Manchester United currently find themselves in the middle of yet another manager hunt, with the club on the lookout for a new head coach after the sacking of Ruben Amorim.
It is expected that the club will hire an interim boss until the end of the season, at which point a permanent appointment will be made. It remains to be seen who will get the job.
Whoever does get the role will certainly be coming into a high pressure environment.
READ ALSO: Shay Given Issues Fulsome Apology Over ‘Holocaust’ Comment About Celtic On BBC
Recommended
READ ALSO: Macclesfield Captain Dedicates Historic FA Cup Shock v Palace To Late Teammate
Aldridge Feels Roy Keane Comments Have Become ‘Issue’ At Manchester United
There is always a huge amount of media scrutiny on Manchester United, especially when things are not going well at Old Trafford. The presence of their former players as pundits is also something that looms large whenever the club play on live television.
Writing in the Irish Independent, John Aldridge summed up why comments from the likes of Roy Keane and Gary Neville have become an issue at Manchester United.
Another issue that has been raised around United is the constant comments from former players like Roy Keane and Gary Neville, but they are only speaking out because they are hurt by what they are seeing at the club.
Roy is brilliant on TV and he doesn’t hold back when it comes to criticising players, which hurts a few feelings at a time when everyone seems to have a very thin skin.
Neville also speaks from the heart and if the owners, manager and players at United can’t take a little bit of criticism, maybe they are not cut out to play for a big football club.
The next Manchester United will likely be someone who is adept at dealing with the media, although doing so at Old Trafford is a very different task than at most other clubs.
For now, the board will be concentrating on getting the next appointment right after the failed Amorim experiment.
SEE ALSO: Keith Andrews Impressed To See Opposition Manager Bring Back Dying Tradition After FA Cup Win