How each post-Ferguson Man Utd manager fared on their debut | OneFootball

Icon: Planet Football

Planet Football

·29 November 2021

How each post-Ferguson Man Utd manager fared on their debut

Article image:How each post-Ferguson Man Utd manager fared on their debut

After sacking Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, Manchester United have appointed Ralf Rangnick as interim manager until the end of the season.

Rangnick will be the seventh manager to take charge of the team since Sir Alex Ferguson’s retirement in 2013 and will be hoping his stint turns out to be more successful than his predecessors.


OneFootball Videos


His first game will be at home to Crystal Palace, and he needs to hit the ground running if he is to keep this struggling United side in the race for a top-four spot.

The previous six managers have had mixed results in their opening games at the club, and here’s how each of them fared.

David Moyes

Now leading West Ham in the race to a European spot, Moyes was hand-picked by Ferguson to replace him and had huge shoes to fill. The 58-year-old only lasted 10 months of his six-year deal, as the Champions fell to a lowly seventh place with some embarrassing defeats.

But Moyes started his United career in good form, beating 2013 FA Cup winners Wigan 2-0 in the Community Shield to secure his only silverware for the club.

Robin van Persie scored a goal in each half as United dominated the recently relegated side, in a game that also saw Wilfried Zaha make his debut for the club.

Ryan Giggs

After Moyes was sacked in April 2014, Giggs was appointed interim player-manager to replace him for the final four games of the season.

The Welshman’s first game in charge was at home to Norwich City, and there was a clear new manager bounce as United ran out 4-0 winners at Old Trafford.

Wayne Rooney and Juan Mata scored a brace each as the Canaries fell to their fifth successive defeat, and would go on to be relegated that season.

Louis van Gaal

Despite a summer of heavy spending on the likes of Ander Herrera and Luke Shaw, Van Gaal lost his first game in charge of United in August 2014.

The eccentric Dutchman gave debuts to Tyler Blackett and Jesse Lingard in a young starting XI against Swansea City but suffered their first opening day home defeat since 1972.

Goals from Ki-Seung Yeung and Gylfi Sigurdsson cancelled out Wayne Rooney’s equaliser, and Swansea were good value for their win which raised plenty of questions for the hosts.

Jose Mourinho

Mourinho replaced Van Gaal in the summer of 2016 following United’s victory in the FA Cup final, meaning that his first game in charge was the Community Shield against shock title winners Leicester City.

United ran out 2-1 winners, with goals from Lingard and debutant Zlatan Ibrahimovic helping secure one of three trophies that Mourinho would win that season.

The manager took this Community Shield victory so seriously that he would later include it in a ‘treble’, winning it alongside the League Cup and Europa League.

Still just a glorified friendly?

Ole Gunnar Solskjaer

Solskjaer briefly managed Cardiff City in 2014 and returned to Wales in December 2018 for his first game as United’s interim manager.

The Norwegian was attempting to restore some confidence to a side that had struggled for goals under Mourinho, and his first game did exactly that. Smashing Cardiff 5-1 away, whilst playing free-flowing attacking football, gave United fans a glimmer of hope after a dismal start to the season.

Marcus Rashford opened the scoring just three minutes in, and United were 3-1 up by half time before two Lingard goals in the second half rounded off the rout.

Michael Carrick

The former midfielder assumed temporary charge following Solskjaer’s sacking in November 2021, and his first game in charge was a crucial Champions League group stage tie away at Villarreal.

Despite the Spanish side dominating possession and taking more shots, Carrick’s side ran out 2-0 winners, with late goals from Cristiano Ronaldo and Jadon Sancho securing United’s place in the knockouts.

Not a bad way to kick off your managerial career.

View publisher imprint