Manchester United striker Edinson Cavani’s superb performances over two legs of the side’s Europa League semi-final against AS Roma are exactly why they want to keep the Uruguayan at Old Trafford, manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has said.
The 34-year-old scored two goals and provided two assists in United’s 6-2 victory in the first leg at Old Trafford and struck twice again in Thursday’s 3-2 defeat in the return fixture as the English side reached the final with an 8-5 aggregate win.
In the title clash of Europe’s second-tier club competition, United will meet Spanish side Villarreal in Gdansk on May 26.
Villarreal held out for a 0-0 draw on a nerve-jangling night at Arsenal to reach the final 2-1 on aggregate as visiting manager Unai Emery returned to haunt the London club that sacked him in 2019.
“The reason we’re here is because we’ve got a centre-forward who has scored four goals in the tie,” Solskjaer said of Cavani in his post-match news conference. “Edinson has shown again why we want to keep him at Old Trafford.”
Cavani arrived at United on a one-year contract in October with an option of another 12 months, but remains undecided about his future after a difficult season, which included a social media faux pas that resulted in a three-game ban.
He has scored 14 goals from 34 matches in all competitions while leading the line brilliantly and finding the net in key moments.
“Football has its own language. Edinson has proven tonight, in previous games, throughout his career, what a centre forward should be doing both on and off the ball, both preparing for games and recovering from games,” Solskjaer said.
“He’s an absolute top professional and everyone in my team can learn from him.”
Solskjaer’s side, who are second in the Premier League, next face Aston Villa on Sunday before matches against Leicester City on Tuesday and bitter rivals Liverpool in a rearranged fixture on Thursday.
The Norwegian said the fixture list had been made by “people who have never played football at this level.”
“It’s physically impossible for the players,” he said. “We’re going to need everyone for these games. It’s a short turnaround but we have to be ready.”
“It’s a great achievement to get to the final. We didn’t win the game and that’s disappointing but we did the hard work in the first leg,” United captain Harry Maguire told BT Sport.
“We started the game a bit edgy. It was end-to-end like basketball and we gave them too many chances in second half. Now we’ve got to go to the final and win it.”
“We had some great European nights this season, with some big wins. It’s a pity for that second half in Manchester,” Roma midfielder Bryan Cristante said. “Tonight we still had a few goals to score, but we exit the competition with our heads held high.”
Solskjaer’s team had tripped up in the semi-finals of two League Cups, the FA Cup and the Europa League since he succeeded Jose Mourinho in December 2018, but another exit never looked likely in the Italian capital.