Has Alejandro Garnacho Destroyed His Reputation?
There was a time when Alejandro Garnacho was the most exciting name on Manchester United fansโ lips. A raw but fearless teenager who tore down the left flank like a young Cristiano Ronaldo, his idol. He breathed new life into a team that had lacked quality on the wings. He wasnโt just a talent. He felt like the future.ย
But fast-forward to this summer. Garnachoโs name no longer has that same optimism. Instead, his Instagram feed has become the battleground for criticism and growing frustration. All of a sudden, the question isnโt about how high he can fly, itโs whether heโs already burning the bridges that got him here.
From Rising Star To Social Media Storm
Garnachoโs rise in 2022-23 was electric. An 18-year-old Argentine Ronaldo fanboy, scoring late winners, making highlight reels with every touch, and bagging goal-of-the-season contenders. There was a fearlessness to him that made it hard not to love. He played like someone whoโs been doing this for a while at this level.
But that same boldness has started to feel like something else. Immaturity, ego, maybe even arrogance. This summer, while fans were still digesting a horrible half-season under Ruben Amorim, Garnacho posted a picture of himself walking into a luxury villa in Ibiza. Thatโs fine, players unwind. But the issue wasnโt the villa, it was the shirt. Garnacho wore an Aston Villa jersey with Marcus Rashfordโs name on the back. To make matters worse, Rashford replied to the post, calling him โMy brother.โ
On the surface, it may seem like harmless banter between friends, but context matters. Rashford is on his way out after a torrid season both on and off the pitch. Garnacho, too, had reportedly been told by Amorim to โfind a new clubโ right after the Europa League final. The post came off as a deliberate two-finger salute to Manchester United. More of a โWe donโt need youโ than a vacation photo. Fans, understandably, felt insulted.
It didnโt take long for Reddit and X (formerly Twitter) to explode. โPetulant,โ โchildish,โ and โheโs not seriousโ were just a few of the recurring phrases. Many questioned whether heโd let the fame get to his head. For a player still trying to establish himself, flaunting a lifestyle funded by the club while seemingly mocking it isnโt a great look.
A Pattern Thatโs Hard To Ignore
Unfortunately, this wasnโt a one-off. Garnachoโs history with social media has been shaky from the beginning. From using gorilla emojis on a post about teammate Andre Onana (which, though defended as innocent, was clearly tone-deaf), to liking anti-Ten Hag posts during the worst phases of Unitedโs season. Garnacho has consistently found himself on the wrong side of public opinion. When it wasnโt him, it was his teenage brother Roberto who has taken to social media like a PR nightmare on speed dial, posting cryptic digs at managers and ranting after losses like heโs the playerโs agent.
Then came the Europa League final. Garnacho wasnโt in the starting eleven. He didnโt take it well. His post-match interview was filled with cold shrugs, and his brother once again took to Instagram to slam Amorim for โthrowing him under the bus.โ The next day, Amorim reportedly told Garnacho in front of the squad, โYou better pray another club wants you.โ These arenโt just young players’ growing pains. Theyโre becoming a pattern, a damaging one.
Too Much Too Soon?
This is where it gets complicated. Garnacho is 20. At that age, most of us were still figuring life out. And yes, when youโre given money, fame, and power at a young age, itโs easy to get swept up. But football, especially at the elite level, is unforgiving. Reputations, once lost, are hard to win back, especially in football.ย
Garnacho is still very talented. 11 goals and 10 assists last season are nothing to scoff at. He was electric in moments, scored in the FA Cup final, and gave fans reasons to believe. But his off-field behavior has started to overshadow his performances. When clubs pay upwards of ยฃ60 million for a player, they buy more than talentโthey buy professionalism, discipline, and reliability. Thatโs where things get dicey.
His role model? Cristiano Ronaldo. At least, thatโs the image Garnacho has shown, considering the goal celebrations and posting throwback tributes. However, Ronaldo worked harder than anyone else. He didnโt throw tantrums when benched at 20. He didnโt undermine coaches publicly or let his brother post weird comments on Instagram. If Garnacho wants to follow in those footsteps, itโs time he starts acting like it.
Is It Too Late?
The answer, thankfully, is no, not yet. Garnacho is still young and learning. Moving away from Manchester United might be the reset he needs, whether itโs Chelsea, a club on the rise like Napoli, where he would learn to behave under Conte.ย But the leash will be shorter. Another outburst, another social media controversy, and the narrative might be set in stone, too talented for his good.
Weโve seen it happen with so many players, including Ravel Morrison, who is a fitting example of how attitude can overshadow talent, all in the wrong ways. Football has seen this story before: a flashy winger bursts onto the scene, lets fame get ahead of development, bounces from club to club, and eventually becomes a cautionary tale. Garnacho can be more than that, but he needs to decide quickly which road he wants to take.
