Ole Gunnar Solskjaer Appointed Manchester United Manager

Manchester
United have appointed Ole Gunnar Solskjaer as permanent manager on a three-year
contract.
The
Norwegian, 46, arrived at Old Trafford on an interim basis in December to
replace Jose Mourinho.
Solskjaer
spent 11 seasons as a United player, scoring the winning goal in the 1999
Champions League final.
"This
is the job that I always dreamed of doing and I'm beyond excited to have the
chance to lead the club long term," Solskjaer said.
"From
the first day I arrived, I felt at home at this special club. It was an honour
to be a Manchester United player, and then to start my coaching career here.
"The last
few months have been a fantastic experience."
When
Solskjaer took charge, United were sixth in the Premier League and 11 points
off the top four.
But they
have lost only once in 13 league games since - at Arsenal this month - and are
now two points behind the London club, who occupy the final Champions League
qualifying spot.
Executive
vice-chairman Ed Woodward said Solskjaer's appointment was "richly
deserved".
"Since
coming in as caretaker manager in December, the results Ole has delivered speak
for themselves," he said.
"More
than just performances and results, Ole brings a wealth of experience, both as
a player and as a coach, coupled with a desire to give young players their
chance and a deep understanding of the culture of the club."
Solskjaer
became the first United manager to win his first six league games, beating a
record held by Sir Matt Busby.
United
reached the quarter-finals of the Champions League for the first time since
2014 when they overturned a 2-0 first-leg deficit thanks to a stoppage-time
penalty at Paris St-Germain this month.
Solskjaer's
assistant Mike Phelan still has a contract with Central Coast Mariners in
Australia, although it is anticipated he will also stay on at Old Trafford.
Solskjaer is
United's fourth permanent manager since Sir Alex Ferguson retired in 2013.
Ferguson led
the club to their 20th top-flight title and David Moyes was earmarked as the
Scot's long-term successor. He was awarded a six-year contract but was sacked
in his first season.

Former
Netherlands and Barcelona boss Louis van Gaal left after two seasons in charge
despite winning the FA Cup in his final game.
Mourinho
delivered League Cup and Europa League success in his first season, and a
Premier League runners-up spot in his second.
This season,
United's points tally was closer to the bottom of the league than the top, when
Solskjaer - who started his coaching career as reserve team boss at Old
Trafford - returned.
The team had
scored only 29 goals in their opening 17 Premier League fixtures under Mourinho
while also conceding 29, with many fans critical of the Portuguese's style of
football.
A thumping
5-1 victory in Solskjaer's first match at Cardiff - where he was relegated from
the Premier League during an eight-month spell as manager in 2014 - immediately
raised morale.
That was
swiftly followed by victories at Tottenham, Arsenal and Chelsea with a return
to a more attacking style of play.
"Over a
few short months fans have witnessed a turnaround that even the most optimistic
could not have predicted," read a Manchester United Supporters' Trust
statement.
Solskjaer
was manager of Molde when he returned to United on a temporary deal.
The
Norwegian club, whose season had finished, said Solskjaer agreed a new
three-year deal with them in December and they were only
"lending" their manager to United.
However,
that story has since been removed from the club's website and this month
Solskjaer said his deal with Molde had expired.
United are
expected to make a "gesture of goodwill" to Molde in the form of a
payment and a possible future friendly fixture.
Even Ole
Gunnar Solskjaer must be stunned at the speed with which he has gone from
interested observer on the travails of Manchester United to the man in the
manager's hot seat.
By doing
what comes naturally, he has brought a sense of calm to United after the chaos
of Jose Mourinho's latter days.
Solskjaer
has shown tactical acumen, he has made key decisions, shown faith in Paul
Pogba, eased Alexis Sanchez to the fringes, sold Marouane Fellaini and ended
the internal conflict Mourinho seemed to revel in. Most importantly, he has got
results.
It has given
Solskjaer a proper shot at his dream job. Yet, in abandoning their stated aim
to wait until the summer, United have left unanswered some fairly key
questions.
Firstly, can
Solskjaer finish this season's job? Can he, either through a top-four finish or
winning this season's competition, steer United back into the Champions League,
something that looked impossible when he took over and they were 11 points
adrift?
What has
happened to the technical director idea that the club were so keen to push in
the wake of Mourinho's dismissal, without which many people - including Louis
van Gaal - feel any United manager, including Solskjaer, will struggle?
Will
big-name players want to sign for Solskjaer, as they did for Van Gaal and
Mourinho?
These
questions will be answered in the fullness of time and are key to Manchester
United becoming a force in the English game again.
For now,
Solskjaer deserves huge congratulations at landing himself a job virtually
everyone felt would be Mauricio Pochettino's in the immediate aftermath of
Mourinho's exit.
FROM .bbc.com/sport/football/
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