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Monday 31 August 2015

Football: Anthony Martial is facing a baptism of fire at Manchester United

Forward follows Cristiano Ronaldo and Wayne Rooney as the latest talented teenager to arrive at Old Trafford but they had a safety net - he does not


Anthony Martial is facing a baptism of fire as a teenager at Manchester United Photo: AP

It is one those statistics which fades with memories of goals in Champions League finals and countless match-winning interventions, but Cristiano Ronaldo was only able to muster 15 goals in his first two seasons as a teenager at Manchester United.

Wayne Rooney, who marked his United debut as an 18-year-old with a Champions League hat-trick against Fenerbahce following his £27million arrival from Everton in 2004, performed somewhat better than Ronaldo, delivering 36 goals in his first two campaigns at Old Trafford.

But both encountered peaks and troughs during their early days at United, in terms of injury and development, and the same fate is likely to await Anthony Martial who, 11 years to the day since Rooney became the world’s most expensive teenager by signing for the club, now stands to claim that same distinction at United.

Anthony Martial will become the world's most expensive teenager

By moving to Old Trafford from Monaco for an initial £36million, the French youngster will arrive in Manchester bracing himself to encounter the same teenage teething troubles as his glorious predecessors, but without the safety net which helped accelerate Rooney and Ronaldo’s development.

Luke Shaw, the player who Martial will eclipse as football’s most expensive teenager, will attest to the difficulties that come with shouldering such a burden in such a pressurised environment as Manchester United.

With just 64 career appearances to his name, Martial is undoubtedly a rookie - unknown to an English audience one minute and a household name the next.

Anthony Martial - a fine prospect facing a lot of pressure

Ronaldo arrived in similar obscurity in August 2003 as a callow 17-year-old, with a £12.2million price-tag in a summer when David Beckham left for Real Madrid and attempts to land a superstar in Ronaldinho failed spectacularly.

His was an underwhelming signing, with many questioning United’s ambition and transfer strategy, and the same mood music is providing a backdrop to Martial’s arrival.

But while Ronaldo struggled for consistency during his early seasons at United, his progress was aided by the support network of team-mates such as Ruud van Nistelrooy, Paul Scholes, Ryan Giggs, Rio Ferdinand and Roy Keane

“Ronaldo wasn’t the finished article when he came here,” Ferdinand said. “He practiced all the time, sometimes taking a bag of balls out on his own after training.

“But we also made him realise that it was about contributing to the team with goals and assists. Still, by the time he left, he was a machine.”

Rooney, who was much further down the road to development than Ronaldo, still benefited from the presence of those senior statesmen alongside him.

Ronaldo was berated and praised in equal measure by team-mates, who urged the Portuguese winger to eradicate the diving, tricks and histrionics from his game, while Rooney was spared the pressure of having to win games on his own by the likes of Van Nistelrooy, Giggs and Scholes.

But who will play the senior roles when Martial requires guidance on or off the pitch and, with Rooney struggling for form, who will shield the French forward from the expectation that he delivers match-winning contributions from the off?

The team and players around them ensured Ronaldo and Rooney had time to develop into the crucial figures that they became - Ronaldo took three years to become the player that eventually prompted Real to come calling in 2009.

Cristiano Ronaldo was not an instant hit at United

Martial will not get that time and Louis van Gaal is also unable to play the long-game which Sir Alex Ferguson played with Ronaldo and Rooney.

He needs an instant return from Martial, just as he does from Memphis Depay, the 21-year-old Dutch winger whose raw talent requires time and patience for him to develop into another Ronaldo or Arjen Robben,

So it will require immense mental strength, as well as football ability, for Martial to make the impact that his new status as the world’s most expensive teenager will demand.

Shaw, compromised by injuries and fitness problems, endured a disastrous first season at United, with the England left-back only now beginning to show his best form.

Luke Shaw can attest to how hard it is for youngsters at United

Having been signed from Southampton, Shaw at least had a Premier League background to draw upon, but Martial will genuinely be heading into the unknown at Old Trafford.

And the space and time which he will need to grow may not be there. He will have to emulate Rooney and Ronaldo by doing it the hard way.

The Telegraph

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