Ryan Giggs hails Manchester United's reputation for giving kids a chance

Sport360 staff 21:25 19/07/2017
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  • Ryan Giggs believes Manchester United’s reputation for giving kids a chance has helped the club’s academy become the biggest producer of Premier League talent.

    A study conducted by Press Association Sport found that United’s academy graduates last season racked up more top-flight minutes than players coming from any other system across the world.

    There were 34 players who emerged from United’s youth ranks and featured in the Premier League last season, including Red Devils regulars Paul Pogba, Marcus Rashford and Jesse Lingard, as well as West Brom captain Darren Fletcher, Burnley pair Tom Heaton and Michael Keane and Leicester duo Danny Drinkwater and Danny Simpson.

    Manchester United's English midfielder Jesse Lingard (L), Manchester United's French midfielder Paul Pogba (C), and Manchester United's English striker Marcus Rashford attend a training session at their Carrington base in Manchester, northwest England, on February 15, 2017, on the eve of their UEFA Europa League Round of 32 first-leg football match against Saint-Etienne on February 16. / AFP / Oli SCARFF (Photo credit should read OLI SCARFF/AFP/Getty Images)

    Giggs, 43, was another who graduated from the same set-up around the time David Beckham, Paul Scholes, Nicky Butt and Gary and Phil Neville came through under Sir Alex Ferguson’s watch too.

    And the Premier League’s all-time record appearance holder believes United’s long-standing willingness to put faith in their own is what sets them apart.

    “I think you have to go back to when Sir Alex first joined the club and overhauled the whole youth system,” the Welshman told Press Association Sport.

    “He made sure there was a pathway for young, local players to get into the first team. From then on the youth system and that pathway to the first team has just got stronger and stronger, so when parents are picking a team for their son to go to and they want them to get to the first team, they pick United because you’ve seen over the years Man United give young players a chance.”

    “Then there is the coaching, the way they are looked after, the way first-team players look after the young players coming into the team. There’s a number of reasons, but I think you have to go back 30 years ago to when it all started.”

    In all United’s academy graduates accumulated 44,055 minutes in the Premier League last term, more than double the amount any other club accounted for, with Tottenham the next biggest contributors with 19,995 minutes.

    Giggs, promoting the People’s Award for the 2017 McDonald’s Community Awards, was a one-club man who enjoyed a decorated career at Old Trafford, but many of those professionals who departed, such as Fletcher, Keane and Drinkwater, have still enjoyed fruitful spells elsewhere following their United education.

    “When a coach is looking to sign a young player – and I know this from experience of ex-team-mates who have gone on to manage – they know what the players have been through (at United), the training, the grounding, what they have learned on and off the pitch,” Giggs explained.

    “It’s a no-brainer if they’ve got ability, which most of them have, to pick a United player. You know their pedigree, you know what you are going to get, you know how they’ve been coached, that they know how to play football the right way.”

    “And of course there’s that bit of, ‘All right, I’ll show United they shouldn’t have let me go’, which is what you want. (It’s) not sulking, but saying, ‘I’ll show them what they are missing’.”

    “It’s great to see. As a club you take pride in that; okay they’ve not made it at United, but they’ve still gone away and made successful careers for themselves.”

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