Premier League
Roy Keane Slams Bruno Fernandes And Manchester United Over ‘Circus Act’ Behaviour
Roy Keane has launched a brutal attack on Bruno Fernandes and the Manchester United F.C. squad following their dramatic 3-2 victory over Nottingham Forest F.C..
The former United captain admitted he was “raging” after seeing players celebrate Fernandes’ assist milestone during the game, branding the entire situation a “circus act.”
Fernandes Equals Premier League Assist Record
During the thrilling encounter against Nottingham Forest, Fernandes registered his 20th Premier League assist of the season.
That achievement saw the Manchester United captain equal the long-standing single-season assist record previously held by Thierry Henry and Kevin De Bruyne.
While many fans and pundits praised the Portuguese playmaker’s creativity, Keane was far from impressed with how much attention was placed on the statistic.
“I Was Raging” — Keane Explodes
Speaking on The Overlap, Keane criticised both the players and the wider reaction surrounding Fernandes’ milestone.
“What I heard at United the weekend, honestly, I was raging with it,” Keane said.
“The whole chat about his assists, and players talking about assists. He got interviewed after the match and everyone was talking about his assists.”
The former midfielder was especially frustrated by comments from fellow pundit Gary Neville, who reportedly described Fernandes’ achievement as a “massive achievement.”
For Keane, the issue was not the record itself — but the mentality surrounding it.
Keane Questions Manchester United’s Mindset
Keane suggested the focus on individual statistics perfectly summed up what is wrong with the current Manchester United squad.
He criticised Fernandes for admitting he intentionally passed instead of shooting in order to create assists.
“Wow. How can a footballer’s mindset be going out to a match and be talking about some individual record?” Keane questioned.
According to the former captain, Manchester United players appeared more excited about assist numbers than the actual team performance.
“What About The Guy Who Scored?”
Keane also took issue with the way players rushed to celebrate Fernandes after the assist instead of acknowledging the goalscorer.
“I was cringing with all of them,” he added.
“All the players, when he got the assist, going to him — what about the guy who scored the goal?”
The Irishman warned that a team obsessed with individual recognition would struggle to win major trophies.
“He won’t be winning trophies, not with that mindset,” Keane stated.
Another Brutal Assessment From A United Legend
This is far from the first time Keane has publicly criticised Manchester United’s mentality in recent years.
The club legend has repeatedly questioned the leadership, standards, and mentality inside the dressing room since the club’s decline after the Sir Alex Ferguson era.
Despite the victory over Nottingham Forest, Keane believes the celebrations around Fernandes’ personal milestone exposed deeper issues within the squad.
His final verdict was ruthless:
“It’s mind-boggling. It’s a circus act.”
Want To Advertise With Us?
Contact: sales@ventolitemarketing.com
-
Local News2 days agoGroup Queries NFF Credibility, Neutrality On Federation Cup
-
Local News3 days agoAjide/APC Unity Cup: Organisers Extend Registration Period As 125 Clubs Already Registered
-
Local News1 day agoVI Foot Ijora, Fortune FA Set for JOF U-13 Cup Final Showdown
-
Transfers11 hours agoCristian Romero to Manchester United? Red Devils preparing ambitious move for Tottenham captain
-
Transfers11 hours agoKieran Trippier joins Wolves on free transfer after Newcastle exit as Rob Edwards lands major summer signing
-
Transfers12 hours agoDarwin Nunez offered shock Liverpool return after Al-Hilal exit leaves striker available on free transfer
-
World Cup 202612 hours agoKylian Mbappe insists he’s ‘saving’ goals for World Cup as Michael Olise steals spotlight with hat-trick for France
-
World Cup 202612 hours agoTop referee denied entry to USA and set to miss World Cup in stunning immigration controversy