Paul Pogba says he “didn’t see the club going upwards” at the time he truly wanted to leave Manchester United

By HM
3 Min Read
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Paul Pogba shared his desire to depart from Manchester United in 2019 due to his concerns about the club’s trajectory and lack of upward progress.

The French national amicably departed Old Trafford without any transfer fees during the summer of 2022, six years after his return for a then-world record £89 million fee.

Paul Pogba says he “didn’t see the club going upwards” at the time he truly wanted to leave Manchester United

Pogba considers the 2018-19 season, during which he emerged as Manchester United’s highest goal scorer, to be his most successful tenure with the club. Despite the positive atmosphere surrounding the new leadership of Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, who succeeded Jose Mourinho, Mr. Pogba expressed his desire to depart.

The midfielder, 31, has bared his soul in a warts-and-all exclusive interview with Mail Sport’s Sami Mokbel, his first with a UK newspaper since his football ban was reduced.  

‘I will tell you something I’ve never told anyone,’ Pogba teases.

‘The year Jose went and Ole came, it was my best season at United but after the last game I told Ole and Ed Woodward that I thought it was my last year and that I wanted to leave.

‘I was 27 back then, it didn’t work out the way I wanted. I gave my best but I didn’t see the club going upwards.

‘Manchester City and Liverpool were better than us and they were improving. Ole said yes (to me leaving) and that he would talk to Ed.

‘My head was already that I wanted to go but I came back for pre-season because I wanted to be professional.

‘I spoke to Ed to try to make a move but he blocked it. I didn’t want to play for United anymore but I had to be professional.

‘Mentally I wasn’t there and then I got the injuries.’

He went on to join Juventus once again, but only managed 12 appearances due to injury troubles before a failed drugs test in August 2023.

In February Pogba, then 30, was slapped with a four-year ban from football after failing a drugs test in August 2023 – potentially a career-ender. 

He tested positive for testosterone after Juventus’s first game of the 2023-24 season against Udinese, and was given his hefty punishment by an anti-doping prosecutor’s office in Italy.

However, the Court of Arbitration for Sport earlier this month reduced his ban to 18 months after an appeal, meaning he can play again in March 2025, with training permitted from January.

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