Sofyan Amrabat: The real deal or another World Cup flash in the pan β opinion
Shortly after retiring, Sir Alex Ferguson reflected on a few of his signings and expressed a hint regret regarding buying players based on their performances in tournaments. The legendary former Manchester United manager remarked:
βI was always wary of buying players on the back of good tournament performances. I did it at the 1996 European Championship, which prompted me to move for Jordi Cruyff and Karel Poborsky. Both had excellent runs in that tournament but I didnβt receive the kind of value their countries did that summer β¦ sometimes players get themselves motivated and prepared for World Cups and European Championships and after that there can be a levelling off.β
The great Scotsman isnβt wrong, is he? I mean, can anyone tell me where James Rodriguez is these days? Iβll wait.
Of course, there are exceptions, such as Goncalo Ramos, who had a stellar 26 goals in all competitions for Benfica this season on top of a brilliant World Cup hat-trick against Switzerland in December. Still, itβs a risky roll of the dice when a club identifies and signs a player just because he stood out in an international tournament, which brings us to the latest flavour of the monthβand latest name to be linked with a move to Manchester UnitedβMoroccan midfielder, Sofyan Amrabat.
Amrabat became a household name among football fans during the 2022 World Cup in Qatar. The 26-year-oldβs energy, fight, and composure in midfield had United fans salivating for Erik ten Hag and co to bring Amrabat to Old Trafford as an upgrade on Fred and Scott McTominay. The Moroccan was impressive; who can forget him tracking back and keeping pace with Kylian Mbappe to lunge in with a crunching tackle and deny the French attacker the chance to square the ball? Amrabat was a defensive force of nature in the tournament, overall, owning the middle of the pitch as Moroccoβs defensive midfielder and making tackles left and right to win the ball and launch an attack.
While Morocco deployed Amrabat as a defensive midfielder, relying on him to patrol their defensive third and disrupt the oppositionβs attack, he has a bit more license to get forward with Fiorentina and sees a lot of the ball in the opposition half. Amrabatβs passing range goes under the radar, in fact, as many think heβs a defensive-minded midfielder based on his World Cup performances. The Serie A club relies on Amrabat to find his teammates higher up the pitch, as well, with the Moroccan actually finishing the season with an average of 4.6 accurate long balls per match, which ranked sixth in the league. Last year, Amrabat had a pass accuracy of 88.8% of his attempted 67.12 passes per 90, which was in the 95th percentile, while his 7.91 progressive passes per 90 was in the 92nd percentile.
If Amrabatβs passing in Serie A was much better than his defensive output, why was he such a defensive general in Moroccoβs midfield, but not Fiorentinaβs? Well, the answer is a bit full-circle and has more to do with Moroccoβs level on the international stage compared to the opposition they faced in the World Cup. To Moroccoβs credit, they exceeded everyoneβs expectations by making it to the semi-final and jumping from 22nd to 11th in FIFAβs ranking during the tournament. However, much like how smaller clubs play against top clubs, Morocco was very defensive and sat deep, hoping to win the ball and punish teams with their counter attack. Such an approach will magnify a playerβs defensive actions. Thatβs not to say Amrabat isnβt deserving of praise for his World Cup heroics, but that Moroccoβs reliance on him to patrol the midfield raised his defensive baseline for the tournament.
So what does all this mean as far as Amrabat being a World Cup wonder versus a consistent midfielder is concerned? Well, it means that Sofyan Amrabat is a solid all-around midfielder who can do a little of everything, but particularly excels at anticipating danger to win back the ball and using his passing range to pick out teammates in advanced positions. You might be thinking, βManchester United already have that in Casemiro,β and youβd be correct. However, United are seriously lacking depth in the number six role and the Brazilian missed eight games through suspension, leaving a hole in Erik ten Hagβs midfield. Having someone like Ambrabat, who can rotate with Casemiro and even play alongside him in certain matches wouldnβt go amiss. Furthermore, United played the most matches of any club in Europe last season, which means having depth in the squad is vital moving forward.
Ten Hag seems to prefer signing players he knows and trusts, bringing both Antony and Lisandro Martinez with him from Ajax and signing Mason Mount, who he scouted and admired during the English midfielderβs loan spell in the Eredivisie with Vitesse. Amrabat fits this mould, as well, having worked under ten Hag during the Dutchmanβs time at the helm of FC Utrecht.
The issue, though, is ten Hagβs transfer budget and Unitedβs priority positions. Having already spent a fair bit on Mason Mount, United are still in need of a goalkeeper following David de Geaβs departure as a free agent and itβs generally accepted that the Red Devils are in desperate need of a clinical striker. Would ten Hag opt to further strengthen his midfield by approving a β¬30 million transfer for Sofyan Amrabat? If United raise funds by selling the likes of Dean Henderson, Anthony Elanga, Eric Bailly, Fred, Alex Telles, and Donny van de Beek, then Amrabat would be seen as an absolute steal. Ten Hagβs hands are tied for the time being, though, but crazier things have happened during the summer transfer window, meaning all bets are off at this point and Sofyan Amrabat could very well be a United player by the end of the summer.
Get the latest Manchester United news, opinion, interviews and exclusive features with theΒ Stretty Newsletter β Ad Free! Kick off your afternoon with the Stretty News verdict on all matters Manchester United.
The post Sofyan Amrabat: The real deal or another World Cup flash in the pan β opinion appeared first on Stretty News.