Full name | Manchester United Football Club Reserves | |||
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Nickname(s) | The Red Devils, United | |||
Founded | 1878, as Newton Heath Reserves | |||
Ground | Moss Lane Altrincham (Capacity: 6,085) |
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Co-chairmen | Joel & Avram Glazer | |||
Manager | Ole Gunnar Solskjær (Reserves) Paul McGuinness (Under 18s) |
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League | Premier Reserve League | |||
2009–10 | Premier Reserve League North 1st & National Playoff Winners |
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Manchester United Football Club Reserves are the reserve team of Manchester United F.C. They play in the North section of the Premier Reserve League. They have been champions three times since the league's inauguration in 1999; in 2002, 2005 & 2006. They also participate in the Manchester Senior Cup, although in recent years the teams entered in this competition have featured an increasing number of youth players.
The current Reserve team manager is Ole Gunnar Solskjær, who was appointed in the summer of 2008 after working with the club's first team strikers following his retirement from playing in August 2007. His assistant is Warren Joyce, who was previously the manager of Royal Antwerp, Manchester United's feeder club in Belgium. Since November 2008, the reserves have played all of their home matches at Moss Lane in Altrincham, the home of Altrincham F.C. In previous seasons, the team has played at the Victoria Stadium, the home of Northwich Victoria, and Ewen Fields, the home of Hyde United.[1]
The most successful Manchester United Reserves coach has been René Meulensteen. Meulensteen won four of the five available reserve team trophies in the 2004–05 season – the Premier Reserve League North, the Central League North, the Central League Cup and the national play off between the winners of the Premier Reserve League North and the Premier Reserve League South. The team also finished as runners-up in the Manchester Senior Cup. Meulensteen followed this up in 2006 by leading the team once more to the Northern and National Premier Reserve League titles and winning the Manchester Senior Cup.
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As of 1 September 2010, according to official website.[2][3]
Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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The academy is the core of the youth setup at Manchester United, 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 state-of-the-art Trafford Training Centre, a 70 acre site in the Manchester suburb of Carrington.
The academy comprises age-group teams ranging from Under-9's up to the flagship Under-18's, who currently compete in Group C of the Premier Academy League and in the FA Youth Cup (a tournament which they have won a record nine times). The Under-16's and Under-18's 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 Manchester United's reserve team 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.
Paul McGuinness is the head coach of the under 18s academy side. He was also in charge of the side that lost to Liverpool in the 2007 FA Youth Cup final.
In 2007 the Academy were the inaugural winners of the Champions Youth Cup, intended to be a Club World Championship for youth sides, beating Juventus 1–0 in the final in Malaysia.
Player | DOB | Position | International caps | Previous club | Joined United | |
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Young Professionals | ||||||
Nicholas Ajose | 7 October 1991 | FW | Capped at Under-16 level | – | – | |
Robert Brady | 14 January 1992 | MF | Capped at Under-19 level | St Kevin's Boys | – | |
Reece Brown | 1 November 1991 | DF | Capped at Under-19 level | – | – | |
Conor Devlin | 23 September 1991 | GK | Capped at Under-19 level | – | – | |
Davide Petrucci | 5 October 1991 | MF | Capped at Under-19 level | Roma | – | |
Scott Wootton | 12 September 1991 | DF | Capped at Under-17 level | Liverpool | – | |
2nd Year Scholars (players born between 1 September 1991 and 31 August 1992) | ||||||
John Cofie | 21 January 1993 | FW | Capped at Under-16 level | Burnley[11] | – | |
Larnell Cole | 9 March 1993 | MF | – | – | – | |
Michele Fornasier | 22 August 1993 | DF | Capped at Under-16 level | Fiorentina[12] | July 2009 | |
Ezekiel Fryers | 9 September 1992 | DF | Capped at Under-17 level | – | – | |
Etzaz Hussain | 27 January 1993 | MF | Capped at Under-17 level | Langhus | January 2009 | |
Sam Johnstone | 25 March 1993 | GK | Capped at Under-17 level | – | – | |
Will Keane | 11 January 1993 | FW | Capped at Under-17 level | – | – | |
Jesse Lingard | 15 December 1992 | FW | Capped at Under-17 level | – | – | |
Alberto Massacci | 27 May 1993 | DF | – | Empoli | July 2009 | |
Sean McGinty | 11 August 1993 | DF | Capped at Under-17 level | Charlton Athletic | July 2009 | |
Ravel Morrison | 2 February 1993 | MF | Capped at Under-17 level | – | – | |
Paul Pogba | 15 March 1993 | MF | Capped at Under-17 level | Le Havre[13] | July 2009 | |
Tom Thorpe | 13 January 1993 | DF | Capped at Under-17 level | – | – | |
Ryan Tunnicliffe | 30 December 1992 | MF/DF | Capped at Under-17 level | – | – | |
Academy Students | ||||||
Luke Giverin | 4 February 1993 | DF | – | – | – | |
Michael Keane | 11 January 1993 | DF | Capped at Under-17 level | – | – | |
1st Year Scholars (players born between 1 September 1992 and 31 August 1993) | ||||||
Tyler Blackett | 2 April 1994 | DF | Capped at Under-16 level | – | July 2010 | |
Joe Coll | 2 February 1994 | GK | Capped at Under-16 level | – | July 2010 | |
Charni Ekangamene | 16 February 1994 | FW | Capped at Under-16 level | Royal Antwerp | March 2009 | |
Luke Hendrie | 27 August 1994 | MF | Capped at Under-16 level | – | July 2010 | |
Tom Lawrence | 13 January 1994 | FW | Capped at Under-17 level | – | July 2010 | |
Luke McCullough | 15 February 1994 | DF | Capped at Under-17 level | – | July 2010 | |
Unknown status | ||||||
Jack Barmby | MF | Capped at Under-16 level | – | – | ||
Liam Jacob | 18 August 1994 | GK | – | Liverpool | July 2010 | |
Marnick Vermijl | 13 January 1992 | DF | Capped at Under-18 level | Standard Liège | July 2010 |
Many players from the Manchester United Academy go on to have careers in professional football, whether at Manchester United or at other clubs. The following is a list of players who have represented their country at full international level and/or have played regularly at a high level of club football.
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Prior to 1990, a single award was presented to the best young player of that season. After 1990, two separate awards were presented. The Young Player of the Year award is named after Jimmy Murphy, Sir Matt Busby's long-time assistant manager, who died in 1989. Denzil Haroun was a former club director and the brother-in-law of former club chairman Louis Edwards.
Season | Supporters Club Young Player of the Year |
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1982–83 | Norman Whiteside |
1983–84 | Mark Hughes |
1984–85 | Mark Hughes |
Season | Denzil Haroun Young Player of the Year |
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1985–86 | Simon Ratcliffe |
1986–87 | Gary Walsh |
1987–88 | Lee Martin |
1988–89 | Mark Robins |
Season | Jimmy Murphy Young Player of the Year |
Denzil Haroun Reserve Team Player of the Year |
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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 | Craig Cathcart | Kieran Lee |
2007–08 | Danny Welbeck | Richard Eckersley |
2008–09 | Federico Macheda | James Chester |
2009–10 | Will Keane | Ritchie De Laet |
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