Marcus Rashford and Man United on transfer collision course as January solution looks inevitable
Ruben Amorim threw down the gauntlet to Marcus Rashford by leaving the forward out of the Manchester derby - and Rashford has responded by suggesting his days at Manchester United could be numbered.
Rashford and Alejandro Garnacho were both left out of Amorim's matchday squad for United's 2-1 win against Man City at the Etihad on Sunday, with the coach hinting that his selection decisions were based on "standards" and behaviour falling short on and off the pitch. Rashford has struggled for form this season and was booed by travelling United fans in the Europa League last Thursday before missing the City game.
On the Tuesday after the derby, Rashford was asked by journalist Henry Winter if he would be "staying or going" and replied: "For me, personally, I think I'm ready for a new challenge and the next steps."
READ MORE: Amorim breaks silence on Rashford bombshell interview
READ MORE: Touchline reaction was maybe the final straw for Rashford
Amorim held a press conference on Wednesday morning to preview United's Carabao Cup tie against Tottenham on Thursday, and refused to close the door on Rashford's Old Trafford career. The coach insisted he would be happy to keep Rashford, and even suggested that the "new challenge" the forward alluded to could be helping to restore United to the top of the game after years of underachievement.
A tense situation that was brewing behind the scenes is now very much public, with both camps leaving it all on the table: Amorim is daring Rashford to prove himself; Rashford is daring United to sell him. The situation is delicate heading into the January: Rashford is on a £325,000-a-week contract until summer 2028, which limits the number of suitors who could realistically afford to sign him - especially during a winter transfer window. Rashford was worth close to £100m after his 30-goal season in 2022/23, but his value has nosedived since then.
At 27, Rashford still theoretically has years left at the top of the game, and United will not want to sell a much-loved academy graduate on the cheap only to see him go on and succeed elsewhere. It is another difficult transfer situation Sir Jim Ratcliffe's Ineos find themselves in, and we want to know what you, the MEN readers, think.
Have your say in our special Rashford survey below.
Once you have voted in our poll, get involved in the debate in the comments section.