It has not always been an easy campaign for James Wilson. Strange words for a player nominally behind Wayne Rooney, Robin van Persie and Radamel Falcao in Manchester United’s pecking order. Yet, while the Biddulph-born striker forced his way into manager Louis van Gaal’s thinking during the summer, Wilson has scored just once in the United first team this season.
It is a record that has supporters wondering if the 19-year-old’s promotion came a season too soon or whether Saturday’s strike at Queens Park Rangers is the start of something special. No strangers to both the glory of callow youth and failure of inexperience, Old Trafford regulars understand better than most that Wilson’s career could yet go either way.
While the teenager has all the tools to make a genuine impact at United – not least because none of Van Gaal’s forwards are assured of a long-term place up-front – Wilson still has a limited window in which to impress. Danny Welbeck’s departure to Arsenal last summer serves as a warning if nothing else: the Dutchman has little appetite for a water-carrying local hero.
After all, the strike was Wilson’s first goal in 12 appearances this season, albeit with only three games coming as a starter. Nor do the teenager’s key statistics obviously support Van Gaal’s decision to offer Wilson an integral role in his squad. That single goal has come from just six shots taken across 10 Premier League games, while he has misplaced one in three passes. The pacey youngster, known for his ability to carry the ball with tight control at reserve level, has dribbled just 12 times this season and averages close to one miscontrol per match, for whatever those datapoints are worth.
Yet, Wilson’s well-taken goal at Loftus Road potentially says more for the striker’s natural instincts than any data from a limited sample – and perhaps something about his long-term future at United too. Wilson’s ability to cut inside Nedum Onuoha on the run and then, after seeing his snapshot saved, react first to the rebound and slide home was both explosive and composed. Everything that regular observers of United’s academy and under-21 sides will recognise in the player.
Perhaps more importantly the goal proffers the player not only confidence, but a modicum of validation in the faith that Van Gaal has placed in an inexperienced teenager.
“I’ve been struggling for my first goal this season off the back end of last season,” Wilson told MUTV in the aftermath of United’s 2-0 victory at Loftus Road.
“It gives me great confidence and hopefully I can take it into the next game and the rest of the season. Walking into the dressing room everyone was congratulating me and making me feel really good and welcome.”
If Wilson echoes the sentiments of a starstruck youngster then it is, perhaps, a sign of the slow maturation of a player associated with the club for 12 years. The midlander first linked up with United as a seven-year-old, appearing at multiple age groups before making his first team début against Hull City under Ryan Giggs’ temporary stewardship last season. Two strikes against the Tigers promised a bright future even if the anticipated goals have yet to arrive.
Indeed, the player has scored goals at almost every level for the club, including five in one game against Newcastle United under-18s last season and seven in nine games as United’s youngsters reached the 2014/15 Under-21 Premier League final.
Given Falcao’s continuing search for goals and Van Persie’s 18-month-long sabbatical from anything approach his best form, Wilson’s goal at weekend is potentially well timed. The Dutchman has eight goals in 20 games across all competitions, only rarely touching on the form that brought 30 in the 2012/13 campaign. Meanwhile, Falcao’s three strikes this season have come in 14 games; not the return expected of a player who will cost United £43 million should he join from AS Monaco.
With Rooney now seemingly permanently consigned to midfield it is now Wilson’s role to put pressure on his more illustrious colleagues – a challenge Saturday’s goal meets, at least in part.
Still, there is room for improvement in the youngster’s game – not least the subtleties of when to break forward, when to run the channels and the moments in the game when support is required from deep. Nor has Wilson’s finishing always pleased his manager, with Van Gaal calling out one miss against Stoke City at Old Trafford that almost cost United victory. Advice imparted by the veteran coach is advice that Wilson is expected to take on board.
“He just told me to stay onside, because there were a few instances where I’ve been offside,” Wilson said of Van Gaal’s instructions on Saturday. “Stay onside, be patient, hold your run and beat them for pace. That’s pretty much what I did for my goal.”
Aside from Saturday’s goal Van Gaal will have been impressed with the player’s all-round attacking contribution in a 37 minute cameo. Twice the youngster almost found Falcao with crosses whipped into the penalty area, while the player’s movement unsettled a QPR defence that has conceded 39 goals this season.
Progress, however measured, will come at a price for United – the player’s contract, which was last updated in 2012, is due to expire this summer. Wilson joins fellow youngsters Patrick McNair and Andreas Pereira in potentially leaving the club in June. After the debacle over Paul Pogba’s move to Juventus in 2012 Old Trafford’s hierarchy will presumably not to take the situation as lightly.
For the moment Wilson continues to make steady if unspectacular progress at United. That Van Gaal has not considered a loan move for the player who has, in truth, just 311 Premier League minutes to his name this season says something. In part about Wilson’s potential, but also of the unconvincing campaign enjoyed by United’s star trio of Falcao, Rooney and Van Persie. It is almost £100 million worth of striking talent that boasts 19 Premier League goals between them this season. That’s just two more than Chelsea’s summer signing Diego Costa.
That’s a data point for Wilson to remember. One reason he remains in Van Gaal’s thoughts despite the limited goal haul over the past few months.
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Great to see Wilson get a goal and keep himself in the frame for selection. I would like to see him start a game with Falcao. For all his misfiring finishing, Falcao reads the game well and has got himself into decent goalscoring positions.The pace and movement of Wilson linked with Falcao’s eye for a chance could produce a successful partnership. It’s definitely worth a try especially since Van Persie has had a disappointing season, apart from a couple of good weeks in December.
More bad news on the injury front. Valencia is still fit.
I agree – a Wilson Falcao pairing upfront is worth a try. RvP has become even slower than normal and if LvG wants pace upfront its a bit of a problem if he’s included. Don’t know how RvP will take to that though.
As far as Valencia is concerned I though he was excellent in that wing back role on Saturday. He worked his socks off particularly in getting back to defend.
I’m not knocking Valencia’s defensive efforts, it’s in attack that he frustrates me greatly. He takes the ball in a static position, on goes the pause button and all options disappear. Gary Neville was a better crosser of a ball than is Valencia.
I feel sorry for our strikers. Except the first half of the Tottenham game, for a number of games, we have not been able to create enough chances from midfield for our strikers, and I blame that squarely on LvG’s insistence on 3-5-2. You could see the difference against QPR when we switched to 4-4-2…not only did we immediately score, but we started creating chances. Agreed, we let in more goals if we play diamond, but our win percentage also increases significantly. Falcao shows wonderful movement upfront, dragging defenders and works his socks off in a manner you don’t see with Van Persie any more. I would rather keep Falcao than RVP for next season.
Our critics point that after spending 150M+, we should be doing a lot better. LvG keeps arguably our best midfielder in Herrera on the bench, and plays Rooney and Mata in midfield, and Di Maria up front. We might not leak goals when we play 3-5-2 but we will not score either. You only have to look at the form of our rivals – Arsenal, Liverpool, Tottenham and Southampton are all fighting for the 3rd and 4th spot and they are playing much better football than United. Hopefully once Champions League and Europa League games start in Feb, their form in the PL will drop.
What will piss me most is if LvG starts 3-5-2 against Cambridge. You don’t need to play 3 CBs against a league two team. If LvG thinks 4-4-2 lacks balance, he should smell the coffee and realize playing 3-5-2 doesn’t provide the control that he wants his team to have, especially in midfield. If he wants to protect his defence and control the midfield, he can always play 2 defensive midfielders in Carrick and Blind in front of a back 4. But LvG seems to be stubborn, and refuses to acknowledge the lack of control, tempo or pace when we play with 3 at the back.
LvG should either train the players to show better balance when playing 4 at the back, or buy a world-class defender whom he can trust. If he still persists with 3-5-2, expect more insipid performances that bring back memories of the Moyes reign. I fear that might lead to his downfall, soon.
@Lucas_Mutd
Makes no sense
Great read! Looking forward to see what will become of young James Wilson.