Manchester United: Ruben Amorim says players must take responsibility for club’s financial issues
Speaking less than 24 hours after United confirmed a second round of redundancies that will lead to up to 200 staff members losing their jobs, Amorim said that, as the “engine” of the club, his squad must do better.
After losing more than £300m in the past five years, United find themselves 15th in the Premier League before their encounter with relegation-threatened Ipswich at Old Trafford on Wednesday.
It is their worst league campaign since the dark days of 1989-90, when Sir Alex Ferguson almost got the sack as United flirted with the relegation zone before eventually finishing 13th.
“We have to address all the problems in the club but one important piece of this moment is to understand how we get to this situation,” said Amorim.
“It has a lot to do with the lack of success of the football team because we are the engine of any football club.”
In the space of under two seasons, United have fallen from a third-place finish in Erik ten Hag’s first season in charge to their current position.
While Amorim and his squad might be insulated from the cost-cutting measures – staff at Old Trafford will no longer get free lunches in a move the club estimates will save £1m – some of the people they work with every day will soon no longer be around.
“We know this year was really hard for everybody,” said Amorim, who replaced Ten Hag in November.
“As a club, we did a lot of changes. When you are doing the changes if you have a football team who are playing well and winning games, it is easier for the fans and everyone to feel that. But in this moment we are in a difficult period inside of the club and inside of the pitch. We have to fight against this feeling.
“We have do our job and we try our best to help the team to perform better.”
United have scored 30 goals from 26 league games so far this season, with Rasmus Hojlund managing just two from 15 league starts.
The 22-year-old Denmark striker, who was signed from Atalanta for £72 in August 2023, has scored seven goals in all competitions, with his last strike coming in the Europa League against Viktoria Plzen on 12 December.
“I think it’s clear, we as a team, we are not helping Rasmus,” Amorim added. “We don’t create a lot of chances.
“I think Rasmus has a lot of potential. If we improve the way we play the game, he will have more opportunities to score.
“He came here very young and, when you are very young, to be the number nine and play all the time sometimes is hard.
“We have to look at Rasmus as a player: he has the pace, he has the technique, he scores some goals that are really hard to score.
“Sometimes he doesn’t choose the better runs, sometimes he’s so anxious to touch the ball because he passes long minutes without the ball and he moves away from the goal.
“We address that in training. He has the ability, he already showed that here, but I think it’s more a team thing than a Rasmus thing.”