Amorim, keen to inject fresh energy into his side’s faltering midfield, saw Baleba as the ideal player to anchor United’s rebuild. Yet, the Seagulls’ hierarchy was steadfast and made it crystal clear that the 21-year-old was going nowhere. Now, in an interview with The Argus, Brighton chairman Tony Bloom pulled back the curtain on the transfer saga and didn’t hold back on why United’s efforts failed.
“I don’t think Baleba was a saga," he said. “There was interest from Manchester United, and we said that he wasn't available this summer and they went away. So we've had many bigger sagas in the past. But Carlos Baleba, his improvement has been immense. Massively important player to this football club, and just delighted that he's with us for this season.”
Bloom admitted the club constantly prepares for life after its best players, but for now, Baleba’s exit isn’t on the agenda.
"We always try and make sure that the players coming in, maybe players we've brought in previous seasons, can help with that situation," he said.
“But that's true of almost every club. The best players, unless you're potentially Man City, Liverpool, Madrid, PSG, almost every club's best players do get sold. And it's up to us to make sure that we are prepared as much as we can. We can't always get the timing right, but we are as prepared as much as we can be to make sure that, at the start of every season, we have a really, really competitive squad.”