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The stats behind Ruben Amorim’s nightmare tenure at Manchester United

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As Manchester United prepare to host their cross-city rivals, Manchester City, at Old Trafford in the early kick-off on Saturday (12:30, January 17), the Red Devils find themselves two steps back after yet another failed managerial tenure in the post-Sir Alex Ferguson era.

With much of the pre-match narrative focusing on the Man U vs Man City odds, it is difficult to view this fixture without also looking back at the baffling Ruben Amorim era and how swiftly any optimism evaporated.

Despite finally seeming to make progress under the Portuguese coach — with a win over Leeds United capable of lifting United into the Premier League’s top four — his time in Manchester ended abruptly following a bizarre post-match outburst at Elland Road.

Leeds thrashed Chelsea (3-1) and Crystal Palace (4-1) and held their own in a 3-3 draw against Liverpool in December, so a 1-1 draw in Yorkshire was hardly disastrous. Yet Amorim felt compelled to address his role, claiming:

“I came here to be the manager of Manchester United, not to be the coach of Manchester United… I know that my name is not Tuchel, it’s not Conte, it’s not Mourinho, but I’m the manager of Manchester United.”

He doubled down, insisting he would not quit — but the Man United board took the decision out of his hands the following morning.

Appointing former midfielder Darren Fletcher as a bridge for Ole Gunnar Solskjær’s return as interim boss until the end of the season only emphasised the sense of déjà vu. The new-era optimism promised by Sir Jim Ratcliffe seemed to collapse overnight.

But whether Fletcher or Solskjaer succeed is not the point here — Amorim’s legacy is the focus, and the numbers paint a bleak picture.

A historically bad record

Amorim’s defenders were in short supply by the end, and the statistics largely explain why. His 14-month stint will not be fondly recalled, probably not even by the man himself, and there’s an argument to be made that he is the worst permanent manager in Manchester United’s modern history.

Some of the key numbers tell the story:

  • Less than a third of Premier League matches won: just 15 victories from 47 league fixtures, accompanied by 19 defeats
  • All-competitions record: 24 wins from 63 matches — a win rate of 38.1%, the worst for any permanent United boss since Ferguson
  • Points per game: 1.23 — the lowest of any manager in the Premier League era, even below interim figure Ralf Rangnick (1.54)
  • Last season’s finish: 15th in the table, United’s lowest-ever position in the Premier League era
  • European disappointment: beaten by Tottenham Hotspur in the Europa League final

Even in United’s messier post-Ferguson years, the club had never dropped below eighth — not under David Moyes, nor Louis van Gaal, nor Jose Mourinho, nor Solskjaer, nor Erik ten Hag.

That he emerged from the summer still in charge shocked supporters and pundits alike, especially after Ratcliffe had publicly suggested Amorim would be given three years to reshape the club. In reality, he lasted barely one.

Where things went wrong

While injuries, squad imbalance and boardroom politics certainly played their part, Amorim did not help himself. His stubborn refusal to deviate from his preferred 3-4-3 system became one of the defining issues of his reign.

It worked wonders for him at Sporting — where he famously masterminded Champions League victories over Arsenal and Manchester City — but the setup never translated to English football in the same way.

The system was simply not suited to the personnel at his disposal. United lacked the profile of centre-backs, wing-backs and deep playmakers required to make it function, and the board appeared unwilling (or unable) to supply the players necessary to execute the plan.

Performances frequently looked disjointed, sterile in possession and vulnerable to transitions — especially against sides who pressed or countered with pace and aggression.

There is also the wider tactical reality that the back three has rarely succeeded at the top of the Premier League. Antonio Conte notoriously won the division with Chelsea using a three-at-the-back system, but he remains the exception rather than the rule.

As results worsened and United’s price drifted in Premier League odds, Amorim’s insistence that the system would eventually come good — despite mounting evidence to the contrary — only accelerated the loss of patience among supporters and decision-makers.

What comes next

The club is once again cleaning up after a failed experiment. Solskjaer— returning to familiar ground — is tasked with stabilising before the board makes yet another major decision in the summer. Meanwhile, Ratcliffe and INEOS must now confront the same revolving-door problem that has plagued United for more than a decade.

For Amorim, the book closes on a tenure that promised revolution, delivered stagnation, and ultimately produced a statistical nightmare. The numbers will outlive the quotes, leaving very little room for interpretation.

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