Madaboutsports

United’s year of ruin and the flicker that wouldn’t die

The 2024–25 season will be remembered as Manchester United’s collapse laid bare. Fifteenth place in the Premier League, 18 defeats, a minus 10 goal difference — the worst top-flight finish since 1974.

The early sacking of Erik ten Hag, Ruud van Nistelrooy’s brief caretaker stead, and Ruben Amorim’s stubborn system changes painted a portrait of chaos. The FA Cup and Carabao Cup brought no rescue. Even the Europa League dream died in Bilbao, Tottenham snatching glory and Champions League hopes in a 1–0 final.

Yet amid wreckage, a single April night shone. Old Trafford shook under the weight of a nine-goal Europa League quarter-final against Lyon. Ugarte and Dalot’s early goals promised dominance, only for Lyon to claw back.

Extra time became theatre — Lacazette’s penalty, Tolisso’s red, Fernandes’ spot-kick, Mainoo’s touch, and finally Maguire’s towering header. A 5–4 win on the night, 7–6 on aggregate. For a moment, belief returned.

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Bruno Fernandes was the heartbeat, scoring 19, assisting 18, dragging his side forward while surrounded by disarray. His absence would leave a void impossible to ignore.

Amad Diallo, the season’s revelation, delivered 10 goals and eight assists, dancing past markers with a fearlessness that drew fans to their feet. His resilience after injury spoke of promise.

Old Trafford’s aura faded — nine league defeats at home — yet even in its decline, moments of electricity broke through.

This was a campaign that stripped United bare, exposed every flaw, and demanded a summer of reinvention.

But in the ashes, embers still glowed.