Tuesday, 26 August 2025

Kobbie Mainoo is a player United should build the team around

There should be a simple solution to Ruben Amorim's midfield malaise at Manchester United. 

For all the talk of a megamoney move for Carlos Baleba, the answer to United's issues is right in front of us - sitting on the bench in 20-year-old Kobbie Mainoo. 

He is a player United should be looking to build our team around for the next 10, 15, 20 years - a fantastic, generational talent and the future of that United midfield. Instead, if the rumours are to be believed, we are looking to cash in on him and let him go. That would be absolutely criminal and the worst decision this club has made for decades. INEOS risk losing the fans for good if they sanction the sale of one of our best academy graduates in the past decade. 

A little more than two years on, 
these four players may have left the club 
by the time the window shuts 

I cannot tell you how angry this has made me - in what world should Mainoo be one of the first out the door. The maelstrom surrounding Mainoo could well turn out to be exactly that - with only a week left of the transfer window, there remains a very good chance of the man who's been at this club since he was six not going anywhere.  But the fact it is even a topic of conversation is worrying. 

Not only would we be dispensing with one of the finest products of Carrington's conveyor belt, but delivering a strike to the heart of Manchester United's ethos - the trust, belief and development in youth. With Mainoo forced to the fringes of the first team with a World Cup looming, the timing could not be worse. 

Mainoo has not played a minute in United's opening two games of the campaign against Arsenal and Fulham with the unconvincing Manuel Ugarte coming on ahead of him. Mainoo played only the closing seconds of the Europa League final in Bilbao. It is not even certain he will get a start on Wednesday when the Reds visit fourth tier Grimsby in the Carabao Cup. Amorim does need appear to rate him and it says a lot about Mainoo's current place in the pecking order. 
Unless Fernandes is moved into one of the no.10 positions currently occupied by summer recruits Matheus Cunha and Bryan Mbeumo, it is difficult to see Amorim dropping his key man and captain. 

Mainoo's path at United is blocked, with Amorim's comments that he's competing with captain Bruno Fernandes for a spot in midfield suggesting he's not getting near the XI any time soon. Never mind the fact they are completely different types of players in different positions, a Man United midfield with Mainoo in it offers an instant upgrade. Why can't Mainoo and Fernandes play in a double pivot with Casemiro or Ugarte? 

In all honesty, I would rather Fernandes, Amad or any other player leave the club before Mainoo. If it does happen, I would be Amorim out because any project without Mainoo at its centre is one I cannot get behind. If the answer is to sell Mainoo because he doesn't fit the system, then the system and the manager are the problem. 


A player with the quality and ability of Mainoo must be integrated into this team. Of course, no player is ever undroppable but, off the back of his scintillating breakthrough season, he should be one of the first names on the team sheet. Particularly given United's struggles in controlling the midfield and dictating games. Fernandes is not an 8, but Amorim kept him on the pitch and even put Mason Mount alongside him when Benjamin Sesko came on at Fulham. With United only playing one game a week, opportunities to rotate will be minimal.

How did it all come to this for a player who already has quite the CV? Ever since his magnificent full debut at Everton in November 2023 where he bossed the space between defence and midfield, he has been touted as United's next big star. 
That star only continued to shine as he ran the game at Anfield, catching the eye as the ultimate big game player. His highlights reel is impressive: that 98th-minute curling winner at Wolves, another screamer in the 2-2 draw with Liverpool at Old Trafford, and dragging United - kicking and screaming - back from the dead on that famous night against Lyon. Then there was his goal and man of the match showing in the FA Cup final and his impressive Euros campaign, culminating in getting the nod against Spain as England finished runners-up. 

Mainoo's future remains uncertain but United must do whatever it takes to keep him. 

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