The parallels are there and Manchester United have certainly considered them. Few managers go into a club during the season when everything is rosy but, even by the low standards of the trade, Rúben Amorim’s arrival at Sporting in March 2020 stood out.
The Lisbon giants were at a horribly low ebb. Fourth in the Primeira Liga, 20 points off the leaders, Porto, they were on to their fourth manager of the season and their previous title from 2001-02 was a speck in the rearview mirror.
Before that, he had cut his teeth in coaching at the third-tier side Casa Pia before going to Braga B and enjoying his promotion to the club’s first team. The Sporting president, Frederico Varandas, and the sporting director, Hugo Viana, took deep breaths and paid Amorim’s €10m release clause.
For United, it is possible to make the case for this being the most important managerial hire since they turned to Alex Ferguson in 1986 when the team languished 19th in the old First Division. What appeals to them about Amorim goes beyond the headline achievements at Sporting – the sensational title triumph of his first full season, backed up with another one last time out; the two Taça da Liga successes; the run to the Champions League last 16 in 2021-22.