Michael Carrick is out of contract at Manchester United at the end of the season, but there is growing belief he will be rewarded with a permanent deal as head coach.

Any suggestion not to hand Michael Carrick the Manchester United manager's role this summer is 'utterly ridiculous' according to former midfielder Owen Hargreaves. It seems the United boss has earned the support of numerous pundits, with Joe Cole claiming it would be 'absurd' not to prolong Carrick's tenure at Old Trafford.
United virtually confirmed their spot in next season's Champions League after a year away from European competition, following their triumph over Chelsea at Stamford Bridge. Matheus Cunha netted the only goal of the match to stretch United's advantage over sixth to 10 points.
The win at Stamford Bridge enabled Carrick's team to swiftly recover from a home loss against Leeds United, while having to deploy a makeshift backline. Just eight points are now needed from five fixtures to return to Europe's premier competition.
Hargreaves reckons that Carrick has made shrewd assessments of his squad and that he's showing himself to be more than capable for the challenge at hand. Having taken over from Ruben Amorim in January on a deal until the end of the season, Carrick has offered United scant reason not to continue with him.
"Carrick understands the players and that's probably why he's there," Hargreaves said. "He understands the pressure of playing for this football club.
"He puts the boys in the right positions where they need to play to succeed and they're better in every capacity. So, to not give it to him after giving it to him, probably at the time when you wouldn't have expected it, would be utterly ridiculous."
Former Chelsea playmaker Cole believes there's little case to be made against Carrick securing a permanent deal as head coach. "It's absurd to think of not giving it to him," he said.
"He's come in, got more points than any other person in any other team. What more can you do? It would just be absurd, it wouldn't be a gamble, it would just be absurd [not to give it to him], he's proven it."

Carrick reckons there's still further improvement to come from the squad at his command. He had straightforward objectives he wanted to achieve upon taking charge.
"Make them understand and appreciate playing for this club," Carrick said of his task. "It's easy to forget the position that we're in. We can play better, there's lots of layers to come, but we've got results to build momentum and a foundation."
He didn't view the clash against Chelsea as an occasion where United ought to feel burdened by expectation following the shock defeat to Leeds on Monday. "We were fine, you know?" he said.
"We learned from things, and spoke about a few things, but that's football. The league is what it is. There are results all over the place. We weren't getting too down about that at all.
"If anything, we looked at it and thought, 'we're right near the top, if not top of the last 12 games'. We took a lot of confidence from that.
"We knew what this game was. We didn't overplay it. We didn't speak. It wasn't about positions or points or anything. It was just coming down here to win a game and commit to that. The boys definitely did that."
