Ruben Amorim’s future at Manchester United has come under fresh scrutiny, with suggestions that Michael Carrick or Darren Fletcher could step in if results do not improve.
The Portuguese coach has overseen a poor start to the season, including an early Carabao Cup exit to Grimsby and just two wins from five league games. Despite boardroom backing, patience is beginning to run thin at Old Trafford.
– ADEVERTISEMENT –
Amorim has stuck to his 3-4-3 approach since arriving from Sporting, but United continue to look disjointed. Former players and pundits argue the squad has become a “Frankenstein team,” assembled by multiple managers with clashing philosophies. Last season’s 15th-place finish and Europa League final defeat have only added to doubts.

Ex-Chelsea and Everton winger Pat Nevin told Escapist Magazine:
“Short term, I wouldn’t be surprised at Carrick or Fletcher to replace Amorim at all. That would be absolutely fine. And they might do well. They offered the caretaker role to Ole [Gunnar Solskjaer] first, didn’t they? It takes the pressure off.”
Nevin continued:
“Maybe that’s been United’s problem. They’ve had two, three, four, five-year plans that all lasted a year. And that’s not good. Because the next person comes in and changes it. That’s the only reason why they’re standing by Amorim just now — it’s because they know they didn’t spend time with the other ones, so we now end up with a Frankenstein team. All bought by different managers. None of it really fits together.”





