Despite the turmoil, Amorim is unlikely to abandon his principles. Known for rigid tactical structures and high demands, he has stuck by his philosophy through thick and thin.
"He might have this very specific way he wants his team to play and the structure he wants to stick to but he still expects his players to smash it against Grimsby, and he looks like a man who thinks there’s more going on to explain why they haven’t," Stanton said.
Perhaps the most damning suggestion was that Amorim suspects his squad are undermining him.
Stanton continued: "Is there some agenda going on against him? He’s come to Manchester United looking like someone who really believed they were getting promoted to the big job but now he has the appearance of the person who ended up overlooked for that position, almost like he’s been cheated out of the real opportunity.
“But I don't think he's a man who is going to drop his own beliefs and his own ways of doing things. Obviously he's had successes in the past otherwise he wouldn't be so wedded to them. I think the ultimate end point to this would be that he walks rather than changing his approach but I don’t think that is imminent at the moment.
“I think he's going to try and address whatever issues are going on in the locker room with the team but it could come to a point where he looks at it and goes, you know what, this just isn’t working for me. I've tried my best. You're not prepared to play ball. You're not prepared to play my way and work with me and my ideas.”