Manchester United F.C. Reserves and Academy

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Manchester United F.C. Reserves and Academy
The words "Manchester" and "United" surround a pennant featuring a ship in full sail and a devil holding a trident.
Full nameManchester United Football Club Reserves and Academy
Nickname(s)The Red Devils, United
Founded1878, as Newton Heath Reserves
GroundLeigh Sports Village,
Leigh
Capacity11,000[1]
Co-chairmenJoel and Avram Glazer
ManagerNeil Wood
LeaguePremier League 2 Division 1
2020–21Premier League 2 Division 1, 8th
Away colours
Third colours
Current season

Manchester United Football Club Under-23s is the most senior of Manchester United's youth teams and the club's former reserve team. They play in the Premier League 2, the highest tier of the Professional Development League. The team is effectively Manchester United's second-string side, but is limited to three outfield players and one goalkeeper over the age of 23 per game following the introduction of new regulations from the 2016–17 season, an increase from the age of 21 which was introduced in 2012–13.

They were champions of the former Premier Reserve League five times (in 2002, 2005, 2006, 2010 and 2012) between its introduction in 1999 and its dissolution in 2012. The team also won the 2012–13 Professional U21 Development League 1 in its inaugural season, and again in 2015 and 2016. The team also participates in the regional Manchester Senior Cup and the Lancashire Senior Cup. From 2019–20 edition, they also participate in the nationwide EFL Trophy along with senior teams from levels 3 and 4 of the English football league system, as teams from levels 1 and 2 are restricted to players aged 21 and under.

The team's current manager is Neil Wood, who took over from Ricky Sbragia in 2019. Sbragia had been manager since 2017 and had also been manager for the reserves between 2002–2005. Sbragia had taken over from Nicky Butt, an academy graduate in the 1990s who played for United until 2004. Butt held the role on an interim basis for the 2016–17 season after Warren Joyce was appointed Wigan Athletic manager on 2 November 2016. Joyce, who took over from Ole Gunnar Solskjær as manager of the reserves in December 2010, was previously the manager of Royal Antwerp, Manchester United's feeder club in Belgium.

From November 2008 to August 2013, the team played its home matches at Moss Lane in Altrincham, the home of Altrincham F.C. For the 2013–14 Under-21 Premier League season, the team has played the majority of its home matches at Salford City Stadium in Barton-upon-Irwell.[2] Since 2014–15, the team play its home matches at Leigh Sports Village.[3] Rules set out by the Premier League state that at least three home league games per season must be played at the club's main stadium, Old Trafford.[4] In previous seasons, the team has played at the Victoria Stadium, the home of Northwich Victoria, and Ewen Fields, the home of Hyde United.[5]

Manchester United also has an Under-18s team that plays in the Premier League Under-18s Group 2 and the FA Youth Cup. The under-18s play their home games at the club's Trafford Training Centre in Carrington.

Under-23s[]

Current squad[]

As of 24 August 2021[6][7]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
51 GK Czech Republic CZE Matěj Kovář
57 FW France FRA Noam Emeran
59 MF England ENG Charlie Wellens
60 GK Czech Republic CZE Ondřej Mastný
62 DF Republic of Ireland IRL Paul McShane (player-coach)
64 DF Netherlands NED Björn Hardley
65 FW Netherlands NED Dillon Hoogewerf
No. Pos. Nation Player
68 MF Slovakia SVK Martin Šviderský
72 MF Wales WAL Charlie Savage
73 MF Iraq IRQ Zidane Iqbal
74 DF Spain ESP Álvaro Fernández Carreras
77 FW Spain ESP Mateo Mejia
GK England ENG Paul Woolston

On loan[]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
30 GK England ENG Nathan Bishop (at Mansfield Town until 30 June 2022)[8]
35 MF Wales WAL Dylan Levitt (at Dundee United until 30 June 2022)[9]
41 DF England ENG Ethan Laird (at Swansea City until 30 June 2022)[10]
48 DF England ENG Will Fish (at Stockport County until 30 June 2022)[11]
49 FW England ENG D'Mani Mellor (at Salford City until 30 June 2022)[12]
No. Pos. Nation Player
54 MF Northern Ireland NIR Ethan Galbraith (at Doncaster Rovers until 30 June 2022)[13]
58 DF England ENG Di'Shon Bernard (at Hull City until 30 June 2022)[14]
MF England ENG Connor Stanley (at Atlanta United 2 until 1 November 2021)[15]
DF England ENG Reece Devine (at St Johnstone until 30 June 2022)[16]

Manager history[]

Honours[]

Academy[]

Manchester United F.C. Under-18s
The words "Manchester" and "United" surround a pennant featuring a ship in full sail and a devil holding a trident.
Full nameManchester United Football Club Under-18s
Nickname(s)The Red Devils, United
Founded1998
GroundTrafford Training Centre
Carrington
Co-chairmenJoel and Avram Glazer
Head coachTravis Binnion
LeagueU18 Premier League North
U18 Premier League North, 2nd
Away colours
Third colours

The Manchester United Academy was established in 1998, following the reorganisation of youth football in England, but has roots stretching all the way back to the 1930s with the establishment of the Manchester United Junior Athletic Club (MUJAC). and has been responsible for producing some of Manchester United's greatest ever players, including the club's top five all-time appearance makers, Ryan Giggs, Bobby Charlton, Bill Foulkes, Paul Scholes and Gary Neville, and the new wave of home-grown talents known as Fergie's Fledglings. The current academy is based at the club's Aon Training Complex, an 85-acre (340,000 m2) site in the Manchester suburb of Carrington.

The Manchester United youth team is statistically the most successful in English football, with nine players in the English football Hall of Fame (Duncan Edwards, Sir Bobby Charlton, George Best, Nobby Stiles, Mark Hughes, Ryan Giggs, Paul Scholes, David Beckham and Johnny Giles). Manchester United also have the best FA Youth Cup record, winning on 10 occasions out of 14 final appearances.

The academy comprises age-group teams ranging from Under-9s up to the flagship Under-18s, who currently compete in Group C of the Premier Academy League and in the FA Youth Cup. The Under-16s and Under-18s typically play their academy league games at 11am on Saturday mornings at Carrington, while Youth Cup games are generally played at either Altrincham's Moss Lane ground (where the under-23s play their home games) or the club's 76,000-capacity Old Trafford home, in order to cater for the greater number of supporters these fixtures attract.

In 2007, Manchester United Under-18s won the Champions Youth Cup, intended to be an analogue to the FIFA Club World Cup for youth sides, beating Juventus 1–0 in the final in Malaysia. It was their first and only title, since the tournament was scrapped after only one edition.

Current Academy players[]

As of 14 September 2021[23][24][25][26]

Nat. Player Date of birth Position International caps Previous club Joined United
2nd Year Scholars
Northern Ireland Dermot Mee (2002-11-20) 20 November 2002 (age 19) GK Capped at Under-21 level July 2019
England Rhys Bennett (2003-10-30) 30 October 2003 (age 18) DF July 2020
England Omari Forson (2004-07-20) 20 July 2004 (age 17) MF Capped at Under-16 level July 2020
Spain Alejandro Garnacho (2004-07-01) 1 July 2004 (age 17) FW Atlético Madrid October 2020
Norway Isak Hansen-Aarøen (2004-08-22) 22 August 2004 (age 17) MF Capped at Under-18 level Tromsø September 2020
England Joe Hugill (2003-10-19) 19 October 2003 (age 18) FW Sunderland July 2020
Spain Marc Jurado (2004-04-13) 13 April 2004 (age 17) DF Barcelona September 2020
France Willy Kambwala (2004-08-25) 25 August 2004 (age 17) DF Capped at Under-17 level Sochaux October 2020
England Charlie McNeill (2003-09-09) 9 September 2003 (age 18) FW Capped at Under-16 level Manchester City October 2020
Poland Daniel Polakowski (2003-10-25) 25 October 2003 (age 18) GK July 2020
England Logan Pye (2003-10-26) 26 October 2003 (age 18) DF Capped at Under-16 level Sunderland July 2020
Czech Republic Radek Vítek (2003-10-24) 24 October 2003 (age 18) GK Capped at Under-17 level Sigma Olomouc July 2020
1st Year Scholars
England Sonny Aljofree (2004-12-09) 9 December 2004 (age 17) DF Capped at Under-18 level July 2021
England Ethan Ennis (2004-12-11) 11 December 2004 (age 17) MF Liverpool July 2021
England Tyler Fredricson (2005-02-23) 23 February 2005 (age 16) DF Capped at Under-17 level July 2021
England Daniel Gore (2004-09-26) 26 September 2004 (age 17) MF Capped at Under-18 level July 2021
Netherlands Eric Hanbury (2004-10-25) 25 October 2004 (age 17) GK July 2021
England Louis Jackson (2005-09-18) 18 September 2005 (age 16) DF Capped at Under-18 level July 2021
England Marcus Lawrence Unknown (age 16) DF July 2021
England Kobbie Mainoo (2005-04-19) 19 April 2005 (age 16) MF July 2021
England Sam Mather (2004-09-03) 3 September 2004 (age 17) MF Capped at Under-18 level July 2021
England Finley McAllister (2006-07-16) 16 July 2006 (age 15) MF Capped at Under-18 level July 2021
England Sam Murray (2004-09-25) 25 September 2004 (age 17) DF Capped at Under-15 level Huddersfield Town July 2021
England James Nolan (2005-10-02) 2 October 2005 (age 16) DF Capped at Under-18 level July 2021
England Manni Norkett (2004-10-30) 30 October 2004 (age 17) FW July 2021
England Habeeb Ogunneye (2005-11-12) 12 November 2005 (age 16) DF Capped at Under-18 level July 2021
England Max Oyedele (2004-11-07) 7 November 2004 (age 17) MF Capped at Under-18 level July 2021
England Malachi Sharpe Unknown (age 15) MF Capped at Under-18 level Derby County March 2021
England Ethan Williams Unknown (age 15) MF Capped at Under-15 level Barnsley July 2021
England Tom Wooster (2005-03-30) 30 March 2005 (age 16) GK Capped at Under-15 level Barnsley July 2021

Honours[]

Staff[]

  • Football director: John Murtough
  • Head of academy: Nick Cox
  • Head of player development and coaching (U17-U23): Justin Cochrane
  • Under-23 lead coach: Neil Wood
  • Under-23 assistant coach: Neil Ryan
  • Under-23 playing coach: Paul McShane
  • Under-23 physiotherapists: Tom Hughes, Russ Hayes
  • Head of player development & coaching (U14-U16) & U18 lead coach: Travis Binnion
  • Under-18 assistant coach: Colin Little
  • Senior Academy Coach: Mark Dempsey
  • Under-16 head coach: Tommy Martin
  • Under-16 coach: Adam Lawrence
  • Under-14 head coach: Rick Ashcroft
  • Under-12–14 head coach: Hasney Aljofree[30]
  • Under-12 head coach: Lee Unsworth[31]
  • Under-10 head coach: Eamon Mulvey
  • Head of Academy Goalkeeping: Alan Fettis
  • Academy goalkeeping coach: Kevin Wolfe
  • Academy goalkeeping coach: Christopher Backhouse
  • Academy doctor: Dr Tony Gill
  • Head of academy physiotherapy: Neil Hough[32]
  • Academy physiotherapists: Daniel Torpey, Eoghan Murray, Gary Wakefield

Notable youth team players[]

The following is a list of players who have played in the Manchester United youth team (U16–U18) and represented a country (not necessarily their country of birth) at full international level.[33] Players who are currently playing at Manchester United, or for another club on loan from Manchester United, are highlighted in bold.

Players of the Year[]

Prior to 1990, a single award was presented to the best young player of that season. Between 1982 and 1985 this was the entitled "Young Player of the Year"; the award then became known as the "Denzil Haroun Young Player of the Year" between 1986 and 1989 in honour of Denzil Haroun, a former club director and brother-in-law of former club chairman Louis Edwards.

Since 1990, individual awards are made to the best player of the Academy and the Reserves. The "Young Player of the Year" is named in honour of Jimmy Murphy, Sir Matt Busby's long-time assistant manager, who died in 1989, and the best reserve is awarded the "Denzil Haroun Reserve Player of the Year".

Season Supporters Club
Young Player of the Year
1982–83 Norman Whiteside
1983–84 Mark Hughes
1984–85 Mark Hughes
Season Denzil Haroun
Young Player of the Year
1985–86 Simon Ratcliffe
1986–87 Gary Walsh
1987–88 Lee Martin
1988–89 Mark Robins
Season Jimmy Murphy
Young Player of the Year[35]
Denzil Haroun
Reserve Team Player of the Year[36]
1989–90 Lee Martin Mark Robins
1990–91 Ryan Giggs Jason Lydiate
1991–92 Ryan Giggs Brian Carey
1992–93 Paul Scholes Colin McKee
1993–94 Phil Neville Nicky Butt
1994–95 Terry Cooke Kevin Pilkington
1995–96 Ronnie Wallwork Michael Appleton
1996–97 John Curtis Michael Clegg
1997–98 Wes Brown Michael Twiss
1998–99 Wes Brown Mark Wilson
1999–2000 Bojan Djordjic Jonathan Greening
2000–01 Alan Tate Michael Stewart
2001–02 Paul Tierney John O'Shea
2002–03 Ben Collett Darren Fletcher
2003–04 Jonathan Spector David Jones
2004–05 Giuseppe Rossi Sylvan Ebanks-Blake
2005–06 Darron Gibson Giuseppe Rossi
2006–07[37] Craig Cathcart Kieran Lee
2007–08[38] Danny Welbeck Richard Eckersley
2008–09[39] Federico Macheda James Chester
2009–10 Will Keane[35] Ritchie De Laet[36]
2010–11 Ryan Tunnicliffe[40] Oliver Gill[41]
2011–12 Mats Møller Dæhli[42] Michael Keane[43]
2012–13 Ben Pearson[44] Adnan Januzaj[45]
2013–14 James Wilson[46] Saidy Janko[47]
2014–15 Axel Tuanzebe[48] Andreas Pereira[49]
2015–16 Marcus Rashford[50] Cameron Borthwick-Jackson[51]
2016–17 Angel Gomes[52] Axel Tuanzebe[53]
2017–18 Tahith Chong[54] Demetri Mitchell[55]
2018–19 Mason Greenwood[56] Tahith Chong[57]
2019–20 Anthony Elanga[58] James Garner[59]
2020–21 Shola Shoretire[60] Hannibal Mejbri[61]

References[]

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External links[]

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