Barcelona could be the final chance for Marcus Rashford to prove his mettle
Everyone seemed to be talking about Marcus Rashford and his future at United. It was hardly scientific, but there was almost no support for him from the fans. Instead, there was anger and frustration towards what should have been their star player.
Their patience had exhausted at his latest off-the-field misstep – a night out in Belfast. It felt like a fall from grace, the former poster boy of the team, the Manchester lad and United fan. His form had been poor and, not for the first time, he had become a scapegoat rather than a saviour.
Then the game started and Rashford scored almost immediately. The away end cheered and sang 'like Manchester, Rashford is red.' It wasn't a full-on crazy celebration, but it showed how fans can change their tune, how there is always a way back.
But it would be a long way back for Rashford, the man whose name was sold in greater numbers on the back of shirts than any player other than Cristiano Ronaldo in the previous decade. Too much water had passed under the bridge. At Wolves in the previous season, he was dropped for turning up late to a team meeting.
Rashford was one of the best-paid footballers on the planet, but his form was not yet close to that of the best. There was mitigation. Playing for United in the post-Alex Ferguson era wasn't easy, with constant managerial and tactical changes as well as shifting plates of power.
Out of that, Rashford became one of United's most successful academy graduates. He played 426 United games and scored 138 goals. Impressive.
His popularity increased massively off the field as he became the face of a campaign for free school dinners during the Covid-19 pandemic, forcing the UK government into a humiliating U-turn. In November 2020, a phone call was made to him from the personal secretary of Boris Johnson, the British Prime Minister.
'Boris wants to speak to Marcus now.'
'He's training.'
'Well, you'll need to get him from training because Boris wants to speak to him now.'
'Sorry, but he can't, he's training.'
As the campaign elevated his profile and former US President Barack Obama praised him, Rashford became one of sport's most marketable entities; a young home-grown forward for England's biggest club with a wholesome off-field, socially-conscious image.
The man who had marvelled at NFL's Odell Beckham Junior at Nike's HQ in 2018 would surpass his popularity on social media.
In October 2021, Rashford was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Manchester for 'his continuing charity work and campaign against child poverty off the field, as well as his outstanding sporting achievements on the pitch'. At 23, he was the youngest recipient of an honorary degree in the university's history.
That came during a tough time. After the 2020 European Championship (held in 2021 due to Covid) in which he and other England players were racially abused, Rashford was not in a good place when he returned to Old Trafford. Coaches felt he was down, had been affected by what had happened.
There were concerns from coaches at how time and energy Rashford was devoting to off-the-pitch activities, but they could also see value in his work and the praise it was attracting.
Yet tweets from Rashford's social media accounts sometimes sounded nothing like Rashford and he simply wasn't the saint he was portrayed as, but a normal-enough Manchester lad living in a goldfish bowl and trying to navigate his way through life amid myriad hangers on.
He made numerous mistakes, he got things wrong. But he was always going to be judged primarily on how he played football and things were not going well. From being a bright international prospect, he lost his place in the England team.
His statistics varied wildly. He scored 22 and 21 goals for United in 2019/20 and 2020/21, then five in 2021/22. He notched 30 (and a massive new contact) in 2023/24, but only eight the following season.
Rashford simply didn't look happy when he played football or when he talked about football. But as one former teammate said: 'He's looked like this since he's been 14!' But it was sad to see. And how everybody did see it.
His former coach Ole Gunnar Solskjaer said last week that he would hate to be a player today with the existence of social media, where the only hiding space was at home.
Rashford didn't always help himself, but he had had become a non-goalscoring forward and coaches who worked with him were saddened.
United simply didn't get the expected return and new coach Rubem Amorim acted more decisively than previous United managers with Rashford: after weeks of coaching him, he cut him out of his plans. Most United fans supported the new coach's actions. They had had enough of Rashford.
A loan to Aston Villa followed and went well enough for the Midlands club to try to sign the player permanently. The slide had stopped, but Rashford's market value was given as €85 million in 2021.
Now, Barcelona have done a deal where they would pay just over a third of that should they sign him on a permanent deal after a successful loan spell. It's low risk for the Catalans, who needed more attacking options and who will pay 100 per cent of his wages and have an option to buy at the end of the season.
He is 27, so he should be at his peak. This feels like it's his final chance to prove he is a world-class footballer. At the very least, he wants to get properly back into the England team. United fans will watch with as much interest as Barcelona fans.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Khaleej Times
2 hours ago
- Khaleej Times
Man United boss Amorim hails 'really important' Fernandes
Manchester United boss Ruben Amorim heaped praise on captain Bruno Fernandes after the midfielder scored twice in a 2-1 pre-season win over fellow Premier League club West Ham United at the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey on Saturday. Fernandes, who scored 19 goals and provided 19 assists in 57 appearances across all competitions for United last season and won the club's Player of the Year award, was linked with a move to Saudi Pro-League club Al Hilal earlier this year. However, the 30-year-old said last month that he had considered the move but ultimately turned it down to keep playing at the highest level. Asked about Fernandes' importance to the team, Amorim told reporters after the win: "It was so clear last season, you can see it with the goals and assists. But it's not just that. "I think now he has more players, I feel, to help him to lead the group, and that is a good thing. He is our leader and really important, not just on the field but off the field. He leads by example. "Sometimes, the problem is he gets frustrated and loses a little bit of focus of his job. Sometimes, he wants to help the teammates so much, it is not the best thing to do. They have to do their job, and Bruno has, for example, to wait for the ball." United have signed Matheus Cunha and Bryan Mbeumo so far in the transfer window, with Amorim saying the signings would take some of the pressure off Fernandes in attack. "Last year, I felt sometimes I pushed him back to have more possession in the build-up, and we miss Bruno near the box," Amorim added. "With different characteristics from Bryan (Mbeumo) and Matheus Cunha - and I really like Kobbie Mainoo's game - he (Fernandes) will have more help this season."


The National
11 hours ago
- The National
Retegui, El Aynaoui and the glorious rise of multi-sport dynasties
The story is told of Mateo Retegui, who this week became the summer's costliest new arrival in Saudi Arabia's Pro League, that, but for a chance encounter with a persistent coach, he might never have become a footballer. Retegui had, well into his teens, turned his back on the game that would make him a superstar. To do so was perfectly logical, even if Retegui was an outstanding athlete, strong, fast and mobile and a young man with all the genetic gifts to pursue a life in sport. But his question was: Which sport? His background was steering him firmly in a particular direction, unavoidably for a kid whose family name, Retegui, is to field hockey in his native Argentina as the surname Maradona is to football. And not just the paternal name, either. Mateo's mother Maria was a junior national champion at hockey. Mateo's father, Carlos, meanwhile represented the country as a hockey player in three successive Olympics and went on to coach Argentina's men to a gold medal at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games. He also oversaw the Argentinian women's silver medals at the 2012 and 2020 Olympics. Mateo's sister, Micaela, was part of the squad in Tokyo. And so it was that the male heir to this sporting dynasty – one that stretches even further back, to Juan Jose Retegui, Mateo's grandfather, an international at rowing and at rugby union – seemed set on a career with a curved stick and a hard ball. He had been good enough at football to have attracted the attention of the Buenos Aires superclub, Boca Juniors, as a schoolboy but at the moment he felt compelled to dedicate himself to one sporting code, the family game – hockey – seemed to be winning out. He started to be called up by national age-group teams. According to the former Boca Juniors scout, Diego Mazzilli, a chance encounter drew him back to football at 17, and although the journey from there would sometimes be tough – Retegui had spells at Boca and River Plate without making a significant impression – he says his loved ones' sporting expertise helped him persist. Another aspect of the family lineage turned out to be important, too – his mother's Italian ancestry. It meant he had an Italian passport as well as his Argentinian citizenship. While his native country never reached out to him to play up front for their world champions, Italy did. So he moved to Serie A, and after finishing last season as the division's top goalscorer with Atalanta, and taking his total caps as Italy's centre-forward up to 20, Al Qadsiah of the Saudi Pro League were persuaded to spend close to €70m on the 26-year-old. It has been a significant week for young footballers with great sporting forebears. About the same time the Retegui deal was being agreed, Italy's Roma were celebrating the capture of Moroccan midfielder Neil El Aynaoui, signed from France's Lens. Tennis fans will recognise the name. El Aynaoui also comes from a sporting dynasty which, like the Retegui line, follows an unusual zig-zag across different codes. Younes El Aynaoui was a pioneer for professional tennis in Africa and the Arab world in the 1990s and early 2000s, reaching a global ranking of 14th in the men's game. His son showed an aptitude on court as a boy. But, as Neil tells it, an influential period of his childhood spent living just outside Barcelona with his parents drew him to football. 'I was a great fan of Barca and especially of Andres Iniesta,' he said at his Roma presentation, explaining why he has chosen the Italian club's number eight jersey, Iniesta's number, for this chapter of his career. He thanked his family influences, too, for giving him the tools to thrive in professional sport, where having the right support, developing a strong armour to survive the fierce spotlight and the inevitable setbacks are essential. This is an era in which the elite tier of football is heavily populated with stars who come from footballing families – like Erling Haaland, whose father Alfie was a seasoned, much-travelled international, or the Thuram brothers, Marcus and Kephren, sons of World Cup winner Lilian – but it is also, seemingly, a peak time for the multi-sport dynasty. In this, Neil El Aynaoui will find he is not unique even in Serie A, nor in a likely Morocco midfield of the near future. Al Aynaoui, who is on the cusp of turning his national under-23 status into a senior call-up for the Atlas Lions, will in October come up against Fiorentina's Amir Richardson, the much admired Morocco international whose father is the former NBA basketball star Michael Ray Richardson. This weekend, meanwhile Moroccan football will be focused on another story of sporting excellence across generations, across disciplines, across gender, hoping for a fairytale ending. On Saturday in Rabat, the host country take on Nigeria in the final of the women's Africa Cup of Nations, aiming for an unprecedented first title in the competition, a maiden triumph for any North African side in a Wafcon, and to go one better than the silver medal Morocco achieved two years ago. Leading them on to the field will be the tournament's leading scorer, Ghizlane Chebbak, a pioneer for a sport that, in her 35-year lifetime has sometimes struggled to match the attention, the resource base of men's football. Each time that our family name is mentioned, he's also being mentioned Ghizlane Chebbak on father Larbi For Ghizlane, the distinctions between the men's game and the women's were viewed through a particular lens for as long as she can remember. Her father, Larbi, was a distinguished Morocco international. 'The first thing I learnt from my dad was a love of football,' she said just before leading Morocco into their first appearance at a World Cup finals, in 2023. 'The first present he gave me was a ball.' After Larbi's death, aged 73, five years ago, Ghizlane appreciated all the more that every success of hers would honour Larbi, too: 'Each time that our family name is mentioned, he's also being mentioned,' she noted. The echoes will be louder, more resonant than ever should Morocco's Lionesses win in Rabat. For all the aura that surrounds the national men's team, with its current stars like Achraf Hakimi and Yassine Bounou, Morocco have only ever won the men's Africa Cup of Nations once in their history. That was in 1976, when Larbi was running the Atlas Lions midfield. Almost half a century later, his daughter is 90 minutes from mounting the same podium.


Khaleej Times
19 hours ago
- Khaleej Times
Gill and Rahul steady India after early wobble to frustrate England
A superb 174-run partnership between India captain Shubman Gill and KL Rahul frustrated a previously dominant England on day four of the fourth Test, narrowing the hosts' lead to 137 runs. Chris Woakes took two wickets in two balls in the first over of India's second innings to leave them reeling on 0-2 before lunch, after captain Ben Stokes' first century in two years fired England to 669, their fifth highest test total. Gill and Rahul survived to return for the afternoon session and steadied the ship as India ended the day on 174-2, despite England continuing to create chances. The top scorers in this series settled in as the day wore on and piled on the runs, without being overly troubled. Gill will resume on Sunday unbeaten on 78, with Rahul 13 from his century. Stokes, who took five wickets in India's first innings, elected not to bowl after retiring hurt with cramp when batting on Friday. India's battling recovery takes the fourth Test to a tantalising final day, with England holding a 2-1 lead in the five-match series. "It was very frustrating," England assistant coach Marcus Trescothick said. "We expected to get more wickets after the first over of the innings. "The ball was nipping around but they batted really well. They were positive, but we still felt we could pick one or two up. "He (Stokes) is a bit stiff and sore. He has had a big workload in the last few weeks. Hoping with another night's rest he will be back and can bowl tomorrow." Resuming on 544-7, with Stokes on 77, the skipper looked nervous as he edged towards a long-awaited ton. He pointed to the skies -- in tribute to his father -- when he reached three figures early on Saturday. Stokes became only the fourth England player in Test history to take five wickets and make a century in the same match and was the first captain to do so. After Liam Dawson had been dismissed, Stokes started playing more freely once he had scored his century. He belted a huge six and another four to cross 7,000 Test runs and take the hosts past 600. Stokes joined West Indian great Gary Sobers and South African Jacques Kallis as the only Test players to have scored 7000 runs and take 200 wickets. The boundaries continue to flow, with Brydon Carse getting in on the act before Stokes was out for 141. Carse attempted one six too many and was also caught on the boundary for 47 to bring England's colossal innings to an end. With 15 minutes to navigate before lunch, India crumbled under the pressure. Yashasvi Jaiswal was caught in the slips by Joe Root and Sai Sudharsan followed him back next ball. Gill, who has three centuries already this series, reached his eighth Test fifty in cruise control. Rahul became only the 13th visiting opener to score more than 500 runs in England in a series and the second Indian opening batsman after Sunil Gavaskar. "Both today and tomorrow, we just need to take it hour by hour," India batting coach Sitanshu Kotak told reporters. "They (Gill and Rahul) showed great determination. They batted brilliantly. Rahul has been outstanding in this series."