Javier Hernandez believes former club Manchester United need to adapt and finally get over Sir Alex Ferguson’s exit if they are to get back to the top.
The Scot called time on his masterful, medal-laden managerial reign at Old Trafford in 2013, having won 13 league titles and two Champions Leagues among his impressive trophy haul.
Hernandez was part of Ferguson’s final Premier League title triumph and has watched from afar as United floundered for much of the nine years that have followed.
The LA Galaxy striker hates the way things have panned out for a club he retains so much affection for and believes the Old Trafford giants need to focus on what is to come rather than what they have lost.
Asked if he was surprised by United’s fall, Hernandez said: “That’s a very tricky question, man. Because I’ll answer yes and no.
“It doesn’t surprise me because in life it’s not easy having a manager for 26 years in the way that Sir Alex did it.
“One of his greatest aptitudes, in my humble opinion, was that probably seven out of 10 players who signed for United worked out. That’s not easy, man – not for Real Madrid or Barcelona or even for Chelsea, City, Liverpool or Bayern Munich.
“It’s not easy to do that for 26 years, but Sir Alex was very good on the personal side to see how he could take the best out of you and how you can help the club.
“To substitute that man like that is not easy. It is like winning the lottery.
“Do you think anyone you hire afterwards is going to be able to do 80 per cent of what Ferguson did?
“My point of view is that after Ferguson brings so much pressure that it just isn’t going to work out.
“United need to now get over the fact that Sir Alex Ferguson has gone.
“Would we like to have someone similar? Yes, yes, yes. But Sir Alex has gone and it is never going to be the same.
“So United have to adapt and allow the next manager to do it in his own way.”
Hernandez hopes that his former club “start to go up” under new boss Erik ten Hag, whose progress in the role has been slowed by United’s struggles in the transfer market.
Hernandez understands why players would prefer Champions League football and likened the Old Trafford giants’ challenging period to the one rivals Liverpool went through when he played in England.
The slow rebuild is part of the reason why Cristiano Ronaldo would be keen to leave after just a year back at the club where he enjoyed such success under Ferguson.
“I just think about himself or any player what would I do? What would have benefited myself?” Hernandez said when asked about his former Real Madrid team-mate. “It’s completely different as him as everyone else, you know?
“So I understand him, then what is going to happen is time will tell what is there – correct or not correct? Will this turn around good? We will see.
“That’s the beauty of it. The uncertainty of life. We’ll see. What if he stays and scores 40 goals?”
United and Ten Hag would love that having repeatedly said all summer that the veteran star was staying put, but moves are afoot to bolster the attack.
Put to Hernandez that his former club are in the market for a striker, the 34-year-old said with a laugh: “Man, I mean, there are these situations and I know the narratives because of my age and my past.
“If United came for me then I’d say ‘yes, I’ll play for free.’ Of course, you know, I’d do that.
“But I also want to be very respectful to my club. I am playing very consistently and in my mind and my world, my conviction is all about winning a championship with LA Galaxy.
“But to get to that outcome, every day I try to be as healthy as I can and as good as I can.
“In the future, if things happen then they happen. But in my mind I am 100 per cent with LA.”
Hernandez joined the Galaxy two-and-a-half years ago and is loving life in Major League Soccer, whose All-Star team he captains against their Mexican league counterparts in Minneapolis on Wednesday.
“I think MLS was so focused on making the league (successful) and don’t be obsessed on the quick return,” he said of the league’s continued growth. “They see the big picture, they see the long road.
“They can see farther than some other countries or some other leagues decide to do because they’re I think a little bit obsessed to the straight benefit and just gaining the quick as we can gain, we do it.
“I think what MLS has done is that. Just learn a little bit off all the leagues around the world, learn way more from Mexico because we’re neighbours in the end. They’ve been just doing it in their own way but taking and adding some stuff around how we can improve.
“Of course investment not only monetary, investment about time and investment about hiring the correct people, not only as players, as managers or staff.
“But which location we’re doing in MLS, which teams we are allowing to build teams and not to build teams. There’s a lot of organisational strategies that I think MLS has been doing so far pretty good.”
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