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    Chelsea star Mason Mount linked to stunning French Instagram model after pulling out of England squad and going to Paris

    ENGLAND football ace Mason Mount made a mystery trip to Paris after he began following a French-based model online.The visit took place in the recent international break after the Chelsea star, 22, pulled out of the Three Lions squad.
    It is not known if England ace Mason Mount met up with 21-year-old Israeli model Ilanah Cohzn
    The visit took place in the recent international break after the Chelsea star, 22, pulled out of the Three Lions squadCredit: AFP
    It is not known if he met up with 21-year-old Israeli model Ilanah Cohzn while in France — but the pair recently started following each other on Instagram.
    Mount missed two England World Cup qualifier wins over Albania and San Marino after having dental surgery on November 7.
     He had been suffering from a wisdom tooth infection.
    The midfielder was snapped in Paris on November 14 — including a visit to restaurant and cocktail bar Monak, where he threw his arm around owner Karim Jema.
    Mount was in the French capital with a security guard and pal Nathan Wood, who shared footage of their trip with friends.
     Their break included a visit to the Eiffel Tower.
    Influencer Ilanah has 212,000 Instagram followers and regularly shares snaps of her luxury life.
    She has made a trip to London in recent weeks.
    Their friendship began after Mount split with long-term lover Chloe Wealleans-Watts, 22. They started dating in 2017, but made it official a year later.
     Chloe has unfollowed him on Instagram since their split and deleted their photos together.
    Monak — close to the Arc de Triomphe — is popular with Paris Saint-Germain footballers including superstar forwards Kylian Mbappé and Neymar. 
    Open until 2am, it also attracts top models and has a nightclub vibe. 
    Asked about Mount’s visit to Monak, Mr Jema said: “We do not comment on anyone. We are a restaurant — we keep things private.”
    Last night, a source at Chelsea said Mount’s trip had been signed off by the club as it was during the international break.
    The friendship with Ilanah began after Mount split with long-term lover Chloe Wealleans-Watts, 22. They started dating in 2017, but made it official a year later.Credit: Instagram / @chloewealleanswatts
    Influencer Ilanah has 212,000 Instagram followers and regularly shares snaps of her luxury life.

    Mason Mount struggles to speak in hilarious clip after wisdom teeth removal More

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    Footballers with tattoos score more goals than those without, shows new study

    TATTOOED footballers net 42 per cent more goals than players without inkings, a study found.But they are also more likely to get a yellow card.
    Footballers are more likely to score if they have a tattoo, and get bookedCredit: BackGrid
    Scientists claim those with visible tattoos, such as PSG’s Brazil star Neymar, are viewed as more aggressive — giving them a psychological edge over opponents.
    They reckon the body art bunch are greater risk takers, leading to more goals. The findings follow analysis of Spain’s 2018-19 LaLiga season — when more than a third of top pros had tattoos.
    On average they scored 2.7 goals a season compared to 1.9 for unadorned players.
    They had a 91 per cent chance of getting a yellow card, while those without tattoos had an 83 per cent risk.
    Half of players from South America were inked, compared to a third of Europeans.
    Researcher Dr Nicolas Kluger, a dermatologist at Finland’s Helsinki University Hospital, said: “Tattoos are associated with ego boosting, and symbolise physical strength as well as traits of aggressiveness and rebelliousness.”
    The findings appeared in the journal Annals of Dermatology and Venereology.

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    From Cantona’s kung-fu kick to Ronaldo’s breakdown, Match of the Day stars pick their footie Top 10s… but do you agree?

    WE spend a lot of time together making Match Of The Day.Every Saturday during the season, the two guests and I will arrive in the studio a little before lunchtime.
    Match Of The Day presenter Gary LinkekerCredit: BBC
    Co-presenter Alan Shearer joins in the top 10Credit: BBC
    Micah Richards is also on hand to give his opinion on football’s top 10s of everythingCredit: grab from BBC
     We gather, along with the producer, director and production staff, in a little office lined with television screens and begin a long day doing the really rather pleasant work of watching football.
    Throughout the day, there is plenty of joking and laughing. We cheer when our teams score. We sink with our heads in our hands when they concede.
    And, in the case of Alan Shearer, whenever his beloved Newcastle are frustrating him, we shout. A lot. 
    But what we do, most of all, is talk. We debate. We argue.
     And we tell stories. We try to outdo each other to see who can get the biggest laugh. 
    It was those bottomless ­conversations that were the inspiration for what would, eventually, become the Match Of The Day Top 10 podcast, show and, now, the book I have ­written with Micah Richards and Alan Shearer. 
    It was a chance to tell those stories to a broader audience, to offer a little insight into the way we played the game then and the way we see it now, and perhaps to settle a few of football’s ongoing arguments, too.
    Who was the greatest defender of all time? Was it really harder in mine and Alan’s day than it was when Micah was playing?

     Can you say for sure that Lionel Messi is better than Diego Maradona? And just how many teams did Micah support when he was growing up?
    Please feel free to disagree with our conclusions. They are, after all, no more than personal ­opinions.
     I would ask you to let us know exactly where you think we’ve gone wrong, too, but I know that when it comes to football, nobody ever needs an invitation to do that.
     That, after all, is the fun of it.

    Extracted from Match Of The Day: Top Ten Of Everything, by Gary ­Lineker, Alan Shearer and Micah Richards (BBC Books, £20)

    Bonkers moments
    Eric Cantona’s kung-fu kick on fan as Manchester United played at Crystal PalaceCredit: Action Images
    1) Eric Cantona’s kung-fu kick on fan
    2) Paolo Di Canio shoves referee Paul Alcock 
    3) Lee Bowyer and Kieron Dyer fight on the pitch 
    4) Luis Suarez bites Branislav Ivanovic 
    5) Kevin Keegan’s “I would love it” rant 
    6) Martin Keown celebrates at Ruud van Nistelrooy 
    7) Alan Pardew headbutts David Meyler 
    8) Roy Keane and Patrick Vieira clash in tunnel 
    9) Temuri Ketsbaia versus the advertising hoardings 
    10) Sunderland-Liverpool and the beach ball goal
    ALAN says: “The Cantona moment was pure chaos. I was watching it on television and I couldn’t believe what I was seeing. You knew he was different – the collar up, the arrogance and the swagger – but that was another level. It was a scandal when it happened, and it is still the strangest moment I have ever seen in football.”
    Player of all time 
    The great Lionel Messi takes top spot in the Player Of All Time listCredit: AP:Associated Press
    1) Lionel Messi 
    2) Cristiano Ronaldo 
    3) Pele 
    4) Diego Maradona
    5) Ronaldo 
    6) Johan Cruyff 
    7) Zinedine Zidane
    8) George Best 
    9) Michel Platini 
    10) Franz Beckenbauer
    GARY says: “It has to be Messi, as much for his longevity as anything else. The problems ­Maradona had outside the pitch meant that his peak only lasted for three or four years. What matters, ultimately, is not which of the two got the highest [honours], but who stayed around at the top for longest, and that has to be Messi.”
    Pantomine villains
    1) Joey Barton (Manchester City, Newcastle United, QPR) 
    2) Robbie Savage (Leicester, Blackburn Rovers, Birmingham City, Derby County) 
    3) El Hadji Diouf (Liverpool, Bolton) 
    4) Craig Bellamy (Norwich, Coventry, Newcastle, Blackburn, Liverpool, West Ham, Manchester City) 
    5) Diego Costa (Chelsea) 
    6) Dennis Wise (Wimbledon, Chelsea, Leicester) 
    7) Mike Dean (referee) 
    8) Lee Cattermole (Sunderland) 
    9) Ben Thatcher (Wimbledon, Tottenham, Leicester, Manchester City) 
    10) Emmanuel Adebayor (Arsenal, Manchester City)
     MICAH says: “I like Robbie Savage off the pitch, but I didn’t have any time for him on it. He spent most of his time trying to wind other players up. He wasn’t going into a game to focus on his team or how he played – he was focusing on irritating the opposition as much as possible.”
    Goals
    Dennis Bergkamp of Arsenal scores the top goalCredit: Getty
    1) Dennis Bergkamp, Arsenal v Newcastle United 
    2) Trevor Sinclair, Queens Park Rangers v Barnsley 
    3) Jack Wilshere, Arsenal v ­Norwich City 
    4) Thierry Henry, Arsenal v Man United 
    5) Wayne Rooney, Man United v Newcastle United 
    6) Paolo Di Canio, West Ham v Wimbledon 
    7) Matt Le Tissier, Southampton v Newcastle United 
    8) Andros Townsend, Crystal Palace v Man City 
    9) Robin van Persie, Man United v Aston Villa 
    10) Vincent Kompany, Man City v Leicester City
    MICAH says: “There is something about the pure team goal that I’ve always loved, and there haven’t been many better examples of it than Jack Wilshere’s for Arsenal. All those one-twos, the little interchanges with the ball – that’s how football is meant to be played.”
    Quotes 
    1) Kevin Keegan: “They’ve got to go to Middlesbrough and get something, and I would love it, love it, if we beat them.” 
    2) Eric Cantona: “When the seagulls follow the trawlers, it is because they think sometimes sardines will be thrown into the sea.” 
    3) Jose Mourinho: “I think I am a special one.” 
    4) Roy Keane: “They have a few drinks and probably the prawn sandwiches, and they don’t know what’s going on out on the pitch.”
    5) Alan Hansen: “You can’t win anything with kids.”
    6) Alex Ferguson: “It’s getting tickly now. Squeaky bum time, I call it.”
    7) Rafa Benitez: “I want to talk about facts.” 
    8) Jose Mourinho: “They brought the bus and parked the bus in front of the goal.”
    9) Tim Flowers: “Don’t talk to me about bottle, don’t talk to me about bottling it, because that is bottle out there.”
    10) Nigel Pearson: “If you don’t know the answer to that question, then I think you are an ostrich.”
    GARY says: “That Keegan speech may be quite hard to watch now, and it may seem a little cringe with the passage of time, but it’s important to remember that it could have gone down in history very differently. Had Newcastle gone on to win the title, it would not have proved that Alex ­Ferguson was a master of mind games, but that Kevin’s passion and belief had pulled his team through. A great quote depends on its context.”
    World Cup memories
    Could it be anything other than Diego Maradona’s ‘Hand of God’?Credit: Bob Thomas Sports Photography – Getty
    1) The Hand of God (1986)
    2) Zidane’s head-butt (2006) 
    3) Ronaldo’s breakdown (1998) 
    4) Gazza’s tears (1990) 
    5) Brazil 1-7 Germany (2014) 
    6) Nigel de Jong’s boot (2010) 
    7) Carlos Alberto’s goal (1970) 
    8) Marco Tardelli’s scream (1982) 
    9) Ronaldinho’s free kick (2002) 
    10) Toto Schillaci (1990)
    ALAN says: “The controversy and uncertainty of Ronaldo ahead of 1998 is one of the great World Cup mysteries, but for a player of Zinedine Zidane’s level to leave football like he did – head-butting Marco Materazzi and then trudging past the trophy and down the tunnel – is one of the defining images of the game.”
    Prem champs
    Sergio Aguero scores during Man City’s 2012 campaignCredit: News Group Newspapers Ltd
    1) Leicester City (2016) 
    2) Blackburn Rovers (1995) 
    3) Arsenal (2004) 
    4) Manchester City (2012, above) 
    5) Manchester United (1999) 
    6) Chelsea (2006) 
    7) Manchester City (2018) 
    8) Liverpool (2020) 
    9) Arsenal (1998) 
    10) Manchester United (2008)
    GARY says: “Leicester were so unlikely to win the league that I tweeted that I’d present Match Of The Day in my underwear if they held on to do it. I thought there was absolutely zero chance of it ­happening, but it did. It was agony over the last few weeks, waiting to see if they could, and it wasn’t great appearing topless on television, but I would do it all over again.”
    Gary Lineker bemused after Cristiano Ronaldo is named Prem player of month over Salah ‘who should have won comfortably More

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    Footie fans could be allowed to drink during games as law banning booze in the stands may be axed

    FOOTIE fans could be allowed to drink during games again for the first time in 36 years.The law banning booze in stands could be axed as part of a wide-ranging review of the sport.
    A ban on drinking in sight of the pitch was introduced in 1985 to stem hooliganismCredit: The Sun
    Among recommendations is a test scheme for fans to be able to drink alcohol during matches at League Two and National League clubs.
    Ministers have welcomed the move, part of a fan-led review headed by ex-sports minister Tracey Crouch.
    She said a “small scale and limited pilot” on the sale of alcohol “in sight of the pitch” would help struggling clubs rake in extra cash.
    Ms Crouch added yesterday: “This is about the financial sustainability of the lowest parts of the league — such a small change would make a huge difference.”
    Research suggests an average League Two club loses around £184,000 a season by not being able to sell booze to fans watching matches.
    A ban on drinking in sight of the pitch was introduced in 1985 to stem hooliganism.

    Currently, only non-league sides are allowed to sell alcohol to fans to take pitchside.
    The Football Supporters’ Association and the English Football League both back an update to the current laws.
    Paul Bristow MP said: “Alcohol is sold at rugby and cricket without incident.
    “Football has changed, it’s not the 1980s any more.
    Among recommendations is a test scheme for fans to be able to drink alcohol during matches at League Two and National League clubsCredit: The Sun
    “Selling alcohol could be a boost many of our lower leagues need to survive.”
    But Cheshire Police Chief Constable Mark Roberts said: “There is a clear link between alcohol and poor behaviour, not just in football but broader society
    “Increasingly we are seeing concerns in rugby and cricket about the negative impact on fans’ experiences.
    “It is being proposed at a time when we are seeing many worrying instances of violence at football at all levels, so the timing is bizarre.”
    A Government source said: “There’s a strong case. But it’s a thorny issue.”
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    Independent football regulator needs to be created to stop any future Super League plans, ministers will say

    AN independent football regulator needs to be created to stop any future Super League plans, ministers will say today.It follows the backlash earlier this year over an attempt by clubs, including six in England, to form a break-away European competition.
    An independent football regulator needs to be created to stop any future Super League plans, ministers will say today
    Fans could also get a so-called golden share in clubs so they can block stadium moves or changes to crests and colours.
    And Premier League clubs may have to pay a new tax on foreign players, with the cash helping lower league clubs.
    The proposals are part of a fan-led review into footie.
    It was chaired by former Sports Minister Tracey Crouch, who warned the game “is at a crossroads” and struggling with “deep-seated problems”.
    It is understood the Government will today announce it supports a strong independent regulator.
    Ministers are still considering the other proposals but The Sun understands they are keen on the golden share idea.
    Downing Street ordered the review after six clubs — Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Man City, Man United and Spurs — tried and failed to split from the Premier League and set up their own with rich European clubs.

    The proposals, which were chaired by former Sports Minister Tracey Crouch, are part of a fan-led review into footieCredit: Rex
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    England and Man City ace Raheem Sterling to guest edit BBC Radio 4’s Today programme

    ENGLAND and Man City footie ace Raheem Sterling is to guest edit BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.The flying winger, made an MBE this summer for his racial equality work, is one of seven personalities to take over the show in the week after Christmas.
    England and Man City footie ace Raheem Sterling is to guest edit BBC Radio 4’s Today programmeCredit: Getty
    Raheem, 26, is expected to dedicate his edition to subjects he is passionate about, including helping disadvantaged youngsters.
    Today editor Owenna Griffiths said: “Each year the guest editors bring novel ideas, surprising perspectives and, on occasion, a little sparkle to the programme.
    “This year is no exception and I’m thrilled these guests have agreed to spend time with us to help illuminate and make sense of the world we live in”.
    The flagship news and current affairs programme has been running for 64 years.
    Previous guest editors have included actress Angelina Jolie, Prof Stephen Hawking and teenage climate change campaigner Greta Thunberg.
    Sterling’s show will air between December 27 and January 3.
    Last week, the Sky Blues star launched a foundation to aid education and social mobility for youngsters in Britain and Jamaica.

    Raheem, 26, is expected to dedicate his edition to subjects he is passionate about, including helping disadvantaged youngsters
    The flagship news and current affairs programme has been running for 64 years
    Raheem Sterling announced as newest ambassador for mental wellness app Headspace
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    Man Utd’s capitulation at Watford will live in infamy as day club legend Solskjaer was betrayed and abandoned by players

    IT IS a date that will live in infamy.Saturday November 20, when a good man, a club legend was finally abandoned and betrayed by the players he trusted to wear the famous Manchester United shirt.
    Ole Gunnar Solskjaer was massively let down by his own players at Watford once againCredit: EPA
    The likes of Bruno Fernandes and Cristiano Ronaldo started the defeats to Leicester, Liverpool and Manchester City tooCredit: Reuters
    He would constantly tell them how fortunate they were to pull it on and represent the world’s most famous sports team.
    He knew. They clearly did not.
    The 4-1 defeat at Watford on Saturday was the biggest shambles in the club’s modern history.
    A day when the players were happy to see their manager hung out to dry.
    Yes, the boss had his shortcomings, which were clear to see when he was tested at the very highest level.
    Still he deserved better than this — much, much better than this.

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    So when the fans see social media messages from the players apologising, praising and thanking Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, one can only imagine the reaction.
    Take this one from skipper @HarryMaguire93 . . . 
    “You signed me for the best club in the world and gave me the biggest honour in football. Huge respect and forever grateful. Thank you for everything boss. Legend.” Probably best he, or perhaps his social media team, does not look at the responses.
    The time for action and not words has come and gone.
    The 4-1 defeat at Watford on Saturday was the biggest shambles in the club’s modern history.
    Leicester, Liverpool, Manchester City and Watford — four shocking performances, four games lost, 15 goals conceded.
    Here are the seven players who started all of them: David de Gea, Victor Lindelof, Maguire, Luke Shaw, Aaron Wan-Bissaka, Bruno Fernandes and Cristiano Ronaldo.
    Seven players who were trusted and trusted again.
    Seven highly-paid players who have been part of the most shameful period Red Devils fans can remember.
    Leicester was a calamitous defensive performance. Liverpool at home the tactics were all wrong but they were outfought and over-powered.
    Against Manchester City, it bordered on embarrassing, their inability to get and keep the ball.
    ‘SHOW SOME RESPECT’
    But Watford were a team who stood a place above the relegation zone having won one of their previous seven games, one who had recently changed their manager again.
    This was a chance to save the boss, even if for the time being.
    At least show you wanted to play for the boss, show some respect.
    There was none of that.
    When the players went to the fans to show their appreciation you started to wince.
    Solskjaer knows what it means to wear the Manchester United shirt, sadly not enough of his players did. He is best off out of it.
    What were they expecting?
    Manchester United fans are some of the most forgiving around. I shake my head in wonder at the standing ovations some players get when they are subbed off.
    It was incredible the way they cheered Solskjaer at half-time in the home Champions League game against Atalanta back on October 20 with the side 2-0 down.
    They would come back and win 3-2.
    But you cannot take the mick out of people’s loyalty.
    FAITHFUL FANS
    These are some of the most loyal around — home, away, Europe, round the world, their every penny earned spent on their club.
    I heard a story about one United fan that is worth repeating to describe some people’s devotion to a club.
    During Covid restrictions, while football continued but fans were not allowed in, he would drive from his home in Manchester to every ground United played at, park outside, listen on the radio and drive home.
    Even to Brighton twice in five days at the start of last season.
    So my guess is he was in the away end at Vicarage Road when the players began to approach the fans.
    If they expected a warm, forgiving reception from their faithful followers they did not get it.
    What they got was one of the most vitriolic reactions these players will ever experience from their own fans.
    BRU ARE YA?
    Who does Fernandes think he is having a go back?
    A player who has done a very clever disappearing act and whose body language suggests it is everyone else’s fault but his.
    It is not going to improve any time soon all this. What do you expect with Solskjaer’s trusted assistant Michael Carrick now at the wheel?
    Good man as well but how is that going to change anything?
    Lose to Villarreal tomorrow and there is every chance they will be heading out of the Champions League at the group stage once again.
    The game against high-flying Chelsea at Stamford Bridge next Saturday will be watched painfully through their fingers by the faithful.
    But they will be there, they are always there but to take that for granted, as this group has, is a disgrace.
    Solskjaer knows what it means to wear the Manchester United shirt, sadly not enough of his players did.
    He is best off out of it.
    ⚽ Read our Manchester United live blog for the latest news and transfer gossip from Old Trafford
    Solskjaer went over to apologise to the faithful Red Devils supportersCredit: Getty
    Michael Carrick will take temporary charge until a new manager is foundCredit: AFP
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    Man Utd fans still sing of Gerrard’s slip and Demba Ba… former Liverpool boss Rodgers won’t be an instant crowd-pleaser

    IF Manchester United do manage to rush through the appointment of Brendan Rodgers, it would not be an easy sell to the Old Trafford faithful.Here is a manager sacked by Liverpool, currently in charge of a side four places lower than United, and with a track record of late capitulations in the Premier League.
    Brendan Rodgers won’t be the easiest sell to Man United fans after his time at LiverpoolCredit: Getty Images – Getty
    Red Devils fans still sing about Steven Gerrard’s slip which ended Rodgers’ title hopesCredit: Sky Sports
    While many of us believe Rodgers would be a fine successor to Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, he would not be an instant crowd-pleaser.
    The Northern Irishman is a shrewd tactician, with a keen eye for a player.
    He is also far more comfortable in his own skin, and less desperate to please, than the cheesemonger who took charge of Liverpool almost a decade ago.
    That Rodgers has inserted a get-out clause in his Leicester contract enabling him to speak to specified clubs – including United – should they make an approach, also suggests he is up for the significant challenge of replacing Solskjaer.
    Having sacked Jose Mourinho three years ago, United are reluctant to hire another bad cop.
    Rodgers is a modern man-manager but no glad sufferer of fools.

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    He is capable of improving an ego-heavy United squad without trashing the joint.
    But for United’s support – so loyal to Solskjaer for so long – a former Liverpool boss would rankle.
    They still sing gleefully of Steve Gerrard ‘slipping on his a**e and giving to Demba Ba’, when the Anfield Spring masterminded by Rodgers in 2014 ended with Liverpool blowing the title.
    And having guided Leicester into the Champions League places for the vast majority of the past two seasons, Rodgers oversaw late collapses and fifth-place finishes on both occasions.
    Winning the FA Cup for the first time in the club’s history was no mere consolation. United, of course, have won nowt for four seasons.
    But the United hierarchy, somehow, were impressed enough with Solskjaer to offer him a new three-year contract this summer. They have now sacked him, with Leicester beneath them.
    Still, if compo is stumped up and Rodgers goes to Old Trafford, it would spare United from the confusion they hinted at in the statement announcing Solskjaer’s exit yesterday.
    WHO WILL TAKE THE THRONE?
    This suggested that, having sacked a manager who should only have ever been a caretaker, they would replace him with a caretaker. Then an interim manager. Then a proper manager next summer.
    The assumption at any other major club would be that an agreement in principle had already been reached to appoint a specific new boss at the end of the season.
    Perhaps Mauricio Pochettino – the bloke backed by Sir Alex Ferguson and the bloke who spent a year out of work, expecting United to phone, before accepting the Paris St Germain job.
    They still sing gleefully of Steve Gerrard ‘slipping on his a**e and giving to Demba Ba’, when the Anfield Spring masterminded by Rodgers in 2014 ended with Liverpool blowing the title.
    Or perhaps Erik ten Hag, the progressive boss of Ajax, might decide to leave possibly the best-run major football club in Europe for probably the worst-run.
    And if United were just waiting for any world-class manager to become available, then why hadn’t they appointed Antonio Conte, who waited for their call after the 5-0 home humiliation by Liverpool last month?
    That Solskjaer survived such a car crash, only to steam headlong into another when Manchester City demolished them two weeks later, suggested United’s hierarchy held a bizarre belief that the Norwegian was the man for the long haul.
    Yet after another abject surrender at Watford, United finally bowed to what had long seemed inevitable to most.
    GLAZERS MUST GET IT RIGHT
    At Vicarage Road on Saturday, David De Gea delivered a perfect epitaph to Solskjaer’s reign – ‘we don’t know what to do with the ball and we can’t defend properly’.
    It was reminiscent of the famous line which stated that there were only three problems with England’s cricket team – ‘they can’t bat, they can’t bowl and they can’t field’.
    Yet that pearl, from 1986, was dispensed by a journalist – the late, great Martin Johnson. This one was delivered by United’s actual goalkeeper.
    And this air of ‘you don’t know what you’re doing’ extends way beyond a woefully under-performing team and an out-of-depth manager.
    The ruling Glazer brothers and their men on the ground – led woefully by Ed Woodward these past eight years – are a shambling rabble.
    Fixated by commercial deals and social-media reach, they prefer Hollywood signings to boring old fuddy-duddy stuff such as team-building and coaching.
    Each footballing disaster brings forth bespoke online apologies from United players, each attracting hundreds of thousands of ‘likes’, which managing director Richard Arnold can boast about when the figures are published.
    CAN’T MAKE SAME MISTAKE TWICE
    It is an extraordinary way to run a world-famous institution. But then United are a club for the age of memes and gifs.
    Even the good moments under Solskjaer were generally instances of individual brilliance and breathless late comebacks, rather than results earned through tactical nous.
    This club has never recovered from the retirement of the almighty Ferguson – who left behind no real footballing infrastructure, because he was such a genius he’d barely needed one.
    Initially, Solskjaer’s appointment was a soothing dose of nostalgia for those Ferguson years – a fumigation of the place after Mourinho had stank it out.
    It was only ever meant to be a caretaker stint, but an early winning streak gave the Norwegian irresistible momentum.
    So if Rodgers doesn’t come, what if this season’s ‘interim’ boss does the same? Does he get the gig full-time? You wouldn’t put it past this lot to make the same mistake twice.
    ⚽ Read our Manchester United live blog for the latest news and transfer gossip from Old Trafford
    Or what if caretaker Michael Carrick pulls off wins over Villarreal, Chelsea and Arsenal? Does the caretaker become the interim? Could the interim become the permanent?
    United have enough great players to go on a decent run at any time. They showed that several times under Solskjaer.
    So a swift appointment of Rodgers would at least rid United of even greater chaos.
    Who will be the next manager of Man Utd after Solskjaer is sacked More