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AI predicts post-apocalyptic Old Trafford if Sir Jim Ratcliffe fails to fix Man Utd problems in time

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OLD TRAFFORD could become more suitable for zombies than Red Devils within just two decades.

That’s the post-apocalyptic vision predicted by AI images – unless Manchester United fix all their creaky, leaky stadium problems.

OLD TRAFFORD AI
Man Utd’s stadium could get a scary look without a revamp[/caption]
OLD TRAFFORD AI
Images of a famous venue can’t get much more bleak than this[/caption]
OLD TRAFFORD AI
This future vision might help spark United into urgent action[/caption]

Luckily, United’s minority owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe has identified the issue as a vital part of his plans for a massive revamp on and off the pitch.

But the “Old Trafford falls” – the taunting new moniker for the club’s sieve-like roof – has symbolized the Red Devils’ plight this season.

“You must be soaking” might be another way of expressing the damp squib of a campaign for Erik ten Hag‘s squad.

And Arsenal fans chanted “Old Trafford is falling down” as the Gunners triumphed 1-0 in a stormy deluge last Sunday – with water cascading through the roof at what could now be called the Theatre of Streams.

AI’s doom-laden vision of how the country’s second-largest stadium could look in the mid-2040s is the worst case scenario – and surely unlikely.

Nonetheless, the images are another alert for Ratcliffe of how dramatic, expensive – and arguably urgent – the refurbishment must be.

The pictures look like scenes from a horror movie – perhaps to be titled “The Night of the Living Red”.

Despair and disrepair dominate the gloomy representation of a do-nothing nightmare future.

PA
Here’s how it looked after a soggy Sunday in the Prem vs Arsenal[/caption]
PA
Gunners’ supporters taunted United when this leak erupted[/caption]

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The patchy roof has gone to rack and ruin in the desolate depiction, and the pitch is littered with debris.

Meanwhile, the surroundings of the stadium look more like a bleak industrial site than the setting for one of football’s most grandiose venues.

However, before any stadium re-build, Ineos CEO Ratcliffe and United’s new board must decide whether to keep under-fire manager Ten Hag.

So for now the priority is sorting out the reign rather than the rain.

Rex
United’s short-term priority might be deciding Erik ten Hag’s future[/caption]