Michael Carrick says Kobbie Mainoo is “getting closer” to signing a new deal at Manchester United.
In March, Sky Sports News reported that both Mainoo and Harry Maguire were close to agreeing new terms. The defender’s contract was announced last week.
While the 20-year-old’s deal is yet to be confirmed, it is understood to include a significant pay rise. His current contract was signed in 2023 when he was 17 and runs until the summer of 2027.
Man Utd are keen for his new agreement to better reflect Mainoo’s progression in the last few seasons and his current status within the first team. The current proposal is for a five-year deal to run until 2031.
And Carrick – whose own future at the club remains unresolved – said the club were edging towards a new contract with the midfielder.
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When asked if Mainoo will sign new terms at Man Utd in his pre-Leeds press conference, Carrick said: “We’d like to think so.
“It’s getting closer, we’re positive with that. we’re calm with it, but we’re positive and only time will tell how it will go. But we’re in a good place with him.
The signing of a new deal would mark a major turnaround in his fortunes at Old Trafford. Mainoo was not in previous head coach Ruben Amorim’s plans, and at the turn of the year, his future looked certain to be elsewhere.
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Manchester United boss Michael Carrick reveals he is helping with the club’s plans going forward as the summer’s pre-season schedule has been announced, despite questions around whether he will continue in the role next season.
Since Carrick took over, the midfielder has featured in each of the ten Premier League matches on United’s fixture list, and has become among the first names on the team sheet.
Mainoo was also included in Thomas Tuchel’s latest England squad, with the 20-year-old featuring in both games against Uruguay and Japan.
Carrick insists he can handle Man Utd pressure as big decision looms
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Michael Carrick discusses the pressure involved with being the head coach of Manchester United.
Being Manchester United manager has become the impossible job. Six have succeeded Sir Alex Ferguson, all succumbing to the pressure in the end. This summer a seventh will be chosen and Michael Carrick, it seems, is on course to be that man.
By winning seven of his 10 games since January and lifting United up to third in the Premier League, Carrick has made a return to the Champions League more likely than not. It would now come as a surprise if a top-five finish did not seal the deal.
It is hard to nail down the characteristics required to be a success at United. They have gone down nearly every route. Jose Mourinho was the serial winner. Louis van Gaal was the experienced hand. Erik ten Hag and Ruben Amorim were the project managers.
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Michael Carrick believes that Bruno Fernandes is ‘right up there’ in the conversation for Premier League Player of the Year, following his significant impact on Man Utd’s season.
Carrick falls into the ‘United DNA’ camp. In other words, the Ole Gunnar Solskjaer camp, which brings its own baggage. Solskjaer’s deficiencies were obvious, but he navigated the scrutiny at Old Trafford better than most. This is a trait Carrick appears to share.
“There are parts of [what comes with being Manchester United manager] – and I am not being blasé when I say it – that I have known for so long,” Carrick tells Sky Sports’ Roman Kemp at United’s training camp in Dublin.
“The pressure is something I have lived with for a long time.
“What’s expected here, how to go about achieving things, the amount of support we have, and the scrutiny is something that becomes normal after a while.
“It does not feel as big as it probably looks from the outside for me personally.”
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