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“I Came Here to Be a Warrior… I’ve Become a Ghost” — Ugarte’s Old Trafford Nightmare

What was meant to be a dream move has quietly turned into a career crossroads.

When Manuel Ugarte arrived from Paris Saint-Germain for £50.7 million, he was billed as the future engine of Manchester United’s midfield. A warrior. A destroyer. A long-term solution.

Now, just two summers later, the narrative has flipped completely.

“I came here to be a warrior, but I’ve become a ghost. I can’t continue to sit on the bench while my career slips away. It’s time for a new chapter alongside Casemiro.”

If those reported words reflect his mindset, they reveal a player who feels invisible at the very club that was meant to elevate him.

The Brutal Numbers: 28 Minutes in Seven Games

Since Michael Carrick took interim charge in January, Ugarte’s involvement has collapsed.
• 28 total minutes in seven matches
• Zero starts
• Frequently an unused substitute

While United climbed to third in the table with six wins in seven, Ugarte has watched from the sidelines.

Meanwhile:
• Kobbie Mainoo has cemented his place.
• Casemiro continues to command respect in midfield.
• Bruno Fernandes thrives further forward.

The system is working.

Without him.

That may be the harshest truth of all.

Tactical Misfit or Lost Confidence?

Ugarte built his reputation at Sporting and PSG as a relentless ball-winner — aggressive in duels, intense off the ball.

But concerns have followed him:
• Limited passing range
• Struggles progressing play under pressure
• Difficulty dictating tempo in possession-based systems

Under previous managers, he showed flashes. Under Carrick, he has simply disappeared from the rotation.

At 24 years old, this should be his prime growth phase — not a bench-bound limbo.

The Casemiro Exit Connection

Casemiro is set to leave when his contract expires. His departure will free significant wages and reshape the midfield structure.

Ugarte referencing a “new chapter alongside Casemiro” may symbolize more than friendship. It suggests:
• A shared sense of transition
• A desire for reset
• Possibly even interest in similar destinations

Their South American bond at Carrington was well noted. Now both appear ready to close the United chapter.

Serie A: A Fresh Start?

Reports indicate strong interest from Italian clubs.

Serie A could suit Ugarte:
• Slower tactical tempo
• Greater emphasis on structure
• Less transitional chaos compared to the Premier League

We’ve seen similar revivals before — players who struggled in England rediscovering themselves in Italy’s more measured environment.

For Ugarte, it may not be about reputation anymore.

It’s about playing.

A Costly Lesson for United

If Ugarte leaves this summer, he becomes another expensive post-Ferguson miscalculation.

£50.7m invested.
Minimal impact delivered.
System never built around him.

Yet the club appears ready to move forward aggressively. New midfield targets are already being monitored as part of a broader squad overhaul.

Carrick’s United is evolving — athletic, dynamic, possession-aware.

And unfortunately for Ugarte, it has evolved without him.

The Verdict

Old Trafford was supposed to be his stage.

Instead, it became a place where his voice faded.

Ugarte still has time. Still has talent. Still has the warrior’s mentality he arrived with. But at Manchester United, the chapter feels closed.

The rebuild continues.
The ghost prepares to leave.

And somewhere else, perhaps in Italy, the warrior may finally reappear.

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