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Man Utd have become even more of a mess under Sir Jim Ratcliffe: Farcical Dan Ashworth exit is the latest in a growing list of embarrassments for wasteful INEOS after Erik ten Hag debacle

Dan Ashworth spent about as much time on gardening leave as he did working for Manchester United. Let that sink in for a minute. The man who United believed was such a talented sporting director that they were prepared to wait five months for him to start work and paid up to £3 million ($3.8m) to prise him from Newcastle, was deemed not fit for purpose just five months into the role.

Ashworth is the latest high-profile name to drink from the poisoned chalice of working for Manchester United and see his impressive achievements at former clubs eaten up by his failure writ large at Old Trafford. Serial-winners such as Raphael Varane and Casemiro have been down this path, as have elite managers such as Jose Mourinho, Louis van Gaal and Erik ten Hag.

Now not even the executives are safe. And the highest ranking executive at the club comes out of this bizarre saga looking worst of all: Sir Jim Ratcliffe.

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    Making a mockery of 'recruitment' claim

    Long before Ratcliffe had even considered buying his stake in United, the billionaire took aim at the club's shoddy recruitment policy. As far back as 2019 he described the club he has supported since a child as "the dumb money". And when he took control of the club's football operation late last year, he said that the key to getting United back towards the elite was fixing the recruitment. He mentioned the word six times in a roundtable interview with journalists in February.

    He said: "Recruitment in the modern game is critical. Manchester United have clearly spent a lot of money but they haven’t done as well as some other clubs. So when I was talking about being best in class in all aspects of football, recruitment is clearly top of the list. I’m thinking about getting recruitment in a good place in the future. There’s not much I can do about what’s happened in the past. Our thinking is all about how we become first in class in recruitment going forward. Which means you need the right people."

    Yet after talking so much about the importance of getting the right people, it seems Ratcliffe and his INEOS colleague Sir Dave Brailsford have botched one of the biggest calls they could make, the sporting director. United had been playing catch-up with the top clubs in Europe for years by only deciding to appoint a sporting director in 2021 when they promoted John Murtough from within. Before him, chief executive Ed Woodward, whose background was in accounting and investment banking, did most of the work in this key area.

    Hiring Ashworth, who had played a big role in the success stories of England and Brighton, was seen as a step in the right direction at last. Ashworth's status seemed to justify the huge effort the club made to get him from Newcastle, which nearly landed them in trouble when it emerged they had approached him while he was still working for the Magpies. But not even one of the best operators in the sport was deemed good enough for Ratcliffe.

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  • Sir Jim Ratcliffe Manchester United 2024-25AFP

    Treading on toes

    Sacking Ashworth, who was reportedly told about the decision soon after United's 3-2 defeat by Nottingham Forest, which he had brought his family to, was a massive shock. And yet, with hindsight, there was a small clue in an interview Ratcliffe had given to the fanzine United We Stand. The co-owner had talked up the recent appointments he had made within the last year, hailing Ruben Amorim as "a fantastic coach" and Omar Berrada as "a great chief executive". But there was no mention of Ashworth, who, back in that February interview, he had described as "clearly one of the top sporting directors in the world" and "a very capable person".

    It has been revealed that Ratcliffe was not impressed with Ashworth's approach to naming a successor to Erik ten Hag. The billionaire was said to be 'disappointed' that the sporting director would not look beyond candidates he had previously worked with such as Eddie Howe, Graham Potter and Gareth Southgate, meaning he ended up tasking Berrada with leading the search for the new boss. Amorim may prove to be an excellent appointment and only time will tell if Ratcliffe was right to dismiss Ashworth's suggestions.

    But it ultimately appears that he was not willing to trust Ashworth to do the job he was hired for. Ratcliffe clearly wanted his say in a process which Ashworth was supposed to lead. And that is not a good sign. Ratcliffe's background is in petrochemicals and sport is very much a hobby to him rather than his area of expertise. Treading on Ashworth's toes sets a worrying precedent.

  • Jim Ratcliffe Erik ten Hag Dave BrailsfordGetty

    Ten Hag call should fall on him

    Another intriguing aspect of the breakdown in Ratcliffe and Ashworth's relationship relates to the decision to keep Ten Hag last summer. Ratcliffe clearly harboured big doubts about the Dutchman's suitability for the job after the team finished eighth in the Premier League - their worst performance in 34 years - and in the build-up to the FA Cup final it emerged that the club had held talks with Kieran McKenna, while it was later revealed they also approached Thomas Tuchel and Thomas Frank.

    Ultimately, Ratcliffe decided to make a U-turn and not just keep Ten Hag in charge, but trigger the one-year extension in his contract. That decision, and the talks with other potential managers, took place before Ashworth had officially began work on July 1. In a September interview with journalists, Ashworth, like Berrada, was at pains to point out that he had not made the decision on Ten Hag as he was not working for the club at the time. And the remarks, according to the Daily Mail, were said to have 'gone down like a lead balloon' with Ratcliffe.

    It is a curious explanation for Ratcliffe taking against Ashworth though, not least because Berrada had also shirked responsibility for the decision to keep the faith with Ten Hag. Both men were not supposed to have been involved in that process and, had they admitted to doing so, could even have found themselves in legal difficulties due to the terms of their departures from Newcastle and Manchester City respectively. But more importantly, that decision should fall on Ratcliffe.

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    £25m in compensation fees

    The INEOS chief had five months to observe Ten Hag up close and determine whether he was the right man for the job or not. He was about to conclude that he wasn't, but the surprise win in the FA Cup final over City made it more politically difficult to sack Ten Hag. He ultimately backed away from making what would have been an unpopular decision at that time even though he knew it was the right one.

    And giving Ten Hag an extra year could not erase the fact that everyone knew Ratcliffe didn't truly believe in the coach. Ratcliffe effectively kicked the can down the road until the next season, increasing the cost of dismissing Ten Hag and his staff (£10.4m/$13m according to club accounts) and obliging United to pay around £11m ($14m) to free Amorim from his contract with Sporting CP. United have now spent approximately £70m ($89m) on hiring and firing managers in the 11 years since Sir Alex Ferguson's departure. And almost a third of that has come on Ratcliffe's watch.

    The decision to fire Ashworth little more than a month after axing Ten Hag means that in the last year alone United have spent around £25m ($32m) in compensation fees on two roles, and they will now have to spend even more money to replace Ashworth with another 'best in class' sporting director.

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    Cost-cutting savings up in smoke

    Ratcliffe's indecision on Ten Hag but his ruthless firing of Ashworth has left the club with a huge financial bill, at the same time that the co-owner has been preaching the need for the club to be more efficient. He made 250 members of staff redundant, at huge personal cost to many people who had proudly served the club for decades. Doing so saved the club an estimated £30m ($38m), a saving which has been erased by sacking Ten Hag and Ashworth while hiring Amorim.

    He also ended Sir Alex Ferguson's role as an ambassador, a huge insult to one of the most important figures in the club's entire history, saving a meagre £2m ($2.5m). And more recently he presided over shocking ticket price increases, charging children and senior citizens £66 ($84) per game with no consultation. That move, which risks pricing out thousands of loyal fans, will make a mere £1.5m ($1.9m).

    In other words, long-running staff and ordinary fans are footing the bill for the mistakes Ratcliffe has made. That should not be surprising, given how he views the world. When INEOS' oil refinery site at Grangemouth in Scotland was running into financial difficulties, he threatened to shut the place down unless workers agreed to his reforms. In 2020, he moved his tax residence to Monaco, saving himself an estimated £4 billion ($5.1 billion), but meaning one of Britain's richest men pays no tax to the country where he made his fortune.

    He also keeps making clumsy statements in interviews, such as disrespecting the women's team and claiming that watching United should not cost less than Fulham, ignoring the financial disparities between Manchester and west London.

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    Running to the wrong solution

    Ratcliffe has stated that he will need time to get United to where he wants them to be and in February he said 2028 was a good timeframe to see that change in action. Berrada has even said they should be winning the Premier League title by 2028, which will also be the 150th anniversary of the club's foundation. But Ratcliffe is already running out of time after a woeful first year.

    When Ratcliffe finally purchased his stake in the club on December 24 last year, United were eighth in the Premier League. Twelve months on, they are 13th in the table, 16 points behind leaders Liverpool, who Ratcliffe had said he wanted to "knock off their perch" along with City. They have lost more games (six) than they have won and their goal difference is plus one.

    The club spent £177m ($226m) on four players in the summer and have sacked the manager and the sporting director who hired them, which does not say much about their belief in the new arrivals. Meanwhile, cutbacks have been made that not even the Glazer family, who were hated for their lack of investment in the club, were comfortable making.

    Ratcliffe is often described in the media as a man in a hurry, but he could do with taking a minute to reassess the direction he is taking the club in. He has stressed the importance of "walking to the right solution, not running to the wrong one". But one year into his reign, the club seem to be going backwards.