Alejandro Garnacho opens up on Manchester United exit, saying he did some 'bad things'

Alejandro Garnacho opens up on Manchester United exit, saying he did some 'bad things'

Alejandro Garnacho has opened up on the way he left Manchester United, admitting he did some "bad things" during his final six months at the club.

Garnacho left Old Trafford last summer in a £40m move to Chelsea after not being involved in Ruben Amorim's first-team squad during pre-season.

Before departing the club, Garnacho was pictured wearing an Aston Villa shirt with Marcus Rashford's name on the back.

After United's Europa League final defeat to Tottenham, in which Garnacho came on as a second-half substitute, the Argentine's brother claimed he had been "thrown under the bus" by Amorim.

When asked if he regrets the way he left Old Trafford, Garnacho added: "Maybe yes, because I loved that club. They gave me the confidence from the start.

"From Spain, to bring me to the academy, then they bring me to the first team. So it was like four or five years, and amazing love from everyone."

He added: "I remember in the last six months I was just not playing like before at Manchester United. I started to be on the bench, it's not a bad thing.

"I was only 20 years old, but in my mind it was like I had to play every game. In my mind, maybe it is also on me, I started to do some bad things.

"But yes, it was just this moment in life and sometimes you have to make decisions and I am really proud to be here [at Chelsea] and still in the Premier League at a club like this. Everyone knows the team we have and the things we can do.

"Sometimes, we have better moments or worse moments, I am proud to be here but with United, I have nothing wrong to say about the club, no one in the club or the team-mates. It's just a moment in life that changes and life continues. I have no regrets."

"From the fans, the stadium, everything was really good. It's just sometimes you have to change for the good of your life or the next steps. I only have good memories of Man Utd."

"You can understand and you can see he's a really talented boy, and sometimes things don't work out," Amorim said.

"You cannot explain specifically what it is. But I have the feeling, I think it's clear that Garnacho wants a different thing with a different leadership, and I can understand that. So I think it's not a problem.

"Sometimes you adapt to one guy, you have the connection. Other times, you want a new challenge, so we try to make everything OK to all the parts. To the club, to the coach and to the players. It's a natural thing in football."

Being Manchester United manager has become the impossible job. Six have succeeded Sir Alex Ferguson, all succumbing to the pressure in the end. This summer a seventh will be chosen and Michael Carrick, it seems, is on course to be that man.

By winning seven of his 10 games since January and lifting United up to third in the Premier League, Carrick has made a return to the Champions League more likely than not. It would now come as a surprise if a top-five finish did not seal the deal.

It is hard to nail down the characteristics required to be a success at United. They have gone down nearly every route. Jose Mourinho was the serial winner. Louis van Gaal was the experienced hand. Erik ten Hag and Ruben Amorim were the project managers.

Carrick falls into the 'United DNA' camp. In other words, the Ole Gunnar Solskjaer camp, which brings its own baggage. Solskjaer's deficiencies were obvious, but he navigated the scrutiny at Old Trafford better than most. This is a trait Carrick appears to share.

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