The former Red Devils defender has echoed a famous line from Alan Hansen, with the Class of '92 graduate seeing a lack of leaders at Old Trafford
Manchester United were once told that “you don’t win anything with kids”, and Gary Neville believes the club’s class of 2019-20 will prove that to be the case.
Back in the mid-1990s, Alan Hansen famously stated that, after the Red Devils opened the season with a defeat away at Aston Villa, Sir Alex Ferguson had taken the wrong approach by putting his faith in youth.
Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s current team are considered to lack leaders, making it impossible for academy graduates such as Mason Greenwood, Scott McTominay, Andreas Pereira and Marcus Rashford to have the same kind of impact as iconic predecessors.
Neville told Sky Sports: “I pointed out on Sunday [during a 2-0 defeat at West Ham] at the £900m that has been spent in the last seven or eight years, and there's nothing left of it really.
“There are the bones of a squad, some young players from the academy that haven't cost that money. Potentially David de Gea, who is struggling. There's Harry Maguire but there's a lot more rebuilding to do.
“I've said many times that Alan Hansen was right, you don't win anything with kids.
“The Class of '92 didn't win that Premier League title. We had Steve Bruce, Gary Pallister, Roy Keane, Eric Cantona, Brian McClair and Peter Schmeichel. We had world-class performers and two of the best centre-backs ever.
“Keane was the most inspirational captain and leader, Cantona was world-class, Schmeichel was the best in the world and Dennis Irwin was brilliant. They pulled us through it. If the Class of '92 had gone into this team, we would have had no chance.”
He added: “I'm not panicking as a fan. I'm frustrated but not panicking.
“What I would say is they have to quickly and efficiently identify three or four players to go alongside De Gea and Maguire. They need a couple of midfield players, they need a striker to carry the front line, they need a wide player and they need a left-back.
“You can't kid football fans. There are five or six players required.”