Manchester United have done what they do best in recent years sack another manager.
Rúben Amorim has officially been relieved of his duties, making him the 10th manager to take charge of United since Sir Alex Ferguson left. At this point, the job role should come with a suitcase and return ticket.
To steady the ship (or maybe just delay the sinking), Darren Fletcher has been appointed as interim head coach.
13 Years, 10 Managers 😲
Since Ferguson’s exit, Manchester United have rotated managers like it’s a playlist on shuffle. Different styles, different philosophies, same ending.
Fans online were quick to point out the painful maths:
thirteen years,ten managers, over £1.5 billion spent and still struggling to stay competitive.

At this stage, even Excel is tired of calculating United’s rebuild.
Is It Really the Coach? The Question Everyone Is Asking
Amorim reportedly raised concerns about the squad’s quality. Instead of backing him with players, the club reportedly backed him to the airport.

This reignited the long-standing debate:
Is the problem really the man on the bench, or the people sitting comfortably in the boardroom?
Many fans believe United are stuck in a vicious cycle hire coach, promise rebuild, sack coach, repeat.
Different accent, same excuses.
Online Reactions: Blame Game, Anger, and Zero Patience
Reactions online were ruthless. While some fans grouped Amorim with the long list of post-Ferguson managers, others refused to lump him together with those who at least won trophies.

There were heated arguments about standards, comparisons with past managers, and the usual internal fan wars that always follow bad news at Old Trafford.
One thing united everyone though:
This problem is bigger than one coach.
Darren Fletcher Steps In For Now
With Darren Fletcher taking over as interim boss, fans are already asking the real question:
How long before the next announcement?

Because at Manchester United, “interim” is just another word for loading.
Same Club New Statement Pending
Manchester United have changed managers again, but the feeling around the club remains painfully familiar.
New coach, same squad, same confusion, and disappointment.
At this point, the most consistent thing at Old Trafford isn’t the tactics it’s the sack letter.

