
Man Utd transfer for Mbeumo takes ‘fresh twist’
Everything has changed for Man Utd over Bryan Mbeumo after Nottingham Forest made an offer for Yoane Wissa about ÂŁ30m below Brentfordâs valuation.
Rash decision
It is rare to be given such insight into the MailOnlineâs internal ranking of headline priorities. But Friday provided a glorious opportunity to peek behind that particular curtain.
This story published at 9.11amâŠ
âMarcus Rashford arrives at Man United training EIGHT Minutes [sic] after boss Ruben Amorim and the squad depart Carrington as forwardâs cold exile continuesâ
âŠwas changed to reflect the most important detail of all at 10am, with myriad wrist slaps presumably doled out in between:
âMarcus Rashford arrives at Carrington in sparkling ÂŁ177k Audi to train alone after the squad had left the complex â as forwardâs Man United exile continuesâ
The omission of some unnecessary ALL CAPS was obviously a tough call, his âexileâ is no longer âcoldâ and now we have no idea of the delay between Ruben Amorim leaving and Marcus Rashford arriving, but look at the expensive motor before he takes it to Barcelona and shut up.
Why axis
The same ground-breaking update prompts an important Q&A session from the Manchester Evening News:
âWhy Manchester United forward Marcus Rashford drove into Carrington amid transfer decisionâ
Because he a) is a footballer who wants to train and b) didnât fancy catching the bus.
Howâs it hanging?
Rashford makes up part of a group given perhaps the least inspired nickname in football history by the MailOnline:
âInside Man Unitedâs first week of pre-season as Gang of Fiveâs shadow hangs over Carrington while club struggle to sell outcastsâ
That is laughable. Whereâs the creativity? No alliteration, rhyme or pun? What about The Rash Pack? The Infamous Five? If youâre not going to do it properly then donât do it at all.
But Mediawatch is intrigued. In what way does the âshadowâ of Rashford and his exiled brethren âhangâ over Man Utd beyond the club placing extortionate values on their heads before wondering why no-one wants to buy players they are explicitly desperate to sell?
It is not exactly made clear and indeed Chris Wheeler has been ever so slightly stitched-up. His four mentions of Rashford in a wide-ranging piece include: how Man Utd want to sell him; that he has returned to training early and with an excellent attitude; and that the other players the club want rid of have chosen not to do so, as it their wont.
It really does sound like the âGang of Fiveâs shadow hangs over Carringtonâ. Wait until Sir Jim finds out what car Rashford took.
Twist again, like we did last summer
With precisely zero actual movement on the Rashford front we are left with the ongoing need to pretend there is anything happening with regards to the future of Bryan Mbeumo.
That is obviously relatively difficult, seeing as it is common knowledge the player wants to join Man Utd but negotiations with Brentford over a fee are protracted and inevitably secretive.
Yet there are absolutely updates to be had if you look hard/desperately enough. Like the Daily Mirror website, who say the move has âtaken fresh twist as Brentford receive new bidâ.
How unfortunate that the headline implies said ânew bidâ is from Man Utd for Mbeumo when it is actually from Nottingham Forest for Yoane Wissa.
Does Forest making an offer about ÂŁ30m below Brentfordâs valuation of Wissa really constitute a âfresh twistâ over Man Utdâs pursuit of Mbeumo? No. If anything it reflects better on Man Utd who are far closer to finding a breakthrough in negotiations. But also obviously yes if you need to pretend things are happening at Old Trafford.
The same outlet also runs this story:
âBryan Mbeumo âvery frustratedâ by Man Utd transfer as Brentford starâs coach breaks silenceâ
And Mediawatch is thrilled to confirm that Cameroon assistant coach Ashu Cyprian Besong has finally spoken out on the matter after keeping his counsel for so long.
If these quotes donât get the ball moving then nothing will:
âYes, obviously heâs very frustrated with how long itâs taken. But heâs a professional and anticipates these things. I spoke to him about a week ago and he is very calm with everything that is going on.â
Shame they could only find space in the headline to fit in how Mbeumo was âvery frustratedâ rather than âvery calmâ.
READ NEXT:Â Huge Man Utd boost as transfer âwill go throughâ with ÂŁ300m Ratcliffe plan revealed
Noni chance in hell
Arsenalâs move for Noni Madueke has prompted the sort of reaction this summer desperately needed: namely absolute fury at a relatively sensible but admittedly quite expensive transfer.
The common consensus appears to be that Arsenal are shafting themselves; The Sun believe âChelsea could be about to repeat their Mo Salah transfer mistake by selling Noni Madueke to Arsenalâ.
That is a brave and bold line from Lloyd Canfield, Sports Journalist and Sport Social Media Manager, who reckons the Blues are âselling what seems to be the most obvious Salah replica the club have had in yearsâ.
Good lord. There are some similarities in underlying numbers and style but it is a frankly ludicrous and unhelpful comparison.
And pretending âit signals the sale of a player who perhaps epitomises BlueCoâs model better than any otherâ is also quite weird for two reason: the ÂŁ52m sale itself of a player Chelsea signed for ÂŁ29m less than two years ago epitomises that model, as does the fact âhis replacement is an 18-year-old Brazilian wonderkid who is a talented but still relatively unknown outside of South America in Estevao Willianâ.
This is remarkably BlueCo Chelsea.
Maduekeâs modest output last season is then excused because it is âimportant to remember he had Nicolas Jackson on the end of many chances he was creatingâ.
Why that didnât stop six different Chelsea players assisting at least one of Jacksonâs 13 goals but held Madueke back to the extent he set up fewer goals than Christopher Nkunku, Tyrique George and Jackson himself last season is unknown.
âWith Liam Delap and Joao Pedro already looking clinical in the Club World Cup, Chelseaâs frontline next season could have represented an opportunity for Madueke to explode into the player most fans know he can become.â
Someoneâs forgetting the other ÂŁ55m forward Chelsea have signed; that frontline needs to make room for Jamie Gittens too and the player with 20 combined goals and assists in 67 Premier League games makes sense if a buyer is willing to meet his price tag.
Madueke might come good at Arsenal. He might not. But is it really necessary to pretend there is literally zero middle ground between starting a petition against his signing and comparing him to one of the greatest players the Premier League has ever seen?
Bees knees
With the âshockâ of the only Premier League club then without a manager considering the credentials of Ange Postecoglou having barely set in, the MailOnline now brings us this JUST DAYS later:
âJordan Henderson returns to Premier League with free transfer to surprise club, after quitting Ajax early having already ditched his Saudi nightmareâ
A mid-table side who have just sold an experienced central midfielder in their 30s? Brentford are, again, about the least âsurprisingâ club Henderson could have joined. Stop being weird.