
The Peoples Person
·11 Mei 2025
“We’ll have to address that”: Ruben Amorim addresses Manuel Ugarte’s jaw-dropping blunder in defeat to West Ham

The Peoples Person
·11 Mei 2025
Manchester United manager Ruben Amorim has shared his thoughts on a puzzling moment during the 2-0 defeat to West Ham, where Manuel Ugarte’s failure to track back proved costly and directly contributed to the visitors’ second goal.
Tomas Soucek and Jarrod Bowen scored in either half to condemn United to their 17th Premier League defeat of the season.
Both goals stemmed from some truly woeful defending by United. The second was particularly damning. Ugarte was dispossessed by Mohammed Kudus and, instead of getting back to help his team, he stayed on the ground. Moments later, Bowen had the ball in the back of Altay Bayindir’s net.
After the final whistle, Amorim spoke to reporters and had his say on this moment and the game in general.
Asked about Leny Yoro, who was withdrawn in the second half with an injury, Amorim stated, “We have to assess Leny in a better way tomorrow. He felt something but I think it could be a small thing.”
On the performance, Amorim answered, “I think it’s quite similar [to] some games that we had here. Against Wolves it was a little bit the same. We create more chances than the opponent, but the lack of urgency to protect our goal in the few times that West Ham were near our box…we had a lack of urgency.”
“We were near the box and we had a lack of urgency. We need to be more aggressive. If you can’t score with the first ball, the second ball, if we cross the ball, if we are aggressive, we can score.”
“We had lack of pace, we have to do so much better and for me the biggest concern is that feeling that it’s okay and because we can’t change our position so much, then it’s okay.”
“That is the biggest problem at our club at this moment because we are losing the feeling that we are a massive club and it’s the end of the world to lose a game at home. So I think that is the biggest concern in our club.”
Asked how it feels to look at the Premier League table and see United in 16th place, Amorim replied, “I think I feel what a manager of Manchester United would feel in that position – embarrassed. And it’s hard to accept and I think everybody has to think seriously about a lot of things here. So everybody is thinking about the final but that’s not the issue in this moment.”
“We have bigger things to think [about] and we have to change a lot of things at the end of the season.”
One journalist pointed out to Amorim that when Ugarte lost the ball in the build-up to Bowen’s goal, the Uruguayan just stayed on his knees and made no attempt whatsoever to track back. He followed that up by asking the United head coach how he can hope to be successful with players who possess that kind of mentality.
Amorim responded, “I don’t want to talk about specific players. It’s a team thing. When it’s a team thing, it’s a manager thing. We will have to address that. It has to be a lack of urgency to defend the box and attack the box still.
The Portuguese tactician conceded that there remains a culture issue at United.
“Yeah [there’s a culture issue]. It’s the feeling. I will not talk about culture because we are talking about this moment but it’s a feeling that is the most dangerous feeling to have in a big club.”
Asked about whether he’s worried by the fact he has so far been unable to address glaring issues like urgency, Amorim explained, “I think if you…of course it’s a different competition but in the Europa League, we don’t play quite well but we have a little bit of urgency. We cannot lose the games, we have to win them and we manage to find a way to win the games and take advantage, for example if Athletic Club has a player sent off.”
“We are so focused and then you see these games in the Premier League, sometimes we are not focused and we don’t have that feeling that we need to win to go to the next stage like we have in the Europa League. So it’s something that is mentally in our team.”
Pressed further on whether his players are picking and choosing which games are important and which ones are not, Amorim refused to give a definitive answer, only adding that the lack of urgency is the biggest problem plaguing the team.
Amorim confessed that he is surprised the fans are not booing him and his players, unlike previous years.
“I think they are doing…it’s hard to say something about our fans and everybody, because there is no explanation, no matter the contest. And I’m talking here [because] I’m the biggest person responsible for that. We need to change a lot of things during the summer.”
On whether those players who lack urgency and feel it’s ok to lose can be coached to fix their mentality or they will just have to be moved on, Amorim told reporters, “I don’t know and I don’t want to talk about players. I’m talking about myself, the culture at the club and the culture in the team. I have a feeling that we need to change that and we need to be really strong in the summer and be brave because we will not have a next season like this.”
“If we start like this or if the feeling is still here, we should give the space to different people.”
Amorim emphasised that he is not concerned with the final, further stating that it’s the “smallest problem” at the club. He noted that the only way United will return to the top is to fix the deeper underlying issues.
Featured image Marc Atkins via Getty Images
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