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Team DBview - Manchester United [Premier League 2019-20 - 14/20]

Manchester United Football Club

by nitedfan

Welcome back to the first(? I've lost count) iteration of our long-running series, in which actually I really can't think of anything that even resembles humour to parody this opening paragraph. I apologise.
So yeah, Manchester United.
This will be a doozey.
About
"It’s difficult in times like these: ideals, dreams and cherished hopes rise within us, only to be crushed by grim reality. It’s a wonder I haven’t abandoned all my ideals, they seem so absurd and impractical. Yet I cling to them because I still believe, in spite of everything, that people are truly good at heart." - Anne Frank on DB’s /soccer explusion.
Arrested 75 years ago today.

Last Season

Pos P W D L GF GA GD Points
6th 38 19 9 10 lol 65 54 11 66
Last season was another in what has become a long slog since AAlex Ferguson left. Our managers since have been nothing short of disgraceful. First, the club had the audacity to appoint the man that Ferguson handpicked to be his successor. Then we had to endure the hardships of the man who led Ajax to a Champions League win and dominated with Barcelona and Bayern Munich. The man who was at the helm at the start of this season really was the pick of the bunch though. The inept hybrid of innovation and success, whose odorous little trophy haul “boasted” European Cups and League titles from across the continent was what we, the official United Supporters Club of Houston, Texas, had to suffer through with such great fortitude, saddled with such phenomenal mental trauma.
But then, In the Bleak Midwinter, a hero emerged. Following a humiliating 3-1 loss to Liverpool (which Travis and Brad still won't let me live down, the freaking bin dippers) Medusa saw her own reflection. Manchester United and all-round soccer legend Ole Gunnar Solskjær took over. He brought the United way back. The passion was there. The desire was there. No more shying away, Ole's at the wheel, oh let me tell you how good it feels.
BANG talk to you later Cardiff! Oh hi Huddersfield, nice idea but this is Ole's unstoppable train. Hmm Bournemouth, some nice cherries you have there, be a shame if a certain Norwegian PICKED them. Game after game the heads of the English soccer titans rolled at the feet of Ole's irrefutable boys. The Busby Babes had sex with the Class of 92 and Scotty McSAUCE was the result. Defenders could barely move they were so scared of Tony M, Rashy and Big Chungus. PogChamp feeding through balls oh yes Ole, oh yes. IT FEELS SO GOOD.
"they've had a good start, he's no miracle worker"
Oh is that right bro? Well sit down and strap in as I tell you a story about the most iconic Champions League Round of 16 game to have ever graced the sport. When Manchester United drew the impenetrable Paris Saint-Germain, much famed for their dominance of the most competitive league in Europe and their irresistible form in the Champions League, nobody gave Ole's lions a chance. After the first leg the salty ABUs giggled to themselves. 2-0 loss with Paul Pogba suspended for the second leg? My god, it'll be a massacre! But they forget. This. Is. Manchester. United. A team fabled for their never say die attitude, for their ability to pull something out the hat when all the chips are down. Whose fans - the best in the world - will NEVER turn their back on the team. You gave up. We didn't.
BAM Lukaku 0-1. Juan Bernat 1-1? THIS IS MANCHESTER UNITED, LUKAKU 1-2. Hear that? It's the sound of the Red Devils knocking on the door. The pressure is insurmountable, Kimpembe glances over at our dugout. He sees a man who knows we will win. A man who knows the United way. He sees our Ole. PENALTY! Marcus Rashford, cool as you like. Neymar looks on bewildered from the stands. He knows which franchise's jersey he'd rather be donning. He knows who he'd rather have driving him forward, who he'd rather have behind the wheel. Tell me, how good does it feel?
We went on to lose 4-0 to Barcelona in the next round, finish 6th and end the season empty-handed.

This Season

This season is already shaping up to be something special. The lightning speed of new boy Daniel "vroom vroom" James mirroring the elegance of Anthony Martial with inch-perfect balls sent to feet by the Pirlo-esque passing of Paul Pogba. An attack spearheaded by two of Manchester's finest in Marcus Rashford and something Greenwood. On the rare occasion that a player gets past McSauce, they'll have to deal with the hard-hitting defending of Arachnid Wan-Bissaka. All this emulsified by the tactical prowess of Ole Gunnar Solskjær.
Youth. Courage. Success. Oh, that doesn’t resonate with you? Hey, that’s fine, Manchester United didn’t reach the pinnacle of football by being like the run-of-the-mill club y’all support. See, before Ole we had a series of transfers that, whilst at the time may have been claimed to be in the vein of the United way, in retrospect turned out to be a string of red herrings. But now Ole’s back, so is the United way. Manchester United don’t build their foundations on spewing money everywhere like Manchester City and Liverpool. No, we’re different. We care about youth, we care about courage, and we define ourselves on success. This is why we’ve spent this summer going for young gems as opposed to spending silly money. Matthijs de Ligt, Jadon Sancho and Aaron Wan-Bissaka to name just a few of these players were targeted in hopes of showing clubs that you can still organically develop a football team in to a European Goliath by just putting a little faith in youth.
However, a dark cloud overshadows this. The Glazers once again threatened with their paltry sums to do nothing but accumulate more atop the £800m pittance they've spent in the last 5 years. Anger boiled over in tidal waves of sweat as the grease dripped down from shaggy locks whose humble abode lay atop my fair head. I tapped away vigilantly at my phone screen as the concoction of sweat and grease engulfed the display. Before all touch capability disintegrated in to a puddle of human despair, I managed to send out the tweet.
#GlazersOut.
A spark, prefixed by a hash. A revolution is afoot.
But this is no ordinary revolution, this is organised by some of the finest minds that Manchester United Reddit & Twitter has to offer. I'm trying to think of a way to say this humbly but I can't so I'll just say it. We got the hashtag to NUMBER ONE trending on Twitter. I'm welling up a little just thinking about it. The date was set for the protest. June 29th would be the fateful day the Glazers feel the wrath of the Red Devils, inhale the smog of the fiery pits of hell. Love Manchester United. Hate the Glazers.
Me personally? Well I wouldn't be attending, no. Think of me as a Field Marshal, like Haig if you will. I'm the orchestrator, my subjects will do the protesting - and protest they will. Green and yellow banners will unfurl, songs will be sung, fan groups will roll up in the bus-load à la the miners at Pride in '85. The Glazers will have sold up come closing hours through fear of being left completely at the mercy of the famous Manchester United fanbase. It will be the day we get OUR United back. Hated, adored, NEVER ignored.
20 people turned up.
Transfers
Highlights
Player Type From To Fee(£m)
Matthijs de Ligt Perm Ajax Manchester United £75m
Aaron Wan-Bissaka Perm Crystal Palace Manchester United £50m
Daniel James Perm Swansea City Manchester United £15m
All transfers from muppetiers
All incoming/outgoing transfers
Full 2019-20 squad
3 players to watch out for
⭐️ Paul Pogba
Despite the salty ABU infested media's attempts at trying to besmirch Paul by doing things like directly quoting him saying he wants to leave, true Red Devils such as myself and my friend Trevor know better. On his day indisputably the world's best midfielder, Paul bleeds Manchester United football club. He could have gone to any club, but he came to us. After we offered to double his wage and made him the most expensive footballer in the history of the sport. A man who never gives up on the pitch, never turns his back on the club, is never involved in any controversy. Who showed so much passion in the CL RO16 first leg that he got sent off putting us in a potentially precarious position for the second leg, although we ended up playing better without him. That's the kind of man you want to be the linchpin of your side, and the man I myself am rallying behind to slide that captain's armband on to that huge defined bicep of his.
⭐️ Michael(?) Greenwood
Wow. What a prospect this young man is. Having absolutely blitzed pre-season, he undoubtedly must have one hand on the PFA YPOTY award. Like most Manchester United fans, I know a lot about him and have been following his career trajectory for the best part of a decade now. Never before has a more talented footballer graced the academy of a team in English football, and - whisper it quietly - but give it 5 years and we may bump that from "English football" to "World football". With massive goals against the likes of Le*ds (scum!) he looks set to follow in the footsteps of Marcus Rashford and hit that prolific 1 goal every 4 games mark that really acts as a litmus test for separating the wheat from the chaff. The Lord Bendtners from the Emile Heskeys XD.
⭐️ Cristiano Ronaldo
Having started his pre-season on a strong note of having rape allegations dropped through lack of evidence (thots, begone!) Ronaldo is really shaping up for another season of doing Manchester United proud. Whilst the pedants may point out he left the club 10 years ago, and if he'd had his way he'd have left 11 years ago, it is clear Cristiano Ronaldo absolutely adores the club so we make a point of following his progress each season as if he didn't literally use us as a stepping stone, turn down every opportunity to rejoin us, and celebrate after scoring against us by flashing his abs. And at the risk of riling y'all up in the comments, c'mon dude, it's totally Ronaldo > Messi (no /s).
What the fans think
Thanks to /The_Donald for their help
How do you think this season will go?
I'm not sure really I'm more looking forward to the next transfer window and continuing to publicly support a man who puts children in cages.
  • Jroades267
I'm currently in a hotel in Kho Phangan and just saw the Lukaku news there and loudly screamed "HOLY SHIT LUKAKU" and this Thai lad a few balconies below replied "I KNOW!!"
  • TyperSniper (editor's note: literally nobody asked, Typer)
This pre-season has been immense. I have a feeling we’re being underestimated by people who haven’t been watching us. What Ole has managed to galvanise tactically is something completely new which I think is going to take the league by storm. Basically, when an opposition player is on the ball, two or more United players will run at him closing down any passing avenues. This decreases the chance of the opposition player making a dangerous pass, and increases the chance of a United player potentially winning the ball. Then, on the occasions when we get the ball, we start to move forward and kick it towards the opposition goal. It’s something completely new and in fitting with what you expect from Manchester United. I’m calling it “pressurising”.
  • paeders
Which player is going to be your star of the season and why?
ITK 27. I’m convinced that this one actually has a source.
  • Ubergorp
Harry Maguire. He is going to completely transform this defence. For the steal price of £140m we’ve managed to quickly storm right in to contention for the best defence in the league with AWB and Slabbers. Whilst Wan-Bissaka has been superb, and through his appearances in the ICC has essentially already paid back his price tag, Maguire really is going to be something else. Affectionately dubbed “Slabhead” by the United fans (god we’re clever and original) the all-conquering defender comes from defensive juggernauts Leicester, who conceded a mere 48 goals last season in comparison in to our disastrous 54 goals. Squawka Comparison Matrix with the right selected stats actually shows him to be a better defender than Virgil van Dijk, the so-called best in the world. He’ll easily win us 15-20 points and have us back in title contention.
  • AutoModerator
I was saying they look older than they are, not that I’m attracted to them!
  • Alleged Paedophile
How do you think the team will line up?
De Gea – Shaw, Maguire, Koulibaly, Wan-Bissaka – Fernandes, Pogba – Martial, Dybala, James – Rashford
  • “Reliable ITK” xisimon
The 11 of whoever is facing Liverpool
  • TopRed99

DB's Debrief

by the DB_Cooper727
As someone who has been permanently banned from both /RedDevils and /LiverpoolFC, DB feels like he’s best placed to be giving a preview on Manchester United.
The Manager: Usually found snorting lines of Carrington dust that he believes to be remnants of Alex Ferguson's dead skin, OGS has taken a slightly unorthodox approach to this window in buying from close to home. This, in part, is likely because he thought he wasn't yet worthy of using Ferguson's old scouting setup and first had to prove himself by signing players he already knew about. Whilst on the face of it you could argue he has a win percentage comparable to that of David Moyes, completely leans on Mike Phelan to do any kind of coaching work and has, by his own design, overshadowed his entire United reign with an inferiority complex in relation to Ferguson, Ole is a manager beyond his years. So much so that, despite being almost 5 years removed from his tenure at Cardiff, he still managed to deliver them a big 4th PL win under his tutelage when kamikazing his United side against them. Most worryingly for United fans, though, is the fact that the only people who like Ole more than they do is the fans of their rival clubs.
The Team: Through one technicality or another, United boast the incredible record of their entire team being academy products. Every United fan is well-versed in the intricacies of these technicalities and will be able to offer onsite assistance to anyone whose mind may stray away from their infallible club being fuelled by anything other than the United way. They also have an unnervingly brilliant ability at plucking absolute nobodies from clubs lower in the table and making them one of the best in the league without so much as a senior appearance. Take Wan-Bissaka for instance. I bet you can’t even name which irrelevant minnow he used to ply his trade for, but one thing we’re all able to agree on is that as of the 29th June he is indisputably one of the best right-backs in the league.
Why to like them: They ruined your childhood but now they’re shite. Like watching the kid who used to make fun of you for still eating Lunchables when you were in your teens drink himself in to having wet brain. Fuck you Jake you’re a burden on your family and your mum just liked Dignitas’ page on Facebook. Their record with managerial appointments and transfers is horrendously poor, to the point that if they managed to get a manager or signing right it’d be a surprise only dwarfed by the time Taylor Swift brought out Robbie Williams to sing Angels at Wembley. Rival fans can delight and revel in the fact they’ve become everything they used to criticise and mock. Spending loads of money on prima donnas, give nauseating recounts of their history, and the best moments of their post-Ferguson era have been the two times their local rivals beat their biggest rivals to the title. I realise these aren’t really reasons to like them, but come on, it’s Manchester United. DB can only bend the truth so much.
Why to dislike them: No Gun Ri Massacre, My Lai Massacre, Highway of Death. Their legends are littered with women beating, brother's wife pulling, granny shagging, chicken tongue-fucking dangers. Without even the slightest trace of irony they belt out verses about wanting to "go on the piss with Georgie Best", a man who denounced alcohol and the impact it had on his life whilst laying on his deathbed. Whilst for a spell in 2011 their club resembled a bastion of the civil rights movement, more recently their fans have shown a less progressive attitude as they fought back against organisations such as Kick It Out over the racial connotations of their Lukaku chant, defended a homophobic Patrice Evra rant, and claimed that someone who recently called Ashley Young the N word was, in fact, trying to say "like". However, I think we can all agree that which really stands out, tangled within this mesh of reprehensible and immoral actions, is their treatment of our oh so sweet and precious DB. His only crime? Correctly predicting the downfall of the /reddevils at the hands of the ITKs. Their potential saviour, only ever given the chance to be the villain. For shame.
Summary: Unban me from /soccer I’ll be such a good DB 😭.

Links

Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3
#FuckScooterBraun
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UEFA Golden Boy Winners 2003-2008: Where are they now?

Alright you lot, it's been a while. How've you been?
Yes, I'm back again with a footballing history lesson none of you really asked for. I've split this one into two parts, I would say it's so we can have an in-depth discussion but it's mainly because I'm lazy. Hey, at least I'm honest.
I've done some similar posts to this one before, and the lovely people at 8by8 Magazine asked me to write them with a little more substance. You can see my past articles here:
PFA Young Player of the Season 1990-2000: Where are they now?
PFA Young Player of the Season 2000-2010: Where are they now?
Premier League Manager of the Season: Where are they now?
2003
RAFAEL VAN DER VAART
Club (at time of winning): Ajax
Position: Midfielder
Age: 20 then, 32 now
The winner of the inaugural Golden Boy award was a young Dutch boy from Heemskerk. At the time of winning he’d already been playing regular football for Ajax for three years, making his debut at just 17. Van der Vaart left Ajax in 2005 after a series of incidents that also sparked the sale of Zlatan Ibrahimovic, internet darling and absolute bellend, from Ajax after rumors that Zlatan had intentionally injured Van der Vaart during a Holland v Sweden game. The two were supposedly vying for the striker position at the time. Van der Vaart moved from Ajax to Hamburger SV and then on to Real Madrid for £10 million in 2008.
Van der Vaart’s time at Real Madrid started well with him being nominated for the Ballon d’Or in October 2008, but the next few years were not as kind seeing him reduced to a sub for much of his career, leading him to look elsewhere. So entered Henry James Redknapp into Van der Vaart’s life. In what was actually a fantastic piece of wheeling and dealing that would make Del Boy shed a tear, Redknapp managed to snag Van der Vaart for a mear £8 million after an £18 million deal to Bayern Munich had fallen through. He even got the Premier League to allow Spurs to conduct business after the transfer window had officially closed, presumably on the grounds that it was a top, top piece of business. In his debut season Van der Vaart was both Spurs top scorer and provided the most assists.
Van der Vaart currently plays for Real Betis, with injuries having plagued the later half of his career.
2004
WAYNE ROONEY
Club (at time of winning): Everton
Position: Striker
Age: 19 then, 29 now
Since the last time I wrote one of these, quite a lot’s happened for Wayne. It would be easy to poke fun at him getting knocked out by Phil Bardsley in his own home, but it happened and really the knowledge alone is enough for me. No the real story is that Rooney is now England’s all-time goalscorer. What makes it more magical is that he did it the right way. You can imagine it now: It’s Liverpool 1992, a young Rooney sits with his family, huddled for warmth around a burning Ford Escort someone at the pub “found”. Wayne looks up from the rat he’d been gnawing on and says “Mam, I’m gonna be England’s top scorer me. And I’m gonna do it by scoring dodgy pennas against San Marino and Switzerland”. Brings a tear to the eye.
Joking aside, the wake of Charlton’s record being broken sparked a desperate attempt by pundits to convince themselves that Rooney was in fact deserving of the record and that no-one had ever spoken ill of him. But the flurry of opinion pieces just served to highlight how sad it is that the media have made Rooney the scapegoat for so many of England’s failings over the years. Yes, he hasn’t lit up a major tournament since he was a teenager, but is it really his fault England have been so poor on the world stage? Should it really be expected that he has to be the one to get England over the line? Or should the blame be more on the FA for only producing one truly world class player in his generation and then pinning all their hopes on him?
  • 565 career appearances, 252 goals (0.45 goals per game)
  • 488 Manchester United appearances, 235 goals
  • 107 England caps, 50 goals
  • Career silverware: 5 Premier League titles, 2 League Cups, 3 Community Shields, 1 Champions League and 1 Club World Cup.
2005
LIONEL MESSI
Club (at time of winning): Barcelona
Position: Forward
Age: 18 then, 28 now
I was torn how to approach this little bio of Messi. What can I say? You all know who he is and what he’s about (if you don’t, he’s the third most famous Lionel in the world, behind Richie and Blair). I could talk about how he might worry about how aging will affect his game but unlike other players his age he shows no signs of slowing down. I could spend the whole bio just poking fun at him, but in reality that’s kind of impossible because at the end of the day he’s Lionel Messi. He’s dodged more in tax than I can ever hope to earn, he’s short but annoyingly that just makes him better at football and worse of all he seems like a nice bloke. At least most of the great footballers have the decency to be a bit of a knob to balance it out (Maradona, Pele, looking at you lads).
Undeniably the most deserving winner of the award and a footballer we are all lucky to be witnessing in his prime, Messi will undoubtedly become the impossible standard of all future Golden Boy winners. Perhaps even the anomaly that was too good at football - how many players will be built up to be “the next Messi” only to have expectation and inevitable disappointment tarnish their careers? How many already have been?
  • 525 career appearances, 429 goals all for Barcelona (0.82 goals per game)
  • 105 Argentina caps, 49 goals
  • Career silverware: 7 La Liga titles, 3 Copa del Rey, 6 Supercopa de Espana, 4 Champions Leagues, 3 UEFA Super Cup, 2 Club World Cup, 2008 Olympic Gold Medal, 2014 World Cup Runner-up, 2 Copa America Runner up.
2006
CESC FABREGAS
Club (at time of winning): Arsenal
Position: Midfielder
Age: 19 then, 28 now
It’s funny how quickly things change in football. This time last season Fabregas was lighting up the Premier League, his partnership with Costa the personification of Mourinho’s smug ability to seemingly always have one over on Wenger. Fabregas was hailed as one of the signings of the summer, his return to the Premier League in blue a masterstroke from Chelsea and a foolish missed opportunity from Arsenal. But time and football are cruel mistresses and both have taken issue with Cesc. While time is doing her best to turn Fabregas, Costa and Mou into a trio of greasy kebab shop owners, football seems to have forgotten about the three of them altogether. Chelsea currently lie 15th in the table with 8 points from 7 games and Fabregas seems to have lost his magic touch that defined the first half of every season he’s played. Although a more impressive individual display against Newcastle does suggest the skill that earned him this award may still be around it remains to be seen if the malaise that seems to have infected the Chelsea squad is temporary or indicative of a permanent shift in an aging Fabregas’ career.
  • 509 career appearances, 105 goals (0.21 goals per game)
  • 303 appearances for Arsenal, 57 goals.
  • 98 Spain caps, 14 goals.
  • 3 Catalonia caps, 0 goals.
  • Career silverware w/ Arsenal: 1 FA Cup, 1 Community Shield.
  • Career silverware w/ Barcelona: 1 La Liga title, 1 Copa del Rey, 2 Supercopa de Espanas, 1 Super Cup, 1 Club World Cup.
  • Career silverware w/ Chelsea: 1 Premier League title, 1 League Cup.
  •  Also World Cup 2010 Winner, Euro 2008, 2012 Winner 
2007
SERGIO AGUERO
Club (at time of winning): Atletico Madrid
Position: Striker
Age: 19 then, 27 now
Like a lot of young and talented Argentinians Sergio Aguero, along with the likes of Lionel Messi and Carlos Tevez, was lined up to be the “New Maradona”. This would later establish what was undoubtedly the world’s worst father-in-law/son-in-law dynamic after Aguero married Maradona’s youngest daughter in 2009. I’m not saying that’s what caused Aguero to file for divorce in 2013, but can you imagine having to suffer through having Diego Maradona as your father-in-law? I bet he has a scrapbook full of articles about how you’re not as good as him.
Like so many strikers before him Aguero gained a reputation for himself in Europe at Atletico Madrid before making a big money move to the Premier League - joining Manchester City in 2011 for £35 million. In his debut year in the Premier League he quickly established himself as one of the league’s showpiece players, City’s talisman forward and a key part of Sky Sports Premier League advertising. His last minute strike against QPR has become one of the defining moments of the modern Premier League era, which due a planning masterstroke on my part I got to experience through live text updates sat outside a broken toilet on an overcrowded train from Middlesbrough to Sheffield. I’ve heard it was quite a special moment.
What is strange about Aguero is that unlike most other stikers there’s just something inherently likable about him. Even Manchester United fans don’t hate him really. I mean the nickname “Kun” on his shirt is the nickname his grandparents gave him as a kid and he even has a tattoo of it in Elvish on his arm. Come on now, how can you hate a bloke who loves his Nan that much?
  • 463 career appearances, 231 goals (0.50 goals per game)
  • 234 Atletico Madrid appearances, 101 goals
  • 68 Argentina caps, 32 goals
  • Career silverware: 1 Europa League, 1 Intertoto Cup, 1 UEFA Super Cup, 2 Premier League titles, 1 League Cup, 1 Community Shield, 1 2008 Olympic Gold Medal, 2014 World Cup Runner-up, 1 Copa America Runner-up.
2008
ANDERSON
Club (at time of winning): Manchester United
Position: Midfielder
Age: 20 then, 27 now
So I’m not really sure what happened this year. Maybe the pre-vote party got a bit heavy, maybe the England representative took the other lads out for a Nando’s, things got extra cheeky and they agreed to vote for Anderson “for the bants”. Whatever the events that led to him winning the award it seems Anderson is the only player on the list whose career didn’t quite pan out as planned. Or that’s what you’d think. Believe it or not in terms of silverware, Anderson is the second most successful Golden Boy winner of all time. Just take a moment to think about that.
In a way I’m being hard on Anderson, when he won the award in 2008 he was one of the hottest and most exciting prospects in world football and was rightfully recognised for that. Anderson was fantastic for Brazil U17s; picking up the Golden Ball at the 2005 World Championship and this exceptional form is probably what helped him secure a £20 million move to Manchester United in 2007. Yet somewhere along the way something went wrong. Brought in as replacement for Keane and Scholes, during his time at United Anderson struggled to keep a grip of both the central midfield spot and his waistline. Injury and off the field insubordination left Anderson in the footballing wilderness, with United eventually washing their hands of him, taking a loss as Anderson left for Inter Internacional on a free transfer in January 2015. Sadly there doesn’t seem to be a second coming on the cards for Anderson, on his Internacional debut he missed a penalty and was substituted after only 36 minutes into his second game, uninjured but still requiring an oxygen mask.
  • 261 career appearances, 21 goals (0.08 goals per game)
  • 181 Manchester United appearances, 9 goals
  • 8 Brazil caps, 0 goals.
  • Career silverware: 4 Premier League titles, 2 League Cups, 2 Community Shields, 1 Champions League, 1 Club World Cup, 2 Primeira Liga titles, 1 Taca de Portugal, 1 Supertaca Candido de Oliveira, 1 Campeonato Gaucho, 1 Campeonato Brasileiro Serie B title, 1 2008 Olympics Bronze Medal, 1 Copa America.
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Dele Alli wins PFA Young Player of the Year - YouTube Jess Carter wins PFA Young Player of the Year - YouTube Trent Alexander-Arnold Accepts PFA Young Player Of The ... Lauren Hemp wins PFA young player of the Year award for ...

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