamous goal ever – the Hand of God – before adding what many consider the greatest goal of all time, weaving through England’s helpless midfield and defence in the same match.

Even so, Lineker’s performances in Mexico still brought major personal rewards. Barcelona made their move and Everton agreed to sell him for £2.8m. During his time at the Nou Camp, he won the European Cup Winners’ Cup and the Copa del Rey, before later returning to England with Spurs and lifting the FA Cup.


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The 1986 Ballon d’Or

The Ballon d'Or trophy displayed at the Santiago Bernabeu

Football in 1986 belonged to a very different age, although the wider political backdrop has echoes of the modern world. Today, much of Western Europe remains in conflict with Russian president Vladimir Putin; back then, global politics was shaped by the Cold War, with NATO countries and the Soviet Union on opposing sides as tensions neared their peak.

That situation seems to have had an influence on the 1986 Ballon d’Or vote, as several Eastern European nations threw their support behind Igor Belanov. He had scored a hat-trick in the Soviet Union’s 4-3 quarter-final defeat to Belgium, while also enjoying a strong club campaign with Dynamo Kyiv. They won both the Soviet League and the UEFA Cup Winners’ Cup, with Belanov ending the latter tournament as top scorer.

1986 Ballon d’Or voting

Place

Name

Country

Club

Points

1st

Igor Belanov

USSR

Dynamo Kyiv

84

2nd

Gary Lineker

England

Everton/Barcelona

62

3rd

Emilio Butragueno

Spain

Real Madrid

59

With Maradona ineligible because the Ballon d’Or was limited to European players at the time, Lineker feels he was unfairly denied top spot.

“Only European players were eligible to win the Ballon d’Or, so Diego Maradona couldn’t win it – which he undoubtedly would have done if non-European players were allowed to contend for the prize. At that time, it was Diego – and everyone else. It was as if Maradona came from a different dimension.

“But, speaking of everyone else, I do think I deserved the award that year. Igor Belanov had a very, very good game in the World Cup, and all the journalists from Eastern Europe rallied and voted massively for him.”

Lineker Praised Belanov for Role in Ukraine

gary lineker

Although Lineker is convinced he should have won the 1986 Ballon d’Or, there does not appear to be any bitterness towards Belanov, who has again found himself connected to major geopolitical events. After Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, Belanov joined the Territorial Defence Battalion to help defend his hometown of Odesa.

By 2024, he was still assisting and praising Ukrainian troops, an act Lineker had already commended him for.

“I don’t want to dwell on it, but I should have received the Ballon d’Or in 1986. However, now that I know he visits Ukrainian soldiers on the front line, using his trophy to inspire them, I have nothing more to say. He deserves it, well done!”



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