BASTEN
It is a situation described by Per Mertesacker this week as
“perverse,” and looked upon by many fans across the globe as an entirely
bizarre and unforeseen episode. The ostracism of Bastian Schweinsteiger at Manchester
United has
led one of the world’s most recognizable sporting heroes to train alone amid
the realization his top-level career is heading for a rather sudden and
ignominious end.
Schweinsteiger arrived at Old Trafford in 2015 as Germany captain
and a reigning world champion, but the cracks had begun to appear in his game
under Pep Guardiola at Bayern Munich,
with the now-Manchester City boss insisting that the midfielder’s body had
undermined his attempts to elongate his spell at the top of the game. “He is a
top, top player. Unfortunately, during the last three years he was never in
good condition,” warned Guardiola.
And, in truth, Guardiola’s words proved prophetic during
Schweini’s first season in Manchester under Louis van Gaal. He missed almost all of the
second half of the campaign because of a knee injury, while the Dutch manager
acknowledged being “very disappointed” with the player’s performances prior to
his enforced layoff.
“During December I said that I expect more and he was very
disappointed I said that, but I think I can say that because my expectation is
higher,” Van Gaal said. “Manchester United has bought him even though he is now
31, so I had to convince the board to buy him, because he’s a very good player
and he always gives a team more balance.”
That inability to win over even the manager who stuck his
neck out to get him a good deal at Old Trafford has been underlined since Jose
Mourinho took over from Van Gaal in the summer.
Schweinsteiger might have
experienced a semi-renaissance with Germany at Euro 2016 and celebrated his
marriage to tennis star Ana Ivanovic during the offseason, but upon his return
to United’s Carrington training complex he was warned by the Portuguese boss
that he had no future at the club and would not be considered for selection.
If that seemed harsh to some, underneath the surface there
was plenty of supporting evidence for Mourinho to come to such a conclusion. As
if the run of underwhelming form which left Van Gaal disappointed was not
enough, Schweinsteiger had spent much of his injury layoff jet-setting across
the globe to follow Ivanovic on the WTA tour.
It was not an approach that went down well in the United
dressing room, with more commitment to the cause generally expected at a club
that prides itself on its work ethic. Add in his lack of fitness over a
four-year period, and it should perhaps have been inevitable that a manager as
ruthless as Mourinho would draw a line under the experiment that has been his
Manchester United career.
While his attitude is said to have impressed those with whom
he has had regular contact at Carrington, the 32-year-old has had little
contact with his former first-team colleagues and he now looks destined for a
winter departure.
With Schweinsteiger having stated in the summer that
Manchester United, as the only club he could have left Bayern for, would be his
last European team, it now seems likely that a Major League Soccer future
awaits. While league commissioner Don Garber has claimed the midfielder would
be “welcomed with open arms,” the New York Red Bulls have moved to dismiss
speculation that Red Bull Arena will be his next destination.
Wherever he ends up next, his current situation is arguably
of his own making. While Mourinho has been painted as the pantomime villain in
some circles, even the German himself has said that he respects the decision of
the manager.
“We have had talks and
I have no problem with Jose Mourinho. We had a good chat and he told me his
side of things and I also know what I want,” he said following his farewell to
the Germany national team in September. “There is respect between us and that’s
important for me. I am certainly not going to stop playing football.”
Where exactly he will
play that football remains unclear, but all parties are now working toward
Schweinsteiger’s Manchester United nightmare being brought to an end in the
next three months
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