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Giggs: Next Man United manager must give youth academy players a chance

Ryan Giggs

Manchester United’s interim manager Ryan Giggs smiles as he takes to the touchline before his team’s English Premier League soccer match against Norwich City at Old Trafford Stadium, Manchester, England, Saturday April 26, 2014. (AP Photo/Jon Super)

AP

Whether it’s Louis van Gaal, Jose Mourinho or Ryan Giggs himself that’s the Manchester United manager at the start of the 2016-17 season, the current Man United assistant manager believes the club’s youth academy is still the way forward, just as it was when he came through as a player.

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With the recent emergence of academy products Marcus Rashford and Cameron Borthwick-Jackson, Giggs feels now is a pivotal point in United’s history, not only for the short-term, but for the long-term future of the club as well — quotes from the Guardian:

“I think it will always be part of the club’s philosophy. It’s part of the history, it’s what sets us apart from other teams. Yes, we can bring world-class players in from around the world but we want one of our own to be performing on that Old Trafford pitch, whether it’s a center forward, a winger, a defender … we need players to come through the ranks. That’s a massive part of the United history. We’re a club that gives youth a chance and that again goes back to Sir Matt Busby’s days.”

Giggs, a United academy product-turned-legend himself, knows all too well the history of the club’s youth academy as well as the benefits of a club the size of United producing its own first-team talent. Here’s the problem, though: whoever the manager is next season, he’ll be expected to compete for the Premier League title, or finish in the top-four at a minimum, otherwise he could be out of a job by this time next year.

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Outside of what Mauricio Pochettino is doing at Tottenham Hotspur — and even there, Pochettino has signed a handful of up-and-coming youngsters, like Dele Alli and Eric Dier, from elsewhere — the idea of challenging for the PL title while bringing through more than one or two young players has proven merely a pipe dream.

To the brave soul who takes, or remains in, that job this summer … good luck.

Follow @AndyEdMLS