£89m price tag won’t faze Pogba
Rio Ferdinand is confident Paul Pogba will cope with the pressure of his world record transfer fee after completing his move to Man United.
|||London - Rio Ferdinand is confident Paul Pogba will cope with the pressure of his world record transfer fee after completing his move to Manchester United.
United spent £89million to bring the France midfielder back to the club from Juventus, and his former teammate Ferdinand believes the France international can handle the pressure.
“Paul is a huge talent and someone with the personality to handle that price tag,” Ferdinand told the BBC.
“Paul’s character means he will deal with being such a big investment, so that won’t be a problem.
“He will relish the responsibility on his shoulders of bringing medals and trophies to the club,” he added. “That won’t faze him at all.”
United have paid for allowing Pogba to leave for Juve in 2012, but Ferdinand is confident the 23-year-old can make up for lost time.
“It was a mistake to let him leave but bringing him back is a statement of intent,” added the former England central defender who joined United for a then British record fee of £29.1m in 2002.
“He is going to be a top player for years to come and he will make a big difference to United’s title chances.”
Pogba has rejoined United on a five-year contract, with the option to extend for a further year.
The £89m fee eclipses the E100m Real Madrid paid for Welshman Gareth Bale from Tottenham Hotspur in 2013.
“I am delighted to rejoin United. It has always been a club with a special place in my heart and I am really looking forward to working with (manager) Jose Mourinho,” Pogba said in a statement on United’s official wesbite.
“I have thoroughly enjoyed my time at Juventus and have some fantastic memories of a great club with players that I count as friends. But I feel the time is right to go back to Old Trafford.
“I always enjoyed playing in front of the fans and can’t wait to make my contribution to the team. This is the right club for me to achieve everything I hope to in the game.”
Pogba is the latest of Mourinho’s new signings following defender Eric Bailly, striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic and midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan as the Portuguese coach revamps the under-performing squad he inherited from Louis van Gaal.
“Paul is one of the best players in the world and will be a key part of the United team I want to build here for the future,” added Mourinho. “He is quick, strong, scores goals and reads the game better than many players much older than he is.
“At 23, he has the chance to make that position his own here over many years. He is young and will continue to improve; he has the chance to be at the heart of this club for the next decade and beyond.”
The France midfielder, whose strength and range of passing should allow United to play a more expansive game than the limited style adopted by Dutchman Van Gaal, has been hot property during the off-season with Real Madrid also hovering.
“Everyone is interested in Pogba. He is a great footballer and when you are Madrid you always want the best,” Real coach Zinedine Zidane had said before United wrapped up the deal for a player who scored 34 goals in 178 games for Juventus.
Pogba joined Juve in 2012, having come through Le Havre’s youth system before moving to United’s academy in 2009.
He won four Serie A titles and two Coppa Italia trophies in a successful spell with the Turin club but was criticised after failing to shine in the 2015 Champions League final defeat by Barcelona and France’s Euro 2016 loss to Portugal on home soil.
Pogba had signed for United on a three-year deal with a one-year renewal option which then United manager Sir Alex Ferguson was keen to activate but the 18-year-old was frustrated by a lack of first-team opportunities at the club and decided to leave.
The Frenchman made just seven first-team appearances for United, all off the bench. “Ferguson came to my place. We talked. It did make me think. He wanted to keep me, but I’d made my decision to leave,” Pogba has said.
He will now be reacquainted with Ferguson, who is a global ambassador at the club, but will take his orders from the uncompromising Mourinho who will demand a significant return on the club’s world record investment in the Frenchman. United have not challenged strongly for the Premier League title since Ferguson led them to the trophy in 2013.
Reuters