4

Image source, PA Media Image caption, Marcus Rashford remains a Manchester United player but has been out on loan in the previous two seasons By Simon Stone Manchester United reporter Published 8 hours ago Marcus Rashford didn't give the impression of being consumed by concerns about his future as he trained in heat that climbed above 30C in Kansas City. In fairness, now is not the time to have attention diverted by club matters. For the next month or so, Rashford's concentration is on England. On Sunday, at least for the 15 minutes when cameras were allowed in to film training, that meant linking up with Jude Bellingham, Ivan Toney, Djed Spence, Eberechi Eze and Anthony Gordon in a passing drill before Wednesday's World Cup Group L opener against Croatia in Dallas. The onus is on keeping the focus there. It was not as if Monday would bring any news Rashford was unaware of anyway. The deadline Barcelona agreed with Manchester United to trigger a £26m clause to turn Rashford's loan into a permanent deal passed without it being activated. No-one expected any different. On 1 July, when Rashford will hope to be preparing for a last-32 encounter in Atlanta, he will officially return to being a Manchester United player, with a £325,000-a-week contract that still has two years to run. So, what happens now? Stay at Manchester United? Image source, Getty Images Image caption, Marcus Rashford's most recent Manchester United appearance was against Viktoria Plzen on 12 December, 2024 In theory, Rashford could return to his boyhood club and resume his career there. Head coach Michael Carrick knows him well. Carrick has been a team-mate, coach and - for three games following Ole Gunnar Solskjaer's dismissal in 2021 - hands-on manager of one of the recent star graduates of United's academy. When Carrick was asked about Rashford in April, he said no decision had been made about the attacker's future. He added: "Whoever's here, I want to work with them and help them to improve." It is not quite as simple as that. Minority owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe wants to bring wage costs down and that is not simple when the highest earner is on such a huge sum. In addition, United gave Rashford's number 10 shirt to Matheus Cunha last season and are hardly likely to take it off the Brazilian. The summer squad rebuilding plans are being pieced together in the belief Rashford will not be part of them. Yet it is tricky. Twelve months ago, Ruben Amorim placed Rashford in his 'bomb squad' and told him to train at different times to the main group. He did the same with Jadon Sancho, Alejandro Garnacho, Antony and Tyrell Malacia. Last week, world governing body Fifa announced a memorandum of understanding with global players' union Fifpro. Within the detail, it was confirmed any player exiled from the main group can demand to be released – and to have their contracts paid up. It is fair to assume ostracising Rashford this season is off the agenda. For now, United say they expect the
Be respectful and constructive. Comments are moderated.
  • 2
    Rashfords England stint wont solve Uniteds midfield crisis. His loan spells have been about development, not fixing immediate squad problems.
  • 0
    Rashfords England stint shows hes ready for bigger stages. Uniteds midfield crisis needs solving, but his development matters too. Futures bright, not just for him but for the clubs long-term vision. (119 characters)
  • 0
    @Rashfords England