Amorim Issues Stark Warning After Manchester United’s Dismal Defeat To West Ham.
Ruben Amorim delivered a sobering assessment of Manchester United’s dire situation following a 2-0 defeat to West Ham United at Old Trafford on 11 May 2025, admitting he would step aside if the club’s woeful league form persists into next season. The loss, against a West Ham side that had not won in their previous eight matches, marked another low in United’s calamitous campaign, with the Red Devils languishing in 16th place in the Premier League.
The Portuguese manager did not mince words, warning that the club risks losing its aura as a footballing giant. “We are losing the feeling that we are a massive club, and it’s the end of the world to lose a game at home,” Amorim told reporters. “If we are not scared of losing a game as Manchester United and don’t have that fear anymore, it is the most dangerous thing a big club can have.”
United’s form has been nothing short of catastrophic since 26 January, with only relegated Ipswich Town and Leicester City falling to them in the league. Their current seven-game winless streak matches the club’s worst-ever Premier League run, and with just 39 points from 37 matches, they are on course for their lowest points tally in a top-flight season since the 1930-31 relegation campaign. Only Europa League final opponents Tottenham and the three relegated sides sit below them in the table.
Amorim, visibly exasperated, called for a profound cultural overhaul at the club. “Everybody here has to think seriously about a lot of things,” he said. “Everybody is thinking about the [Europa League] final. The final is not the issue. We have bigger things to think about. I’m talking about myself and the culture in the club and the culture in the team. We need to change that.”
Describing the moment as “decisive” in United’s history, Amorim urged the club to be “really strong in the summer and to be brave” to avoid a repeat of this season’s failures. He added, “If we start like this, if the feeling is still here, we should give the space to different people.” The stark admission echoes Ralf Rangnick’s 2021 warning of the need for “major surgery” at Old Trafford, a call that has gone unheeded in the years since Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s sacking.
The 39-year-old manager confessed to feeling “embarrassed” by United’s plight, knowing that even a potential Europa League triumph against Tottenham in Bilbao on 21 May will not mask the deeper issues. With the club teetering on the brink of its worst league finish in nearly a century, Amorim’s candid reflection underscores the urgency for sweeping changes to restore Manchester United’s faded glory.
As the summer looms, all eyes will be on the club’s hierarchy to heed Amorim’s call for courage and transformation—or risk further decline for one of football’s most storied institutions.

