5 players who regret leaving Manchester United

Manchester United is a hard place to leave
Manchester United is a hard place to leave

#3 Henrik Larsson

FA Cup 3rd Round: Manchester United v Aston Villa
FA Cup 3rd Round: Manchester United v Aston Villa

The Swede made just 13 appearances for Manchester United in all competitions, but quickly established himself as a cult hero during his incredibly short two-month stay in England. A long-time admirer of Larsson, Ferguson jumped at the chance to get his man on loan from Helsingborg in January 2007, with the player responding by scoring on his debut against Aston Villa in the FA Cup.

Further influential performances followed, with the Swede showing shades of the player who terrorised defences during his time with Celtic and Barcelona despite being 35 during his time at Old Trafford.

However, despite two impressive months in Manchester, where he endeared himself to fans, Larsson decided not to extend his loan deal having promised his family and his club that he would return at the end of his temporary spell.

His departure disappointed everyone, most of all Ferguson, who said "We would love him to stay but, obviously, he has made his promise to his family and Helsingborg and I think we should respect that – but I would have done anything to keep him”.
Years later, Larsson admitted to regretting not extending his Manchester United stay, saying: "The only regret I have in my playing career was that I didn’t stay on for the rest of the season because I think if I did that I would have been offered a little bit more, maybe an extension on that. The problem with that was that I promised Helsingborg to come home and I wanted the kids to have somewhere they could call home”.

Such was their affection for Larsson – who made 7 league appearances for the Red Devils – that United made a special request to the Premier League for the striker to receive a Premier League winner's medal despite falling short of the 10 required appearances, which was granted.

#2 David Beckham

(FILE PHOTO) David Beckham of Man Utd scores the 3rd goal
(FILE PHOTO) David Beckham of Man Utd scores the 3rd goal

David Beckham is many things. For countless people he is the face of global football. For fashionistas, he’s the ultimate style icon. For Americans, he’s probably one of the few ‘soccer’ players they know. But before Beckham was all of that, he was Manchester United’s marauding midfielder.

Part of the legendary Class of 92, Beckham grew from a generational talent to a world-class footballer under the tutelage of Sir Alex Ferguson, winning 6 Premier League titles, 1 Champions League, 2 FA Cups and 2 Community Shields. However, Beckham’s focus on his image and corporate deals strained his relationship with Ferguson, who accused the player of acting like he was bigger than the manager.

The pair’s relationship reached breaking point following a 2-0 FA Cup defeat to Arsenal, after which Ferguson allegedly kicked a boot towards Beckham, which cut the player above the eye.

The incident was the final nail in the coffin for Beckham’s Manchester United career, with the player leaving for Real Madrid soon after. And although Beckham forged a respectable career with Madrid, LA Galaxy, Milan and PSG – his on-field achievements came nowhere close to what it was with Manchester United after he left the team.

Ferguson addressed his feelings on Beckham in his 2013 autobiography, saying "David was the only player I managed who chose to be famous, who made it his mission to be known outside the game”.

The Scot further added: "The minute a Manchester United player thought he was bigger than the manager he had to go... David thought he was bigger than Alex Ferguson. There is no doubt about that in my mind”.

Beckham reflected on his time at Manchester United over two decades later, saying “At 41 I’d like to think that I’m more grown up and a little wiser than when I was 21. There were certain decisions I made back then that were wrong and I can see why the manager got so frustrated”.

The former England international also downright stated his regret at leaving Old Trafford, saying "I'd have loved to have stayed at Manchester United for my whole career and never gone anywhere else, but it just wasn't meant to be."

#1 Peter Schmeichel

Champs League SF Peter Schmeichel
Champs League SF Peter Schmeichel

The Great Dane was undoubtedly one of the world’s greatest goalkeepers in his prime and will go down as an Old Trafford great. Manchester United’s six-year long quest to replace him is a testament to his greatness.

Signed from Danish outfit Brondby in 1991 for a paltry £505,000 – which Sir Alex Ferguson described as the "bargain of the century," Schmeichel took little time to find his feet in the Premier League.

Eight years of phenomenal goalkeeping followed, with the stopper winning everything there was to win in football while picking up numerous individual awards along the way. Besides maintaining clean sheets for 42% of his United appearances – a crazy statistic – Schmeichel’s runs into the opposition area in order to help with his team’s attack made him a fan favourite.

However, in his final season back in 1999, the goalkeeper found the demands of Manchester United’s gruelling schedule combined with the pace of English football too stressful and decided to move to a less demanding league.

The goalkeeper’s United career couldn’t have ended on a better note, with the club going on to seal a historic treble – which culminated in that legendary final against Bayern Munich at the Nou Camp, where he wore the captain’s armband. Schmeichel’s trophy tally at the time of his move to Sporting Lisbon amounted to 5 Premier League titles, 1 Champions League, 3 FA Cups, 4 Community Shields and 1 European Super Cup.

Schmeichel expressed regret over his decision to move nearly two decades later, saying “I could have possibly played on for many more years [at Manchester United] had I cut back a little bit on the pride and spoken to the manager about it – but I didn’t. I was too proud of my position at the club. When you get to your mid-50s you look back and have a better understanding of things. That was a young man’s head making that decision, I admit I probably should have held out. It’s not a regret as such, but it is a regret at the same time if you get what I mean”.

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