Some members of the billionaire Glazer family have been debating whether to sell their stake in Manchester United FC, after more than 20 years of ownership that has often been blighted by fan protest https://t.co/yn8zjFzVG5
The fact Rooney was helping defend, then runs with the ball, pings it perfectly shows the type of player he was. Sacrificed so much of his own goalscoring ability for the team. #MUFC
Rooney and Ronaldo playing together was a cheat code. Just 2 passes and the ball is already in Chelsea penalty box.
Fun Facts: this 33 seconds video has more shot on target than Arsenal shot on target against PSG after extra time in the UCL final. 🤯
State of this at the Arsenal parade. Looks like a bloke hitting women, girls getting too drunk and fighting and someone’s phone getting nicked off the floor. Meanwhile, people are just standing there filming it all. Winning the title and deciding to fight amongst your own fans 😂
Josh Kroenke surprises Gary Neville with a special gift, during an interview at the training ground.
🗣️ “On behalf of our entire club, we have a little present for you. I think you will love it, Gary. I think you might have to open it on camera…” ❤️🤣
Before this conversation, I thought I understood Bruno Fernandes.
I knew the numbers. The goals, the assists, the leadership, the criticism he’s faced over the years at Manchester United.
But I didn’t understand the mentality behind it.
Bruno has arguably become United’s greatest player of the post-Ferguson era, carrying their creativity season after season.
He’s won more club player of the year awards than Ronaldo, and only five players have scored more than his 70 league goals.
So I went to Manchester United Training Ground to ask him questions the footballing world wants to know.
Bruno spoke about growing up in Porto, watching his father sacrifice his own football career to provide for the family. He told me his dad never praised him for scoring goals. Instead, he’d point out the small things he still needed to improve.
And somehow that mindset shaped one of the most resilient athletes in world football.
We spoke about:
- Why he believes character matters more than talent in elite teams.
- How dressing room culture determines whether talent succeeds or fails.
- Why taking risks is essential if you want to create anything extraordinary!
- His honest opinion on pressure and why he thinks it’s a privilege.
- His thoughts on having Michael Carrick as a manager.
- Addressing Roy Keane’s criticism.
When you listen to Bruno speak, you understand that what makes him exceptional isn’t just technical ability. It’s his standards.
The standards he holds himself to.
The standards he expects from teammates.
The standards he believes define culture.
I really respect how Bruno chose to join United during instability because he believed in rebuilding something meaningful rather than joining an “easy” project.
I saw a much softer and more thoughtful side of Bruno that I don’t think people will expect. So, thank you Bruno for taking the time to sit down with me and for being so vulnerable.
Even if you don’t care about football, there’s a huge amount to learn from this conversation about leadership, resilience and high performance.
Bruno Fernandes on turning down £200M to stay at Manchester United:
"Obviously, this is the league I want to be in. This is the best league in the world. This is where I'm going to enjoy my football as I'm not going to enjoy it in any other place. So we still have dreams to fulfil"