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Juventus is reportedly pushing to sign Manchester United's Manuel Ugarte this summer as he nears an exit from the club. The 25-year-old midfielder is among several players Manchester United plans to offload.
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Report: Serie A giants pushing to sign Manchester United star this summer
Credit to SportsBoom for the original reporting, which paints a familiar picture of a modern transfer cycle, one where promise, price tag, and practicality rarely align for long. In this case, Manuel Ugarte appears set to move on from Manchester United after a brief and uneven stay, with Juventus leading the race for his signature.
At 25, Ugarte should be entering his peak years. Yet, as SportsBoom notes, “the defensive midfielder, 25, is one of a group of players Manchester United are looking to offload at the end of the season.” That phrasing alone speaks volumes about where he sits in the club’s current hierarchy.
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There is a sense of inevitability about Ugarte’s preference for Serie A. According to SportsBoom, “sources close to the player have told SportsBoom that the player would prefer a move to Italy.” It feels like a natural recalibration rather than a step down.
Manuel Ugarte is leaving Manchester United due to his limited role and the club's intention to offload several players at the end of the season.
Juventus is leading the race to sign Manuel Ugarte as he prepares to exit Manchester United.
Manuel Ugarte is 25 years old and plays as a defensive midfielder.
Ugarte's potential transfer signifies Manchester United's ongoing efforts to restructure their squad by offloading underperforming players.
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Italian football, with its emphasis on positional discipline and defensive intelligence, often provides a more forgiving landscape for players whose strengths lie in anticipation and ball recovery. Ugarte’s profile, industrious, combative, tactically aware, aligns neatly with that tradition.
Juventus, still searching for stability after a turbulent period, see him as part of a rebuild. “Juventus have earmarked the former Paris St Germain midfielder as one of their man targets,” SportsBoom reports, with Luciano Spalletti described as “a big admirer of the player.” That endorsement matters.
Interest is not limited to Italy. Newcastle United and Tottenham Hotspur are both monitoring the situation, while Galatasaray offer a different kind of appeal, namely European football.
Still, the pull of Juventus appears decisive. As SportsBoom puts it, “he seemingly has his heart set on Juve who still have strong pulling power despite their struggles in recent times.” Reputation lingers, even when results falter.
Ugarte’s career has been anything but static. From Sporting CP to Paris Saint-Germain, and then to Manchester, each move has carried expectation and escalating fees.
“His performances at Sporting earned him a five-year deal at PSG, who splashed out €60million on the player,” SportsBoom notes. That trajectory continued with a €50million switch to United, a move that now feels like a pivot rather than a destination.
Manchester United, meanwhile, are already planning ahead, with links to Mateus Fernandes suggesting a broader midfield reset alongside Bruno Fernandes.
In truth, Ugarte’s departure feels less like failure and more like misalignment. “The league suits his attributes as a ball-winning midfielder,” SportsBoom writes of Serie A. Sometimes, the simplest explanation is the correct one.
From a Manchester United perspective, this report raises more questions than it answers. Ugarte arrived with a clear identity, aggressive, energetic, and capable of shielding a defence that has often looked exposed. Yet, his potential exit suggests that identity was never fully integrated.
A curious United supporter might ask why a player suited to transitional football has struggled in a side that frequently finds itself in transition. There is a disconnect somewhere, either tactical or structural.
If Juventus truly believe in Ugarte, then it reflects well on his underlying qualities. Italian clubs are rarely sentimental in recruitment. They identify function first. That should concern United fans slightly. Are they discarding a player who simply needed a more coherent system?
The reported interest in Mateus Fernandes hints at stylistic change. Perhaps United want more control, more technical security in midfield. Yet, without balance, that risks repeating the same cycle.
Ultimately, if Ugarte thrives in Turin, it will not be surprising. It will simply underline a recurring issue at Old Trafford, recruitment without clear tactical alignment.