Release date: Friday, August 7, 2020 3:32 a.m.
Manchester United academy director Nick Cox believes young people “have never been through such a complicated time” and are under pressure on the club’s duty to care to help players cope with the Covid-19 effect.
As the first team prepares to fly to Germany for the Europa League after finishing third in the Premier League, life is more dubious and troubling for those looking to progress through the ranks.
United’s under-23 team didn’t even know which department he would play in until Thursday, when they were promoted to PL2’s first trouble department according to the game after last season’s abrupt end.
The rope of the time of Neil Wood and the under-18s have only returned to training, while those on the youth team have not yet returned to the box while this complicated coronavirus was still in the form of coronavirus.
The academy director, Cox, is fully aware of the tension this places on young people, which has led United to be released by no player under the age of 19 due to the exclusive cases brought by the coronavirus situation.
“We made the decision, while other people were excluded, that it’s simply not fair to lose the youth of the program, and in fact, we have a role to play in the recovery,” he told the PA news agency.
“And I’m saying recovery lightly. There will be a recovery procedure here. People have been traumatized. Different people, other degrees of trauma.
“Some other people have not been too affected. Some other people have been through a difficult time.
“The football club has a duty to help and help young people what they have just experienced.
“They were at a disadvantage from social interaction, they didn’t hang out with their friends, their regime disappeared, their disposition disappeared.
“We have a task to do to say”hey, at the end of it all, come back with a smile on your face, play football, time with your friends ends.”
“So we had no way to free anyone in this age and we controlled to be consistent with that message for our younger professionals, or for anyone who hadn’t appeared as a senior.”
Even with players who have been released, United has provided them by inviting them to exercise and creating data packages to help them find a new club. In addition, cash was provided to several of them.
But for those still in the system, there are a variety of disorders to deal with as older teams improve their return and follow the “a little more relaxed” technique with younger ones.
“There’s no want to catch up because we didn’t miss anything because nobody played football,” Cox said. “We want to use football as a way for other people to recover.
“Come back, reconnect, go to your friends, have fun, make yourself smile, locate some normality, locate routine, exercise, some sun.
“And once we return to family territory, we can begin to think of”what will the world look like from now on? “From the point of view of football progression.
“But the reaction is slow and stable right now. I think we all have a duty to keep an eye on young people, who have never been through such a difficult time. Full closure. Yes,” he said.
Cox said the lockdown was an era of “crisis management” and to ensure that all ties to the club were monitored, with “football in the background,” as they placed “mental fitness on the most sensitive list of priorities.”
“Absolutely football on the agenda,” he said. “But the primacy of well-being, especially for our young players.
“We don’t bombard other people with regulated internal programmers, nor do”we do X amount of pressure,” we travel that distance “and “do those exercises.”
“We chose to be just a useful network for players and their families.
“To be there if they needed us, giving them data on a regular basis, offering them useful distractions, demanding situations they can interact with, responsibilities they could fulfill if they wanted to.
“And encourage them to be artistic and spend their time in a positive way in difficult times.”
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