Man Utd 'would be seen differently with Europa win'

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It was Manchester United captain Bruno Fernandes who stepped in to tell Ruben Amorim he was under pressure heading into the Europa League final.

The reality is different - even if Amorim can't explain why.

But he does feel his team may be looked at "in a different way" if they can beat Tottenham in Bilbao on Wednesday.

While many believe it is likely counterpart Ange Postecoglou will lose his job even if Spurs end their 17-year wait for a trophy and claim a place in next season's Champions League by winning the Europa League title, at Old Trafford faith in Amorim remains high.

This is despite United's lowly Premier League position and there is no suggestion defeat by Tottenham will alter that view. It will though rob United of around £100m in revenue and leave them without European football for only the second time since English clubs were allowed back into competition by Uefa in 1990.

Asked why he is under no pressure, Amorim was about to answer when his captain and fellow Portuguese spoke instead.

"He is. Who told you he is not?" laughed Fernandes.

This brought an immediate riposte from Amorim: "He wants my job. He'll be a very good coach but he has to work on his mindset. He doesn't know how to deal with people."

The manager added: "It's strange because you have some coaches here that lose some games and they are sacked... it's hard to explain.

"I think people see what we are trying to do, I think that people see that sometimes I'm thinking more about the club than myself.

"People understand, especially the board, that we have a lot of issues that in the context, is really hard."

United may have only beaten Fulham of the non-relegated clubs in the Premier League since December, and taken two points from their last eight games to lie 16th in the table, but the club hierarchy believe Amorim is effecting change behind the scenes.

"There are a lot of things we need to change," he said.

"They way we do everything during the week at Carrington, the recruitment, the academy. It is hard to point to one thing and it will not be solved by winning the cup."

It was as if Amorim was answering the question posed by many: Which club does the final matter most to?

Yet, any feeling the answer had to be Spurs was wrong.

For Amorim knows, quite aside from the riches, winning such an important trophy after such a desperate season featuring redundancies and fan discontent, would be confirmation the club was on the right path.

"People will look at our team in a different way," he said. "It can help us to build a future.

"Our club can have revenues without the Champions League. It is a big club, a massive club but the feeling of winning can help give us the strength we need to do every job we need."

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