It came as a surprise to just about everybody involved in football when Manchester United activated Youri Tielemans’ release clause yesterday. Despite the club being on the lookout for additions in central midfield, the Belgium international had not been linked with a move to Old Trafford.There is no doubting the quality of Tielemans and the agreed fee of £35 million is more than fair, but there is a slight sense of frustration that this is a deal that, had the club been braver, could have been so much better for United. If the midfield playmaker hits the ground running, all of this will likely be forgotten, but it is important that the club learns from its past mistakes with this transfer.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementAfter all, United could have signed Tielemans on a free transfer when he left Leicester following their relegation in 2023.Tielemans has been continuously impressive ever since he arrived at Leicester on an initial loan from Monaco. After a string of impressive performances, Leicester made the deal permanent and he repaid the favour by scoring the only goal in the 2021 FA Cup final.The tenacious midfielder was unfortunately unable to save his side from the drop in 2023 and soon after announced that he would be leaving the club on a free transfer. Despite the fact that United had been scouting Tielemans since 2016, the club passed on the chance to sign him and instead purchased Mason Mount for £55 million.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementThis is not the first opportunity to sign a promising player for a cut-price fee that United have missed. In fact, it has happened a lot over the last decade and it is something INEOS needs to address as the club builds towards challenging for the Premier League title once again.United first scouted Carlos Baleba back when he was a largely unknown talent playing for Lille. Despite being impressed by what they saw and the player being available for around £30 million, the club opted against doing a deal.However, once Baleba had moved to Brighton and proven that he was the perfect fit for the pacey and physical Premier League, United made him a top target last summer. It is hard for the fans to understand why, having had the chance to sign him for an affordable fee just a few years earlier, the Red Devils waited until a £100 million price tag had been slapped on the player before declaring their interest.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementIs it that the club do not believe they can develop players the way smaller clubs like Brighton and Bournemouth can? Is it the fact that United managers across the last decade have been resistant to hand out opportunities to younger players? Perhaps it is both. And, had the club not been so reluctant to embed younger players within the team, Jude Bellingham would likely have opted for Old Trafford instead of the Signal Iduna Park.Prior to INEOS taking control of sporting operations at United, the club largely only recruited proven, supposedly
Content Source: Yahoo News
Image Credit: Getty Images
All rights to the news content and images belong to their respective copyright owners.