But that next campaign was to be Pogba’s last in the famous black and white stripes as he chose to head back to Manchester United just four years and four Serie A titles on from his acrimonious split with the club in 2012.
It was considered that, at
Old Trafford, Pogba would have a greater stage and a more capable supporting
cast as he looked to make his next great leap into super-stardom having gone
away and proved his point by winning so much and progressing so impressively
with Juve. Yet, for many, Pogba has gone sideways – backwards even – since
making the £89.5 million move which made him a record breaker more than two
years ago.
And, as he prepares to face
the Bianconeri for the first time at the Theatre of Dreams on Tuesday,
parallels are understandably being drawn between the Pogba who so brilliantly
complemented Pirlo for three years in Turin and the one struggling to stamp his
mark on United’s under-performing side under Jose Mourinho.
It is undoubtable that
conditions have to be more favourable to Pogba at United if he is to reproduce
his best form on a consistent basis. At Juve he completed a perfectly-balanced
midfield with Pirlo sitting in and orchestrating the play with ease and grace
while Vidal provided the dynamism and tenacity over every single blade of
grass. Whether as part of a 3-5-2 or the very occasional 4-3-3, the team was
always based around their all-action midfield trio
Pogba’s job in Turin began
in a higher starting position than he currently occupies, safe in the knowledge
that Vidal had his back if he lost the ball and Pirlo would always find a way
to give it back to him when the time was right.
Paul Scholes recently told
ESPN that Pogba was a “smaller fish” at Juve than he is at United, and there is
truth in that when you consider the football colossuses he found to either side
of him in the Juventus dressing room. Hugely forceful personalities such as Leonardo
Bonucci and coach Antonio Conte, greats of the game like Pirlo and Gianluigi
Buffon, all complemented by Juve die-hards Claudio Marchisio and Giorgio
Chiellini who would soon set you straight if you forgot for one second what
being Bianconero was all about.
At Juventus, Pogba was
always learning and at the same time was being served by players who suited his
approach to the game so well he could hardly have hand-picked them better.
Conversely, at United he
has yet to find his true vocation. In his first season under Mourinho he was
largely used as one of two deeper midfielders – alongside one of Ander Herrera,
Michael Carrick or Marouane Fellaini – in a 4-2-3-1 which very rarely afforded
him the opportunity to explore the space in which he’d thrived with Juve.
And while during 2018
Mourinho has gradually reacquainted United with a 4-3-3 shape which better
suits Pogba’s natural style, there remains a greater weight around the
Frenchman’s neck in terms of defensive responsibility. Not for United the unbreakable
back line that Pogba barely needed to consider protecting at Juve, nor a
midfielder who thirsts on the dirty work as did Vidal.
Instead, the Red Devils
have a defence not even their manager trusts, a midfield cast that seems to
change by the week, and an attacking vision which leaves a huge amount to
chance as opposed to looking for ways to get Pogba probing in those positions
in which he found so much joy in black and white.
Roberto Pereyra has told
Goal that it could just be a matter of time before Pogba replicates his best
Juventus form in a red shirt.
“Paul is a great player, of
that there is no discussion. I have played with him and he has amazing quality.
He does things which not just any footballer can do,” the Watford attacker said
of his former Juve team-mate.
“It is true that at
Juventus he did very well and now at Manchester United he has struggled a bit
but it is still early. I believe that if he is still here next year or in two
or three years, if he stays with Man Utd, he will make history there.”
But, in truth, there can be
no sitting and waiting for it to happen. There has to be a change in emphasis
in so many different respects.
United’s malaise has
created an emotional negative to go with Pogba's tactical constraints and the clear
personal disconnect with Mourinho, a manager who has taken the vice-captaincy
from the midfielder and fallen out with a string of other players at Old
Trafford alone. Add in the persistent chopping and changing of the first XI and
there is a constant need to perform, bringing its own anxiety. Even a player of
Pogba’s stature and innate self-confidence has been affected following
Mourinho’s repeated decision to mercilessly drop him at times in the last 12
months.
Is there any wonder that
Pogba is not performing to his highest level on a consistent basis given the
marked differences between life at Old Trafford right now and the conditions
under which he worked in Turin?
If allowed to embrace his
natural bolshiness and patrol the areas of the pitch in which he thrives, Pogba
can be a world-beater. He has shown it in glimpses this season with United.
But, whereas Pirlo once
pulled the strings for Pogba, Mourinho’s United resembles an outfit more liable
to tie him up in them. And not until the club’s ills on and off the field are
addressed are they likely to get their money’s worth from a man who could still
go on to be the player he looked set to become back on that tear-stained night
in Berlin.
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