Post
Topic
Board Gambling discussion
Re: ⚽ Football Transfers Speculation, Odds and Predictions
by
death69
on 29/05/2025, 09:59:35 UTC
Luckily, the board still believes in Amorim and has given him a chance for next year as well. But if he doesn't achieve anything significant, it'll be easy for them to replace him. Personally, i think that if they make the right transfers, they can easily bounce back and start winning, but the whole team needs to be changed...

The problem is MU has not even sold one player, and they seem so desperate in selling their own players. It won't give them money if they still keep their big head to sell their players as very expensive price.

They have to give big discounts in order to recoup some money from the markets. Their position in the league, and result in europa league make other clubs reluctant to accept their very high offers for all of their flop players. This is something that is hard to face.
United current transfer policy is that anyone can go, but only if they pay a high enough price to make us look smart in our yearly report. And we all know that no one is buying. You come in 15th, lose the Europa final, and half of your team's value drops like crypto after a rug pull. Of course clubs are circling for bargains, not overpays.

The big club tax United try to charge is officially dead. This is what happens when you buy fancy names for a long time and then find out that half of them are unnecessary, injured, or don't want to work. No one wants to pay Champions League fees for a team that just lost all of its games and is now in the middle of the table. Take a look at how Brighton or even Chelsea. They know when to give up, change direction, and move on. United is still hoping for the impossible. At the same time, the pay bill is losing money, and all of these over-the-top loans and mutual terminations are only short-term fixes.

Emotionally, it is hard, but United have to start acting like a normal club in the market. Take the deal, take off the bandage, and heal your team. The longer they keep living in 2013, the further they will slide from relevance.