Live from Old Trafford, “Remove him from my team immediately… We frequently lose when he starts, and I’m already tired of him.” Sir Jim Ratcliffe, Manchester United’s owner, has selected ONE player who must be sold this summer. Sir Jim Ratcliffe is not impressedđĄđđ±

Sir Jim Ratcliffe Unleashes Honest Review of Manchester Unitedâs Past Mistakes and Future Ambitions
Manchester Unitedâs co-owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe has delivered a frank and uncompromising assessment of the clubâs recent transfer history, openly criticizing several major signings and pledging a major overhaul to return the club to glory.
In a series of interviews, Ratcliffe voiced disappointment in players like Casemiro, Antony, Jadon Sancho, Rasmus HĂžjlund, and AndrĂ© Onanaâlabeling their transfers as expensive errors inherited from past management.
âThese werenât our decisions,â Ratcliffe explained during a sit-down with the BBC. âPlayers like Onana, HĂžjlund, Sancho, Antony, and Casemiro were already here when we took over. Now itâs on us to clean up the mess and rebuild.â
High Costs, Low Returns
Ratcliffe revealed shocking financial details, including that United still covers part of Sanchoâs wages while he’s on loan at Chelsea. Antony, now at Real Betis, also remains on Unitedâs payroll. Despite their staggering price tagsâAntony (ÂŁ81m), Casemiro (ÂŁ70m), HĂžjlund (ÂŁ72m), and Onana (ÂŁ47m)âthe return on investment has fallen short.
He stated, âSome of these players are underperforming. Some are being paid more than theyâre worth. Itâll take time, but weâre working toward a squad we can truly take ownership of.â
While critical of many, Ratcliffe was full of praise for Bruno Fernandes, calling the club captain âan outstanding footballer and a key piece of our future.â
Regret and Recalibration
Ratcliffe also admitted to hasty decisions made early in his tenureâspecifically retaining Erik ten Hag and appointing Dan Ashworth as sporting director before a thorough internal review. âWe rushed it,â he admitted. âThose were missteps, and I take responsibility.â
Since then, United has moved forward under the leadership of new manager RĂșben Amorim, who Ratcliffe strongly supports. âRuben brings fresh energy and tactical intelligence. Heâs a long-term solution, not just a patch-up job.â
Survival Mode to Rebuild Mode
The businessman also revealed the club was on the brink of financial disaster before his arrival. âWithout serious changes, we wouldâve been bankrupt by the end of 2025. Weâve made difficult choicesâstaff cuts, operational reductions, tighter transfer policiesâbut theyâve kept the club afloat.â
Though January spending was modest, Ratcliffe confirmed that Amorim will receive backing during the summer transfer windowâfinanced partially through player sales. However, he firmly ruled out selling top youth prospects like Kobbie Mainoo and Alejandro Garnacho.
âWeâre not sacrificing our academy talent for short-term gain,â he said.
Tough Cuts, Bold Goals
To stabilize finances, United made sweeping internal changesâover 400 jobs were eliminated, cafeteria services were scaled back, and ticket prices rose to ÂŁ66. While unpopular with fans, Ratcliffe insists these were unavoidable.
He also stood by the clubâs focus on the menâs squad, citing that it generates ÂŁ640 million of Unitedâs ÂŁ650 million annual revenue.
Looking ahead, Ratcliffe outlined his ambitious âMission 21â project, aiming to capture the clubâs 21st league title by 2028âjust in time for its 150th anniversary. âLiverpool rebuilt under Klopp. Weâre building something similarâcalculated, long-term, and sustainable.â
An announcement regarding Old Traffordâs futureâpossibly involving the construction of a completely new, state-of-the-art stadiumâis expected soon.