
EPL Index
·22 de março de 2025
Young Defender Set to Return as Man United’s Injury Crisis Eases

EPL Index
·22 de março de 2025
In a season punctuated by fitness concerns and tactical adaptation, Manchester United have received a timely dose of optimism: Ayden Heaven’s foot injury is not as grave as first feared.
The 18-year-old defender was stretchered off during United’s 3-0 victory over Leicester City, sparking fears that another promising prospect had been added to an already overcrowded treatment table. Heaven, who has impressed in recent weeks amid a defensive injury crisis, was later seen in a protective boot – a sight that triggered concern around Carrington and beyond.
But calm, as it so often does in football, follows panic. The Manchester Evening News now reports that Heaven is no longer wearing the boot and is on course to return to full training after the international break. It raises hopes he could feature in the Premier League clash against Nottingham Forest on April 1.
Heaven’s rise has been swift and defined by opportunity. The defensive unit Ruben Amorim inherited has been decimated – Lisandro Martínez, Harry Maguire, Luke Shaw, Leny Yoro and Jonny Evans have all been absent at various points. Yet necessity has become invention. Thrust into the fray, Heaven has looked anything but out of place.
Though his Premier League debut came under pressing circumstances – against his former club Arsenal on March 9 – the teenager displayed assurance. That appearance followed his first start, in the Europa League round of 16 against Real Sociedad, where United’s 5-2 aggregate win was defined by control and a new-found composure in their shape.
This is the sort of development United’s hierarchy hoped for when they placed faith in Amorim’s progressive, coaching-centric model. Ayden Heaven’s integration echoes January signing Patrick Dorgu’s seamless adaptation at wing-back – pragmatic solutions born of planning, not panic.
Photo IMAGO
That’s the direction of travel now. Geovany Quenda may be Chelsea-bound, but United’s blueprint – bolstered by the arrivals of Heaven and Chido Obi from Arsenal – signals a clear shift: recruit smart, develop fast, and keep the squad agile.
Injury, for a young player finding his feet, can be cruelly mistimed. But for Heaven, this brief setback looks likely to serve as little more than a pause – not a derailment. With Amorim reshaping the club’s identity, and Heaven’s recovery aligning with a pivotal phase in United’s campaign, timing, for once, might just be on their side.