Amorim takes aim at Man Utd ‘entitlement’ as Mainoo saga rumbles

by | Dec 19, 2025 | World

Manchester United manager Ruben Amorim hits out at ‘entitlement’ at Old Trafford as culture change remains priority.Published On 19 Dec 202519 Dec 2025Click here to share on social mediashare2ShareRuben Amorim said provocative social media posts from two of Manchester United’s academy stars showed a damaging “feeling of entitlement” at the Premier League club.The United boss last week said Harry Amass was “struggling” at Sheffield Wednesday, bottom of the Championship, and pointed out that Chido Obi was not always a starter in United’s under-21s.Recommended Stories list of 4 itemsend of listThe 18-year-olds both uploaded and subsequently deleted Instagram story posts.Amass posted a photo of himself holding the Sheffield Wednesday’s player of the month award for November with a grinning emoji.Obi’s post showed him with arms out celebrating a goal for the Under-21s against Manchester City in August.Amorim defended his direct approach at his pre-match news conference on Friday, when asked if he had seen the posts.“I think it’s a little bit the feeling of entitlement that we have in our club,” the Portuguese said.“Sometimes, strong words are not bad words. Sometimes, difficult moments are not bad things for the kids. We don’t need to be always with accolades in everything, in every situation.”The United boss called for a change of culture at the club, who are sixth in the Premier League in the run-up to Sunday’s visit to high-flying Aston Villa.“The players sometimes forget about what it means to play for Manchester United. We as a club sometimes forget who we are,” he said.“And that’s the feeling that I have. So I understand everything. It’s the environment, it’s the moment of the players, the kids.“They feel entitled. They feel free to respond to the manager with a picture.” Advertisement Amorim said his office door was open if players wanted to discuss issues.“Nobody is coming to talk to me,” he said. “And that is the way we can solve things. So I think we need to change first as a club. And then everything is going to change.”The United boss was also asked about a T-shirt worn by Kobbie Mainoo’s half-brother earlier this week t …

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