DORTMUND, Germany -- Jadon Sancho was a man alone during a miserable autumn in Manchester. Ostracised by Manchester United manager Erik ten Hag and forced to train, eat and change away from his teammates, sometimes taking his lunch break in his car, the €85 million signing was left wondering where his once-glittering career was headed. Six months later, he is 90 minutes away from winning the UEFA Champions League with Borussia Dortmund.
Life can come at you pretty fast, and Sancho's story of sporting redemption is already complete, regardless of whether he walks off the Wembley pitch on Saturday with a winners' medal following Dortmund's clash with Real Madrid. Win or lose, Sancho has emerged from the toughest period of his career with his reputation as a talented, game-changing winger restored.
But for four months, Sancho was a nobody at United. His reaction to being dropped by Ten Hag for a Premier League game at Arsenal as a consequence of what the manager deemed to be unsatisfactory performances in training was to post a message on his X account saying the comments were "completely untrue."
Ten Hag demanded a public apology, which Sancho refused to give, and although he deleted his X post 10 days later, the damage was done, and the two men held firm in their respective positions through Sancho's departure to Dortmund, who he had left for United in an €85m transfer in 2021, on a six-month loan in January.
Dortmund have witnessed Sancho's rebirth. His return of three goals and three assists in 20 Bundesliga and Champions League games does not paint the full picture of his importance to Edin Terzic's team on their path to Saturday's final. Anyone who witnessed his performance in the first leg of the semifinal against Paris Saint-Germain would attest to Sancho's impact.
That night, he completed 11 take-ons (aka "direct runs past a defender"), which was the most recorded in any Champions League game since Lionel Messi for Barcelona against United in 2008. After the game, Dortmund's official X account posted about Sancho, "You all owe him an apology, we were ALWAYS familiar with his game."
But does he have one more stellar performance in his locker this season? Can Sancho use the biggest club game in world football to show United, and Ten Hag, what they are missing?
"He made the decision a couple of years ago to leave us and he thought it would be a step to help him win the Champions League trophy," Dortmund coach Terzic said. "And now he is back and he is as close as possible to win it. We are now on a mission to fulfill our dreams. Jadon wants to fulfill his dream of lifting the Champions League trophy and hopefully, we can give him that support."
Sancho has often been a challenging character for clubs and coaches throughout his career. Ten Hag was not the first coach to encounter Sancho's uncompromising streak, with Pep Guardiola and Gareth Southgate also having to address disciplinary issues over the years. Guardiola sanctioned Sancho's move from Manchester City to Dortmund in 2017 because he "didn't want to take this challenge" of proving himself at the Etihad Stadium, while Sancho's poor time-keeping was one factor in Southgate's decision to omit him from the senior England squad.
A United source has told ESPN that Sancho is a "good kid, but unbelievably stubborn" and it is that stubbornness -- framed as a refusal to compromise if he believes he has been wronged -- that defines Sancho, who attributes much of his personality and mentality to his upbringing and early years playing cage football (on small, wire-fenced pitches) in the tough Kennington district of south London.
"I know I've taken a different route to where I am now from most of the other players, but it's what helped make me," Sancho told the Football Association in 2021. "I never had a club or anything like that, it was just cage football at the start and at weekends there might've been a tournament at a local park.
"I just used to have fun, being free and having no rules. There'd be me and my boys from one estate and we'd play the boys from another estate and there'd be a rivalry.
"There's a lot of people who play street football, but it's the progression as you get older and more rules come into play. I wouldn't say it becomes less fun, but it becomes more strict which might affect people."
That sense of Sancho being a kid at heart, who loves the fun of the game and struggles to embrace the rigidity and demands of the professional sport, is a real one. Sources have told ESPN that he is "very shy" around non-playing staff, albeit courteous and polite, and that he took time to settle at United after arriving from Dortmund. In late 2022, Sancho spent time away from the club, training in the Netherlands, due to what Ten Hag described as "physical and mental issues," while a source within the England camp have said that Sancho was also deeply affected by the reaction to his penalty shootout miss in England's Euro 2020 final defeat against Italy.
"He was hammered for that and Jadon, like Bukayo Saka and Marcus Rashford, suffered some horrendous racism within the social media abuse," the source told ESPN. "All three of them took time to get over it, but Jadon also had to factor in a big move from Dortmund to United at the same time and the pressure of his transfer fee at just 21 years old. He found it really hard to overcome all of that."
Sources also said that while Sancho is not a troublemaker or negative influence within the group of players, his habit of breaching minor rules can be an issue. Being late for training or team meetings has been a regular occurrence for club and country, while his aversion to fulfilling media duties has also irked teammates and officials. During Euro 2020, he was the only senior member of the England squad to refuse to speak to the media, even when nominated to do a news conference ahead of the second-round game against Germany, despite spending four years in the Bundesliga.
There were also infringements during his first spell at Dortmund, with then-coach Lucien Favre dropping Sancho for a game against Borussia Monchengladbach in 2019 as a "disciplinary measure" for returning late from international duty. But as Dortmund CEO Hans-Joachim Watzke said before his return from United in January, Sancho's shortcomings are the source of frustration rather than anything more serious.
"Jadon has no problem with discipline," Watzke said. "I don't know who thought that up. The lad has a bit of a problem with his internal clock and can be a bit late from time to time."
Ten Hag's disciplinarian approach at United proved to be less forgiving than Dortmund's, however. When the former Ajax coach was hired by United in the summer of 2022, one element of his remit was to impose greater discipline on a squad that had taken advantage of predecessor Ole Gunnar Solskjaer's light touch to management. Cristiano Ronaldo was censured twice by Ten Hag for breaching his disciplinary code before the Portugal forward's contract being cancelled by mutual consent in Nov. 2022, while Alejandro Garnacho and Rashford were dropped by the manager last season for turning up late for team meetings.
"Marcus was 30 seconds late for a meeting at Wolves away," a United source told ESPN. "These are the standards set and all the players agreed and bought into this."
One source said that Sancho's frustration with what he perceived to be unfair treatment by Ten Hag was rooted in a belief that his performances were being judged more harshly than those of some teammates signed during the manager's period in charge. His post on X was a combination of anger at Ten Hag's comments and at others being given more chances in the team despite struggling to justify their selection.
- Mark Ogden, Senior Writer, ESPN FC
No comments:
Post a Comment