Peter
2K posts

Peter
@UTDP3T3R
🔴😈 and RMFC ever since @Cristiano signed for them|👷🏿|@Cristiano @WayneRooney @vinijr @BMbeumo fan

So funny when people talk about "How it ended" with Ole, as if the weird Ronaldo signing didn't just fuck everything up.

James Garner has been more consistent and ultimately better than Tonali and Andersen this season.






You claim to be a Manchester United fan but whenever Cunha scores you’re pained, why

Many of you Amorimsexuals didn’t believe in these same set of players 4 months ago. All of a sudden you want to see 2011 Barcelona. Is that not mental illness??



a misogynist once said?

Imagine telling Vinicius Jr. or Kylian Mbappé at Real Madrid to play as proper wing-backs endless tracking, high pressing, and defensive recovery in a back-five system. They wouldn’t accept it. They’re not built for that role. Their game is about flair, cutting inside, and attacking freedom. Any coach forcing it would face huge backlash. Yet Ruben Amorim demanded exactly that from Marcus Rashford at Manchester United. His 3-4-2-1 system relied on tireless wing-backs who bomb up and down, press relentlessly, and fit a rigid structure. Rashford a natural left winger who thrives on carrying the ball, cutting in, and finishing was pushed into a role that didn’t suit him. Worse, Rashford has a history of back injuries. The constant sprinting and recovery in that position was physically uncomfortable and risky. He has always played through pain with injections, giving everything for his boyhood club and the fans. True United supporters know his loyalty runs deep he’s stayed in tough times and delivered big moments for the badge. Amorim’s public criticism was too harsh. Suggesting Rashford “didn’t want to make runs” or lacked commitment ignored the positional mismatch and physical reality. Comments about preferring his older goalkeeping coach on the bench added unnecessary pressure. Great coaches adapt to their players’ strengths instead of forcing square pegs into round holes. Amorim’s inflexibility contributed to the breakdown and Rashford’s loan exit. Now the picture has changed. Amorim has been sacked, and Michael Carrick is in charge with a more familiar, fluid system back-four, attacking freedom for wide players, and less rigid defensive demands. This is the environment where Rashford has always shone. At Barcelona, Rashford has shown a rekindled spark, contributing goals and assists while proving he can still perform at a high level when trusted in the right role. Rashford is open to returning to United for a “new project.” With Carrick’s setup playing to Rashford’s natural strengths, there’s a strong case to bring him back to Carrington. He knows the club, carries the United DNA, and deserves another chance under a manager who fits the system to the player not the other way around.

















