Michael Carrick Outlines Ambition in First Words as Permanent Manchester United Manager

AAS Editorial Team

Michael Carrick Outlines Ambition in First Words as Permanent Manchester United Manager

Michael Carrick's first words since being appointed Manchester United's new permanent manager made it clear he understands his duties and responsibilities.

United haven't been part of a Premier League title race since Carrick himself was a player in Sir Alex Ferguson's final season in 2012–13, while the club last reached the Champions League final in 2011—going no further than the quarterfinals of the European competition in the 15 years since.

The Red Devils haven't been in a position to seriously challenge for a long time, but the transformation Carrick has overseen from the point of returning to Old Trafford as interim boss in January has been monumental. No Premier League team has matched United for Premier League points—36 from a possible 48 across 16 matches—over that period of time.

"Where we want to be as a club and it's not even so much for me. it'd be an incredible thing for me to be able to do, but just to see this club lifting trophies and winning leagues and challenging for Champions Leagues, that's the buzz," Carrick said in his first interview with his new title, speaking to ex-teammate Wayne Rooney for a special of the club's in-house podcast.

"That's what gets us out of bed every morning and we want to enjoy the grind of the summer and come back stronger for next season."

Premier League or Bust

No successor has matched Sir Alex Ferguson in the Premier League.

It's a high bar to be considered a success at Manchester United. Louis van Gaal and José Mourinho ensured the club had lifted three trophies in the first four years since Ferguson's retirement, but neither came close to winning the Premier League. Neither avoided being fired.

Erik ten Hag is one of only six managers in Manchester United history to win two trophies and yet frustrated fans would rank the Dutchman among the worst to have held the position in the Premier League era.

Ole Gunnar Solskjær is the only manager post-Ferguson to have overseen two top-three finishes—making his the most consistent spell—and yet a lack of trophies, despite regular semifinal appearances, is still used as an argument by critics to belittle his tenure.

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