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Sir Alex Ferguson reaffirms faith in Manchester United's under-fire goalkeeper David De Gea
With Anders Lindegaard being ruled out for up to six weeks with ankle ligament damage, the Scot insists the young Spanish goalkeeper will come good
By Tom Marshall-Bailey
Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson has reaffirmed his faith in David De Gea ahead of Sunday's Premier League clash against Chelsea.
The 21-year old is expected to start after overcoming an illness which ruled himself out of Tuesday’s 2-0 victory over Stoke City.
United were dealt a blow when it was revealed that Anders Lindegaard was to face up to six weeks on the side lines with ankle ligament damage, meaning Sir Alex was left with the options of under-fire De Gea or rookie Ben Amos to start between the posts.
De Gea was criticised for his performance against Liverpool last weekend as United exited the FA Cup, with a 2-1 defeat at Anfield and fared no better in the lost 3-2 at home to Blackburn in December.
Sir Alex feels that his £18.9m summer signing will come good though, as he gets used to the rigours of Premier League football, claiming it could take a few years for him to properly settle in.
“The boy has got a great talent, there is no doubt about that,” said the Scot. “He has made two or three mistakes, coming into the game at 20 years of age.
“He’s 21 now and in two or three years time we won’t be discussing that at all because he will have matured. He will realise his potential then.
“At the moment he has found it difficult coming into the English game.The first goal at Liverpool was a case in point. He was crowded out and our own players created the problem with so many of them being around him. They didn’t give him any room to manoeuvre."
The 70-year-old feels that De Gea's first season in English football proves how different the expectation level for a goalkeeper is over here compared to in Spain.
“He would never have experienced that in Spain, so that was difficult for him.
“It’s highlighted when you make a mistake at United and it can be exaggerated a little bit. But there were mistakes and he wants to address them himself. He will do that through maturity and gaining an understanding of the English game.”
Sir Alex is prepared to be patient and stick by his man though and seemed adamant that his time will come, as he revealed that buying a young goalkeeper was always part of the plan.
“It’s harder when you’re replacing someone like Edwin van der Sar and Peter Schmeichel and they are probably two of the greatest goalkeepers in European football over the last 40 years.
“So that’s not easy. I found it difficult to replace those players at the time.
“That’s why we went for a young replacement. We felt we should go for a young keeper who would develop and mature into the position because the potential is there.”
Hosted by Joe Doyle
"But, we came through. Obviously there were a lot of changes so it's good to get the result.
"Belgium are a very, very strong side who are going to be really good in the future. Vincent [Kompany] told me about them and said that they were coming good and I totally agree with him."
"[Gary] Cahill I suppose is slightly more of a concern for me because it is a jaw injury. We're desperately hoping the CT scan doesn't show any fracture and it's just going to be a bruising situation, which will be bad enough, but won't stop him taking part in the tournament. As far as John's [Terry] concerned he felt his hamstring a little bit. Again it wasn't a major thing when he came off but we still need to scan it just to be 100 per cent sure."
Suffice to say, if Cahill has broken his jaw, he won't play any part in the tournament.
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