When Casemiro signed for Manchester United in August, I called him a ‘Steady Eddie’. Maybe this gave the impression that I did not think he was up to much. I tell you, I would have been more than happy to be called a ‘Steady Eddie’.
It would mean I was consistent, doing something well every week that would get me a 7 or 7.5 out of 10 – that is what I see in Casemiro. For me, he’s the single biggest reason why the team have settled down and go into today’s Manchester derby having won their last eight in all competitions.
If you had asked Erik Ten Hag what his number one priority was earlier in the season, I’d think it would have been to stop conceding stupid goals. Casemiro, in his defensive midfield role, has gone a long way to correcting that.
Casemiro has been impressive in all aspects of play and even chipped in with goals
The Brazilian is the biggest reason why Manchester United have improved of late
I did question the fee they paid, £60million rising to £70m for a 30-year-old. Thinking about it now, I’m not sure the fee was so daft. He looks like someone who never has a bad game. His old Real Madrid team-mate, Luka Modric, played in a World Cup semi-final last month aged 37, and you feel Casemiro might be around for a while yet.
My best football was the season when I was 31, my last year at Liverpool. I played the same position and had a similar physique to Casemiro, so his best football could also still be in front of him.
Perhaps you’d expect me to say this, but that position on the field is greatly undervalued, too. If you are good, it is about not wanting to be the star of the show. It is about doing the stuff that the untrained eye does not see.
Little things, like taking a couple of steps to stop a pass into a centre-forward. Like staying on your feet at the right time rather than going to ground.
It is the job your fellow professionals truly appreciate. Right now, in the Premier League, Casemiro is doing that better than anyone. The previous best was Fernandinho at Manchester City. I thought he was exceptional.
Nobody is doing a better job in the engine room than the former Real Madrid man
Do I think Casemiro is world class? My definition of that is a player who gets in every team in the world, and I’m not sure he does. Real Madrid, obviously, decided that there is someone better in that position and chose to sell him. He is very good at everything, without necessarily being great. He knows where to be at the right time defensively. He can pass the ball. He is chipping in with the odd goal – and so a midfielder should – and is just a very good, all-round footballer.
I said to Jamie Redknapp recently when we were working on TV, when I come back in the next life, I want to be a centre-half with a midfield in front of me who are really good at pressing. Then, you spend most matches with a cigar in your mouth. You would like to have Casemiro in front of you in that regard.
Has he been better than I expected? I don’t think so. I knew what he would bring. But I stand by my point, no-one buys a season-ticket because Casemiro is playing. It’s called the engine-room for a reason – you’re often doing the dirty stuff. On reflection, he is exactly what Man United needed more than any of their other signings.
Which brings me onto Wout Weghorst, the former Burnley striker who is joining Man United on loan. He cannot be anything more than a body, it really is a case of needs-must. He scored two goals in 20 games for Burnley and found our football very difficult. I don’t see any reason as to why that would have changed.
Wout Weghorst is close to signing on loan for Manchester United but is just another body
It looks like Man United have realised they cannot rely on Anthony Martial as back-up to Marcus Rashford. Still, they will be hoping they do not have to use Weghorst very much, because he is several levels below what they have. It also tells you there isn’t any money in the pot, with the Glazers having the club on the market.
Historically, Weghorst, aged 30, does not feel like a Manchester United signing. But the idea of forward-planning has ceased to exist at Old Trafford. They signed Odion Ighalo from China at the age of 30, Edinson Cavani aged 33 on a free transfer – months after they could have got him – and tried for Marko Arnautovic, who is 33, last summer.
Saying that, given their recent form, they’ll go into today’s game with their tails up – but I still expect City to win. They will be fully motivated and angry after losing to Southampton in the Carabao Cup on Wednesday. It is like poking the tiger in the cage, and I don’t think that is good news for Man United.
Erik ten Hag knows Manchester City will be seething after their midweek defeat.
source: dailymail.co.uk/