Sir Alex Ferguson’s Worst Manchester United XI
Last week, we brought you Sir Alex Ferguson’s Greatest XI. This week, we’re taking a look at the other side of the spectrum as we name Sir Alex’s Worst Manchester United XI.
To err is human, and when you’ve been in charge as long as Sir Alex has, you’re bound to make some mistakes. Maybe the highly touted youngster that you signed and developed doesn’t pan out. Maybe the high-priced import doesn’t perform according to expectations. Maybe the grizzled veteran that you signed for leadership and experience was merely over-the-hill and nearing the end.
Ultimately, it’s up to the manager to correct his mistake and move on. Sir Alex Ferguson has proven that he’s able to do that, and he continues to keep the Old Trafford trophy cabinet full of silverware. Then again, I’m sure that’s of little consolation to some of these players:
Goalkeeper: Massimo Taibi
Not all goalkeepers can be Peter Schmeichel or Edwin Van der Sar. However, most of the Manchester United goalkeepers that stood between the posts during Sir Alex’s tenure were above average players that other managers would have killed for. Tim Howard was named to the PFA Best XI during his first season at Old Trafford and also became the first American to win an F.A. Cup. Fabien Barthez was brilliant during his first season at Manchester United, almost single-handedly preventing his squad from dropping points on a number of occasions en route to the Premiership title.
Even Raimond Van der Gouw, Mark Bosnich, and Roy Carroll had their moments in a United shirt. Maybe these guys didn’t reach the heights of Schmeichel or Van der Sar, but they had good careers and contributed to the United cause. In short, they weren’t great, but they weren’t horrible.
Then there was Massimo Taibi.
Taibi came over from Venezia for £4.4 million after Schmeichel left Old Trafford following the 1998-1999 season. Accounting for inflation, he cost twice as much as Howard, almost two-and-a-half times as much as Van der Sar, and nearly seven times as much as Schmeichel. Taibi got the start against Liverpool and committed a horrendous howler that allowed Sami Hyypia to score on a free kick.
United actually won that game, thanks to two own-goals from Jamie Carragher, so Taibi escaped blame for his error. Sadly, that gaffe would pale in comparison to what happened a couple of weeks later against Southampton.
You’ve seen the video. It’s one of the most famous miscues in recent EPL history. With the score 2-1, Southampton’s Matt Le Tissier fired a tame shot on goal that Taibi seemed to have covered. As he went to ground to cover it up, however, the ball trickled through his legs and went over the line for the equalizer.
Taibi later blamed his spikes for the mistake as Southampton went on to earn a 3-3 draw at Old Trafford after Le Tissier victimized Taibi again, this time after hammering a cross past a helpless Taibi from close-range. Taibi only played one more time for Manchester United, a 5-0 drubbing at the hands of Chelsea. He had no excuses this time and “The Blind Venetian” (as he was dubbed by the press) was shipped away to Reggina after the season.
Taibi still plays to this day, and has managed to carve out a fairly long career. Nevertheless, he’ll always be remembered for those handful of starts for United.
Right Back: David May
You know why Manchester United fans love Gary Neville so much? It’s not just because of his decades of service for club and country, his strong leadership skills, or his hatred of all things Liverpool. It’s because he spared United fans from having to see David May at right-back.
A £1.2 million purchase from Blackburn Rovers, May was a natural central defender. However, with Gary Pallister and Steve Bruce firmly entrenched at centre-back, Sir Alex decided to move May to right-back. The England native was acquired, among other reasons, because of UEFA restrictions on “foreign” players at the time. However, a string of poor performances ensued, with May taking part of the blame for Manchester United’s exit from European play in the 1994-1995 season.
The other main reason for his acquisition was because it came at the expense of title rivals Blackburn Rovers. Unfortunately for Sir Alex, Blackburn edged United out for the title during May’s first season at Old Trafford. While United’s loss was hardly May’s fault, he didn’t help his cause by losing his place at right-back to Neville. Injuries soon followed, and while May turned in some solid performances at center-back over the years, he never made the kind of impact that he hoped to.
He was recently voted the 47th worst player in modern English football. That might be a tad harsh, especially for a player who ended up becoming as big of an Old Trafford fan favorite as May. Ultimately, his lasting legacy at Manchester United was as a squad player and cheerleader from the bench. He memorably jumped onto the trophy table after the 1999 Champions League Final to lead the fans in chants. He also regularly conducted his orchestra at Old Trafford, with one favorite chant going “David May, Superstar! Got more medals than Shearer!”
Center Back: Laurent Blanc
Had Laurent Blanc joined Manchester United from Auxerre in 1995, he would have stood alongside the likes of Steve Bruce, Gary Pallister, Rio Ferdinand, Jaap Stam, and Nemanja Vidic as the best central defenders in club history. Had Laurent Blanc joined Manchester United in 1997 instead of going to Marseille, he still would have earned well-deserved plaudits for being a great defender. He was a former World Cup and European Title winner with France and was voted fourth best French Footballer of all time behind Michel Platini, Zinedine Zidane, and Raymond Kopa.
Unfortunately, Laurent Blanc joined Manchester United in 2001. By then, he was well past his prime and near the end of his glorious career. Even worse, he came to Manchester United to replace Jaap Stam, the heart of Manchester United’s defense who had suddenly left Old Trafford amidst a sea of controversy. Stam, he was not, and Blanc’s intelligence, veteran know-how, and experience did not make up for his diminishing skills, especially in the fast-paced English game. Plus, he and Fabien Barthez had a weird kissing ritual that they did before every game, which was more than a little creepy.
Blanc’s woes got worse when the media observed that if you took the first letter of each of the clubs that handed Manchester United their first five losses of the 2001-2002 season, then it spelled out B-L-A-N-C (for Bolton, Liverpool, Arsenal, Newcastle, and Chelsea). They also lost to West Ham and Middlesbrough that year, but unfortunately, Blanc’s first name wasn’t William, otherwise they really could have been onto something. They lost 9 times in all that season and finished 3rd, their worst showing ever in the Premiership, and failed to win a trophy for the first time 1997-1998. Blanc may not have been the primary reason for United’s “collapse” but he sure didn’t enhance his legacy by coming to Old Trafford.
Ultimately, Blanc retired after one more season for Manchester United. He currently coaches at Bordeaux, where he’s had a lot of success. He’s coming off a Ligue 1 title and has helped resurrect the career of United flop David Bellion (see below). For that, he surely deserves praise.
Center Back: William Prunier

He only made 2 appearances for Manchester United, but that was enough to earn him a legacy of infamy at Old Trafford.
Prunier had come up through the Auxerre system with Eric Cantona, and that connection was surely on Sir Alex’s mind as he invited Prunier to Manchester United for a trial. Sir Alex had planned on using Prunier, who had played 11 seasons in France and was hardly an inexperienced ingénue, in a few reserve-side matches so that he could properly evaluate the French defender. However, an injury crisis forced Sir Alex to start Prunier at center-back for two Premiership matches at the beginning of the 1994-1995 season.
Prunier made it through his first match unscathed, but turned in a disastrous performance against Tottenham during the following week. He was widely blamed for a nightmarish defensive effort that saw the club concede 4 goals. Even though many people thought that Prunier was unfairly singled out as the scape-goat, it was telling that Sir Alex merely offered him an extended trial rather than a permanent deal.
Prunier, perhaps knowing that he had no future with the club or feeling psychologically scarred after his experience at Manchester, turned Sir Alex down and fled back to the European mainland.
Left Back: Quinton Fortune

For the record, I actually liked Quinton Fortune. Unlike some of his contemporaries, especially Kieran Richardson, Fortune had a good attitude and worked hard. He just wasn’t very good.
Fortune was a decent utility man and squad player. Roy Keane was known to be a high on Fortune and always picked him first for five-on-five training drills. Unfortunately, he had trouble staying healthy, which no doubt led to him falling out of favor at Old Trafford.
In seven years, he only made 88 appearances for the club. Ultimately, once Gabriel Heinze made the position into his own after coming over from France, Fortune was a superfluous spare part. He failed to hold down spots at Bolton and Sunderland and was last seen playing in his native South Africa for AFC Tubize.
Ultimately, his lasting legacy at Old Trafford was his indirect role in the Ronaldo/Rooney bust-up at the World Cup. According to Rooney’s autobiography, the press reports of Ronaldo winding up Rooney before the match were false. Instead, Ronaldo was merely asking Rooney about rumors that Fortune was leaving the club (rumors that turned out to be true). Whether this was accurate or merely a cover-story, it looks like Fortune may have saved the Rooney/Ronaldo partnership at Old Trafford, at least for now…
Right Midfielder: Jordi Cruyff
Sometimes, the fruit does fall far from the tree.
It’s tough enough trying to succeed in football on your own merits. Having a legendary father who was one of the greatest players in history only makes it that much tougher.
However, having a famous father also gives you advantages that other players lack. Much like how David Sammartino grew up around wrestling royalty, Barry Bonds got to have Willie Mays as a godfather, and George W. Bush had all of his father’s advisers and donors at his disposal, Jordi Cruyff benefitted from his dad’s connections. He had access to the best training facilities. He was trained and taught by some of the best minds in the game. He broke into the Barcelona squad while his dad was the manager. Most of all, he had his father’s DNA. That had to count for something, right?
Well, it sure didn’t do him much good at Manchester United. Signed for £1.4 million, Cruyff rarely played with the first team. To be fair, he faced some stiff competition for spots, both in midfield and up front. If players like Teddy Sheringham and Nicky Butt were having trouble getting into games, then Cruyff didn’t stand a chance.
However, in his four years under contract at Old Trafford, he only made 55 appearances and scored a grand total of 8 goals. He only won one winner’s medal despite being around for one of the most successful periods in United’s history. Finally, United gave up on him and sent him to Alavés, where he played well. He still didn’t make anyone forget about his father, but then again, not many players could.
Center Midfielder: Juan Sebastian Veron
I’m going to get some flak for this one, so let me explain. Sabas wasn’t nearly as bad as he gets credit for (or discredit, I guess). He displayed moments of brilliance in both the Premiership and in Europe, although the vast majority of those moments came in the latter category. He was an excellent free-kicker and scored a number of impressive goals off set-plays. He was a great shooter and gave the team an excellent attacking dimension that they had lacked for years. In fact, if you watch the creatively-edited video below, then you might think that he was one of the greatest players in Manchester United history.
However, when you take into account his price-tag (£28.1 million, still the 13th highest in history and the third highest in Man Utd history), as well as the fact that he brought disharmony to the clubhouse by destabilizing what had been one of the best midfields in Europe, Juan Sebastian Veron was a complete and unmitigated disaster.
Sir Alex Ferguson desperately wanted to win the Champions League one more time before retiring at the age of 60 (he’s currently 67) and was disillusioned with his 4-4-2 formation after watching his squad come up short in Europe in both 2000 and 2001. He decided to blow it up by adding a playmaking midfielder to combat the European defenses that had succeeded by slowing the pace and manhandling United’s four-man midfield of David Beckham, Paul Scholes, Roy Keane, and Ryan Giggs (a foursome that was so good that Nicky Butt rarely got into games unless he was a sub or there was an injury). Veron, who was widely regarded as one of the best in the world, fit the bill and came aboard in the summer of 2001 after a protracted transfer saga (one that even got significant press coverage in America).
However, Veron struggled to adapt to the face-paced game known as English football. He needed space and time to set up his passes, and those were two things in short supply in England. He played well in Europe, turning in several good performances, however he could not stop United from losing to an unheralded Bayer Leverkusen team in the semifinals. His playing style, best described as “deliberate”made Dimitar Berbatov look like Carlos Tevez on speed, and his aversion to playing defense made Cristiano Ronaldo look the like second coming of Roy Keane. To say that he was not popular with the fans would be an understatement.
Worse, his presence on the team complicated Scholes’ role and forced him to play more as a support striker, which angered him so much that he actually refused to board the bus to a League Cup tie with Arsenal. Veron also played an indirect role in David Beckham’s departure. In 2003, Sir Alex’s decision to start an unfit Veron over a rapidly-falling-out-of-favor Beckham when Manchester United played Real Madrid in the second-leg of the Quarterfinals of the Champions League helped play a part in Beckham’s decision to leave in the offseason. Veron also left that summer, as Sir Alex sold him to Chelsea for nearly half what he paid.
Veron remains an excellent footballer, as he continues to put forth strong performances for Estudiantes. However, he also epitomizes the danger of buying someone without any prior experience in English football. If United decide not to pay Franck Ribery’s hefty fee this summer, then a major reason why will be because of its experience with Juan Sebastian Veron.
Center Midfielder: Eric Djemba-Djemba
For all the talk about United’s struggles in replacing Schmeichel, they’ve had even more trouble trying to find Roy Keane’s successor. In fact, you could argue that they still haven’t found a dominant defensive midfielder in the Keane mold, and that this was one of several reasons why they lost to Barcelona in the 2009 Champions League Final.
Djemba-Djemba was the first of many pretenders as Sir Alex bought him from Nantes for £3.5 million in 2003. He was about the same height and build as Keane, and his penchant for tough tackling and hard-nosed play made him seem like the perfect heir to the long-time United skipper. However, Djemba-Djemba was never able to establish himself at Old Trafford.
It didn’t help that there were others competing for the throne and Sir Alex seemed unable to settle on any of them, causing him to rotate Djemba-Djemba in and out of the starting lineup. Within 18 months, Djemba-Djemba was gone, having been sold to Aston Villa. He was even worse there and spent a season on loan to Burnley before moving to the place where all over-the-hill footballers go to make one last paycheck – Qatar. Unfortunately for him, he was only 26 when he made the move.
Sir Alex hinted that his on-the-pitch performance wasn’t the only reason why Djemba-Djemba failed at Manchester United. According to the Daily Mail, Djemba-Djemba lived the life of a spendthrift billionaire, even though he was hardly wealthy, even by footballing standards. He often seemed more interested in spending money than training, and he lived a life of luxury that would have made Mike Tyson and M.C. Hammer blush. He had a fleet of ten 4×4 cars, he had 30 different bank accounts, he wore expensive clothes, and he spent lavishly on his home, his family, and his friends. He was bankrupt by the time he was 26 years old and may owe more than £400,000 in English back-taxes.
It’s a shame that a player went from the penthouse to the outhouse as quickly as Djemba-Djemba did. His lasting legacy could very well be as a cautionary tale; a warning against living beyond your means as well as having unreasonable expectations forced on you. That surely wasn’t what Sir Alex or Djemba-Djemba had in mind.
Left Midfielder: Ralph Milne

Yes, Virginia. Someone did play left-wing for Manchester United before Ryan Giggs. He just didn’t play very well.
Milne was a dangerous offensive force for Dundee United, scoring 73 goals in 286 appearances for the Scottish club. Sir Alex, no doubt, remembered Milne’s prowess back when he managed Aberdeen, and hoped Milne would replicate that form for United. Milne, however, was already well past his prime, due in large part to an indifferent attitude that had driven his manager at Dundee, Jim McLean, to single Milne out as his greatest failure. In fact, when Milne got word that Sir Alex wanted to bring him to Manchester United, he thought he was being pranked.
Milne was hardly the second coming of George Best, however he was just like the United legend in one way: he was an absolute party animal. Milne, along with Norman Whiteside and Paul McGrath, was known to stay out until all hours of the night, hitting various pubs and imbibing massive quantities of alcohol. Milne’s contributions on the pitch were almost negligible, as he compiled a mere 3 goals on 23 appearances in two seasons for a goals-to-games ratio of 0.13. That may not have been higher than his usual blood-alcohol level.
Milne recently came clean about his alcohol problem and revealed that he had squandered most of his money on alcohol, women, and gambling. So, he may not have played like George Best, but he certainly did his best to live like him.
Forward: David Bellion
Sir Alex Ferguson is no stranger to being accused of breaking the rules. He was accused of tapping up Dwight Yorke while the latter was at Aston Villa. Jaap Stam wrote in his autobiography that Ferguson had approached him while the defender was still under contract to PSV Eindhoven. In those situations, it was easy to see why Ferguson may have been a little more aggressive than usual. Yorke and Stam were world-class talents that rank among the best players in United’s history.
But David Bellion?
You wonder why Sir Alex would risk exposing himself for someone like David Bellion. In 2003, Bellion came over to United from Sunderland amidst a sea of controversy. The previous season, he had disappeared during an important stretch of matches for relegation-threatened Sunderland (who were, in fact, relegated with one of the lowest point totals in Premiership history), saying that he was mentally unfit for a relegation battle as a result of family issues.
Many people thought that the real reason was that he didn’t want to get hurt because he knew Manchester United would be signing him in the offseason. In any event, Sir Alex was accused of tapping him up and paid £2 million in an out-of-court settlement (although, in fairness, Sunderland were entitled to compensation because of Bellion’s youth – we don’t know if the money was for that or for the tapping up since there was a confidentiality agreement involved in the settlement).
So, was the legal headache worth it? Hardly. Bellion’s stay at Old Trafford was a disappointment. He didn’t have many chances with the first team and, despite scoring against arch-rivals Leeds United in the League Cup, didn’t do much when he got chances to start. He went on loan to West Ham and rarely got into matches there. Finally, he left England and went back to France, first with Nice and then with Bordeaux where he’s developed into a very good player. He still might not be a world-class talent worth tapping up, but at least he’s a far cry from the player he was at Old Trafford.
Forward: Diego Forlan
To borrow a line from C & C Music Factory, here are some things to make you go “hmmm…” Manchester United acquired Diego Forlan for £6.9 million so that he could complement Ruud Van Nistelrooy up front. Forlan scored 17 goals in 96 appearances for Manchester United. By contrast, Van Nistelrooy scored 150 goals in 210 appearances for United, meaning that, at Forlan’s rate, he would need to make 848 appearances before matching Van Nistelrooy’s output in a United shirt. Ever since leaving Old Trafford in the 2004-2005 season, he’s scored a Van Nistelrooy-esque 109 goals in 205 appearances for Villarreal and Atletico Madrid. Hmm…
Assuming he isn’t on performance enhancers, either Forlan is one of those players who can’t play in England, or else he really needed a change of scenery.
To be fair, Forlan did have some success at Old Trafford. It took a while for him to get off the schnide (he went eight months before scoring his first United goal), but Forlan scored some big goals for the club. He found net in a couple of important late-season matches that helped Manchester United’s run to the 2002-2003 Premiership title. He also scored a brace against Liverpool that ensured his status as a fan favorite. However, he could never pull off a consistent run of form to satisfy his critics.
He even flubbed his goal celebration as he took off his shirt after a match-winner against Southampton and then couldn’t put it back on in time before the restart. He actually ran around bare-chested for a few seconds, leaving the commentators to wonder if they were watching a pick-up game of shirts-against-skins in the park, before officials ordered him off the pitch until he got redressed.
Forlan left Old Trafford at the beginning of the 2004-2005 season after United acquired Wayne Rooney in the offseason. He’s become one of the best strikers in the world while playing in Spain, winning the European Golden Boot in his first season at Villarreal (sharing the award with Arsenal’s Thierry Henry). He recently clinched a second Golden Boot after finishing the 2008-2009 La Liga season as the leading scorer with 32 goals. He could be returning to England this summer, so we’ll find out whether he really is a late bloomer or if his game is uniquely suited to Spain.
Topics: Alex Ferguson, English Premier League, Lists, Manchester United



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The Djemba twins were brilliant, at least from an Arsenal perspective.
June 2nd, 2009 @ 10:56Djemba-Djemba, so good they named him twice.
June 2nd, 2009 @ 12:27Forlan was another Bellion-esque example of where Ferguson didn’t need to get involved. Originally a Boro target, it was as his plane landed in England that Manchester United became interested, kindly picking him up, and giving him a tour of Old Trafford, before dropping him back off at Middlesbrough. There, he held seemingly pointless talks, before signing for Manchester United days later.
If it wasn’t karma in action that he was awful, I don’t know what is.
June 2nd, 2009 @ 12:34Put the 09/08 Gary Neville on there too…
June 2nd, 2009 @ 13:37kieran richardson?
June 2nd, 2009 @ 14:12No room for Kleberson in here? I’d have said he was a far worse signing and player than Veron, who was unfairly singled out.
I also disagree vehemently about Laurent Blanc. I thought he put in a string of very good performances for Manchester United and contributed to the rebuilding of the side with his maturity and experience. I think Rio Ferdinand benefitted massively from playing alongside Blanc in his final season at Old Trafford.
Quinton Fortune was always a solid player who gave his all, and I’d be more inclined to put Poborsky in. Why buy him when you have Giggs and you know you’ve got Beckham to blood? You’d have to go 3-5-2 but you’ve picked three center backs anyway…
Andy Goram has to run Taibi close.
What’s notable is how many of these players have gone on to success after leaving United.
June 2nd, 2009 @ 14:40My favourite memory of Eric Djemba-Djemba was of him alone in a Loaf Bar, manchester – white suit, white shoes, pi**sed up – 12 hours before a vital away game versus Liverpool (2003) around 2in the morning ish. Summed him up really…!
June 2nd, 2009 @ 15:04Kleberson anyone?
June 2nd, 2009 @ 15:15Now it’s official: Kleberson was sooo bad, he couldn’t even make it in Fergie’s all time crap XI.
That’s bad.
SB
June 2nd, 2009 @ 15:39I thought Kleberson was quite alright to be honest, more a Forlan than a Djemba-Djemba.
No Roy Carroll?
June 2nd, 2009 @ 15:58Kleberson was the next pick. However, I thought Veron’s overall impact was far worse than that of Kleberson, who simply flopped and then moved on.
Roy Carroll would have been the guy had it not been for Taibi.
I went back and forth on Blanc, since he was such a great player in his prime and because he had such a deep understanding of the game that he undoubtedly imparted on the youngsters at Old Trafford. However, the bottom line is that his physical skills were such that he couldn’t cut it in English football. Plus, it was a huge setback for the squad since they were bringing him in to replace Stam.
June 2nd, 2009 @ 16:14Considering Veron’s cost, you were right to choose him over Kleberson. Considering what Larry White did in a red shirt, he was also a fair candidate.
SB
June 2nd, 2009 @ 19:14No Darren Ferguson or Laim Miller?
June 3rd, 2009 @ 00:16Needless to say, midfield was the most competitive area as far as rubbish players went. Would a midfield combination of Poborsky, Miller, Kleberson, Darren Ferguson, Richardson, Luke Chadwick, and Neil Webb “out do” the four guys in this article? Possibly. I’m not sure what that says about Sir Alex’s history when it comes to buying midfielders though…
June 3rd, 2009 @ 01:32I agree with everyone else’s comments – Kleberson should have been a must for this list! He’s got to be the most pathetic Brazilian i’ve seen..Lauren Blanc was a bit harsh,considering with his age and limited abilities he gave his all during his time at Old Trafford.Why not include David Bellion in the list instead of him Victor?
June 3rd, 2009 @ 02:25I can beat Andy K’s recollection of Eric Djemba Djemba. I remember seeing him in similiar attire dancing alone in the beer garden of the Melville Hotel in Stretford – but early on a Friday evening!. He put a pint of Holts (I kid you not) on his head and tried to play ‘headers’ with it. By this time there were about 30 incensed Man Utd fans looking out the window at the buffoon. Oblivious to the fact he had an audience, he dropped the fly, whipped the old boy out and slashed on the patio. By this time he was covered in Holts Bitter. Having said all that, he still left with the best looking woman in the pub. Mind you, if you have ever been in the Melville, you’ll know that’s nothing to be proud of.
June 3rd, 2009 @ 02:30I agree with everyone else’s comments – Kleberson should have been a must for this list! He’s got to be the most pathetic Brazilian i’ve seen..Jordi Cruyff was still a good signing in my humble opinion,but putting Laurent Blanc was a bit harsh,considering with his age and limited abilities he gave his all during his time at Old Trafford..Man,Taibi still makes me cry :b
June 3rd, 2009 @ 02:33A big elephant in the room was Alan Smith. He’s been appreciated for his effort etc. But he was a striker who couldn’t score goals. He needs to be acknowledged as a flop. I think Veron gets unfairly put in that slot although that comes with the expectations. Taibi beats all the keepers in the line that followed Schmeichel; Carroll isn’t a patch on Taibi, although he was equally terrible.
David Bellion, I must agree, was another in that garbage dump of a spree Ferguson went on following the Beckham sale (Ronaldo excepted). But I think Ferguson (more appropriately Queiroz) may have yet uncovered a dud in Manucho — he hasn’t played much for United so far, but he looks like a deer in flashlights when on loan at Hull. It’s too early to judge considering his goals in the ACN, but I’m not really keeping my hopes up on him.
June 3rd, 2009 @ 06:17This XI would still have beaten Hull on the last weekend of the season…
June 3rd, 2009 @ 13:03@Taharat, Bellion is on the list. He’s not a defender, so I couldn’t put him in Blanc’s spot.
@Red Ranter, to be honest, I thought about Alan Smith. I agree that fans have an overly sympathetic view of Smudge. Then again, Ferguson didn’t do him any favors by moving him from forward to midfield and then back again. He also battled back from a horrific injury to make a contribution down the stretch in 06/07, so I think that’s why a lot of people love him. For me, though, my view of him being a rubbish player comes more from his time at Newcastle, which, of course, is irrelevant to this column. That’s why I left him out.
@markwithoutspin, very nice!
June 3rd, 2009 @ 14:13If you include Forlan as one of the worst players, the only thing I can tell you is that you must watch more footbal matches. There is life out of ManU and away from the Premier League. Forlan is, nowadays, one the best players all over the world; far better than Rooney, for example. Maybe he was not successful there but nobody can include Forlan in such a ranking unless you want to make people think you don’t anything about football.
June 3rd, 2009 @ 14:52BTW, to Andy K and Colin – GREAT stories about Djemba-Djemba! Now we see why he was so bad.
June 3rd, 2009 @ 14:55i think kilberson was just forgot in this lineup he should be added now!
June 3rd, 2009 @ 17:31Man Utd need to get tough
June 3rd, 2009 @ 17:59and get rid of nani Anderson (if he is going to play another year like he did)Berba Fletc O’shea and Ronaldo
Then start building a new team with Discipline
The question is Does Fergie have the stamina to build
another team
How many stikers from ManUtd win the european golden shoe?
June 3rd, 2009 @ 18:41DIEGO FORLAN got the pair!!! 2005 and 2009…
I totally, totally disagree with Forlan in here!! Veron shouldn´t be a part of this list as well because he’s a great footballer, but it’s possible that he never fit in ManU.
I think the list is missing Dimitar Berbatov, who is the coldest player I’ve ever seen. He was lost all season, and made the team look like a 10-man. Worst player.
June 3rd, 2009 @ 20:10Forlan????? 96 matchs? but how minutes? only ten minutes for match, remember it!!
Ferguson is xenofobic, same do with Tevez… Forlan is two golden show…ronaldo???? Van Nistelroy??? Beckham????? ZERO!!!
June 3rd, 2009 @ 22:42how is ferguson xenofobic?
thats ..ridiculous(altho argentines rarely fair well-hes given a lot of other foreigners great chances)
and as for mikel…. this is about impact on united..so its ignoring his brilliant play now, on purpose, so 8 months without a goal, leave him in!
June 4th, 2009 @ 16:18With all due respect, Man U is a great marketing enterprise, but to say that Forlan is one of the worst is just living in another world.
June 9th, 2009 @ 02:06Or somebody is trying to disguise the fact that they let go of one of the best players in the world…
I think it’s one of the worst yes, but one of the worst mistakes of Sir Alec…
Anyway, I think Diego, as the gentleman he is, is very grateful of Sir Alec and the chance to play Man U, but I think, after watching Man U play against Barcelona ( think of how many goals Diego scored against Barca…) that it may have been different with Diego instead of Ronaldo , Tevez or Rooney…
Anyway, Diego is one of the world’s best….
And that is a fact…..
So, the great Dundee United legend Ralphie Milne makes Fergie’s worst XI and becomes a Man U leg end! You Reds really did miss an absolute genius who destroyed some of the best, Europe had to offer! His autobiography comes out Sept/Oct 09 through Black and White publishing and features 4 or 5 chapters on his time with Man U – sure, he liked a wee bevvy and I’m sure Reds fans would enjoy reading it straight from the horse’s mouth!
June 14th, 2009 @ 21:37Djemba Djemba – so bad they named him Eric
July 4th, 2009 @ 09:40well forlan veron and cruyff did play well though they didn’tmuch as evryone thought……. i think kleberson….. eric nevland……. manucho…… should be included
August 14th, 2009 @ 16:19I’m not english but Man U is the force that my life spins around. And to say anything but praises about Forlan is total rubbish. I have to agree with Jimmy on this one, he only got to play around 15 mins each game, Sir Alex was unfair on him. I still remember a game against Liverpool that after the fans called for him, with the now famous ” Diegooo Ooooooh, Diego Oooooh”, he scored 2 goals against Dudek. I know the point of discussion is not the qualitiy of the player but the impact, but still, i think it’s not fair for himto be on the list. As much as i like him, I do beleive Smith has more credit to be on the list than Diego. And to finish, name one striker who is EQUALLY excelent with both his foots, just one.
March 20th, 2010 @ 03:18They forgot Berbatov.
June 17th, 2010 @ 03:50Can’t actually believe Poborsky didn’t make this list, but the competition clearly is stiff. For the record I don’t think Cruyff was that bad, he just suffered from there really being no place for him in that team plus the fact that he’s not his dad. I spent three of his four years defending him.
There are no words for Djemba-Djemba.
July 20th, 2010 @ 14:38