Erik ten Hag said friends tried to talk him out of taking over as Manchester United manager because they thought he faced an “impossible job”.
The Dutchman left Ajax to take over at Old Trafford in 2022 and has been under pressure in his second season.
Ten Hag told fanzine United We Stand
he was warned how tough life would be.
“Everyone was telling me ‘You can’t succeed in that job’. They said it was impossible. Me? I wanted the challenge,” the 53-year-old said.
In his first season in English football, former Bayern Munich youth boss Ten Hag ended United’s six-year wait for a trophy when they beat Newcastle in the EFL Cup final.
However, the Red Devils are way off the pace of leaders Arsenal in the Premier League table and are bottom of their Uefa Champions League group with one match left to play.
They have not seriously challenged for the Premier League or the Champions League since Sir Alex Ferguson’s retirement in 2013.
Ten Hag is the sixth man – after David Moyes, Louis van Gaal, Jose Mourinho, Ole Gunnar Solskjaer and Ralf Rangnick – to try to bring success back to the club.
“I knew it wouldn’t be easy, but it was such a great club with such a great fanbase,” Ten Hag added.
“People love Man Utd, or they are against Man Utd. I like clubs like this. Ajax was like this.”
United’s 2-1 victory over Chelsea on Wednesday has provided Ten Hag with some respite from the increasing pressure he is facing.
He denied earlier this week there were rifts in his squad, although, evidently, Jadon Sancho’s continuing exile means there is at least one player with whom the Dutchman has no working relationship.
However, despite the financial impact of freezing out a player who cost United £74m when they bought him from Borussia Dortmund in 2021, Ten Hag insisted he stands by his treatment of the England international.
With an announcement about Sir Jim Ratcliffe’s INEOS Group purchasing a 25% stake in the club believed to be imminent, fresh impetus could be around the corner for the Red Devils.
But the deal is unlikely to be concluded quickly enough to have a significant impact on the club’s January transfer window spending, and Ten Hag doesn’t expect to do much business.
“I don’t think [we will spend a lot],” he said.
“As a club, you have to look for improvements, so if you can find better and it’s realistic financially and with Financial Fair Play, the club has to go with it.
“But most of the time you don’t attract the best players in the winter.”
Brailsford and Blanc take Old Trafford fact-finding mission
Sir Dave Brailsford and Jean-Claude Blanc visited Old Trafford on Thursday on a fact-finding mission for Sir Jim Ratcliffe’s Ineos group ahead of a part-purchase of Manchester United.
Brailsford and Blanc will play major roles in United’s new executive structure once the deal is concluded.
Ratcliffe’s £1.25bn purchase of 25% of the club remains incomplete and won’t be finalised next week.
But it is understood there are no significant issues impeding the agreement.
Brailsford and Blanc made a similar visit to Old Trafford in March.
On this occasion, interim chief executive Patrick Stewart met the pair, along with football director John Murtough.
Ineos director of sport Brailsford is best known for having led the revival of British cycling.
Former Juventus and Paris St-Germain executive Blanc joined Ineos in 2022 as chief executive of its sports division
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