Ravel Morrison, Manchester United's problem prodigy

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The chances are you may never have seen him play but, at Manchester United, they are already talking about him being the most naturally talented footballer to come through their ranks since a young Paul Scholes skipped into view. His name is Ravel Morrison: 18 years old, supremely talented and tipped to be one of the pre-eminent English footballers of his generation. Morrison scored a beautiful goal to help United reach the FA Youth Cup quarter-finals last week and was in Sir Alex Ferguson's mind for a place in the squad for the FA Cup tie against Crawley, though he did not make the bench. In ordinary circumstances, it should be a time for celebration, of toasting the future in contemplation of a prodigious career and vast earning power.

Yet the Morrison story is not that simple. What United hoped would never become public knowledge is that, three weeks ago, Morrison stood in the dock of Trafford youth court, alongside two accomplices, waiting to find out if he was to be sent to a young offenders' institution.

Morrison had admitted two charges of intimidating a witness. He had subjected the victim of a knifepoint robbery to a two-day ordeal in an attempt to stop him giving evidence at the trial of his muggers. He had been warned he could face a spell in detention and, with that, United would almost certainly have given up on him. Instead, Morrison was given another chance: the judge decided on a 12-month referral order, warning him that if he did not comply he would be sentenced to a year behind bars. He was told his behaviour had been "appalling" and this was his last chance. What happens next? It is difficult to predict.

Morrison, in terms of ability, is the real deal: balance, speed, control, vision, flair, strong on either foot, an eye for a pass and a prolific scorer for a wide, left-sided player. One clip on YouTube encapsulates what he does best: a preposterous trick to bamboozle an opponent from the Blackburn youth team, incorporating a triple drag-back and a backheeled nutmeg. Let's not judge a player on internet footage, but this was a moment that would have brought Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo to their feet. "Silks", as Rio Ferdinand calls it.

He has played for England at under-16, under-17 and under-18 level and made his United debut, as a substitute, in the Carling Cup tie against Wolves in October. One FA Youth Cup tie in 2008 prompted the Times to wonder "when [we] last saw such balance and daring from an English 15-year-old". The Daily Telegraph has tipped him as "a potential gem for 2014 [World Cup]." The Independent identified Morrison in a feature about 'Five Young Players to Watch in 2010.'

He is not the first young footballer to end up in court. The club's view is that the good outweighs the bad and they are determined to give Morrison the help he needs, in all parts of his life. "The club does not in any way condone Ravel's actions, but he is a very talented player with a bright future ahead of him," a spokesman said. "The right thing to do now is to support him and help him in the process of his rehabilitation."

Even so, there is a genuine concern at United that he has fallen in with the wrong crowd and is in danger of frittering away what could be a dazzling career. Two of his friends were locked up for the robbery. The court was told Morrison subjected the victim of the mugging to threatening phone calls ("you don't know what I'm capable of") over the course of two days a year ago and was among three teenagers who threatened the boy on the street. The three later appeared in the victim's front garden in the early hours. They were chased away but then came back in a mob of 15 to 20 people. A brick was thrown through the window. The victim was so traumatised his family have put the house up for sale and want to leave Manchester.

Since the verdict Ferguson and his coaching staff have spent many hours debating how to handle the teenager, and are still uncertain of what is best. There are already stories of Morrison missing training, or turning up late for matches. "There's always something going on with him," has become a popular refrain.

More seriously, his temperamental nature and apparent dislike of authority have manifested themselves on the training ground. It is said Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, then the reserve-team manager, had to intervene in one incident. The teenager is described as someone who acts impulsively and does not think of the consequences, a fragile personality in need of a role model.

Morrison was born in Wythenshawe, a sprawling council estate on the southern tip of Manchester. He lives with his grandparents, Chris and Maureen Carlway, in Denton, five miles to the east of Manchester, while his mother, Sharon Ryan, still takes an active part in his life but lives in another part of the city with her two younger boys, Rio and Zeon.

Morrison has contemplated moving out, complaining that he does not like being under the watch of his grandmother, but the club would rather he stayed in the company of adults, and it is said that Rio Ferdinand and Gary Neville have both offered to take him in at different points.

His friends, like many lads of 17 and 18, tend to hang around on bikes, wearing hooded tops and dark clothing. Morrison himself wore a hoodie to one court appearance. For his sentencing, he looked what he was: a teenager in Nike trainers and a tie knotted Grange Hill-style, ie as short as possible. There was no emotion when the judge told him he was being spared detention. However, Morrison seemed appalled when he was informed he had to pay costs, including £500 compensation to the victim. The court was told United's No49, described on the club's website as a "supremely gifted talent", had nothing in the bank despite receiving £3,400, after tax, on the 25th of every month, as part of the
professional contract he signed when he was 17.


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all too common place in todays football..

It sounds very different then the common clubbing mishaps that normally come up with young starlets. This sounds more like him being the school yard bully, not him thinking he is better then everyone else because of his skill on the football pitch. Its actually a lot sadder sounding, I would rather have drunk mishaps then gang related activities coming from a player with his potential.
 
He has already moved on and improved his attitude so much. He is moving away with Club player and not staying in his previous place anymore.

If anyone has watched Liverpool vs Manchester United FA youth cup, they should be knowing how much his attitude has improved.

Regarding his talent, he was hailed as the most gifter teenager in the country. That says a lot..
 
that was a nice comeback from 2-0 down for Man Utd, Morrison helped himself to the goals, kind of hilarious that Pogba got sent off while trying to take the pen
 
He's got a lot of talent. We'll see whether he ends up locked up for a few years before he gets chance to realise it, I guess. The stuff he's been involved with isn't petty juvenile stuff. He's exceptionally lucky he hasn't gone down for it already.
 
Sounds like another Balotelli to me.

Hardly. Balotelli is a wind-up merchant that gets in strops easily, like a child. Ravel Morrison is the type of scum that threatens people. Without United's help then he'd be in a young offender's institute right now.
 
I expect his talent will never come through. These people don't realise how lucky they are and selfish acts like this proves that young footballers need to be carefully nurtured and their egos kept down.
 
I expect his talent will never come through. These people don't realise how lucky they are and selfish acts like this proves that young footballers need to be carefully nurtured and their egos kept down.

Looks like finally he has realised. News is that he has moved away from where he was staying, and will be staying with club player.

[COLOR=#00e0]---------- Post added at 01:03 PM ---------- Previous post was at 12:59 PM ----------[/COLOR]

Let Rio give him a talking to.

Ferdinand and Neville are mentoring him if I'm not wrong..
 
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Rio and Neville would be great role models, although I suspect the likes of giggs and scholes are keeping a close eye on his progression too :)
 
isnt this article a month old? and im sure ive seen it on the site before...
 
isnt this article a month old? and im sure ive seen it on the site before...

It was on the Ravel Morrison thread under the Players section I think. I've seen this before as well.

And this lad had just scored a sweet volley against Liverpool in the FA Youth Cup.
 
Sounds all to like Jose Baxter from Everton, supposedly the next Rooney but then got done for dealing Cannabis and producing fake £1 coins.

I know Ravel sounds gang related, but both he and Baxter sound like the kind of muppet who will throw their career away before it's started.
 
Morrison luckly to have Fergie as his manager if any can sort him out Fergie can. Its a shame if he looks aat Scholes and think if I keep my head down work hard I could be a good player.
 
Sounds all to like Jose Baxter from Everton, supposedly the next Rooney but then got done for dealing Cannabis and producing fake £1 coins.

I know Ravel sounds gang related, but both he and Baxter sound like the kind of muppet who will throw their career away before it's started.

Jake, that was old story. Now he has realised it and is improving slowly. News is that he is not staying where he used to anymore and will be staying with Club player. Ferdinand and Neville had a word with him and he is under their guidance.

And also we should give him benefit of doubt as he grew with those wanna be gangsters. Now finally he is starting to improve, he is putting everything into prespective.

There is a lot of change in his attitude, right from his work rate to how he behaves when someone riles him up.
 
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I appreciate everyone deserves a second chance, but your article is a month old, it's not exactly old news.

Although he may be on the road to change, he can't have totally reformed his life in 4 weeks.
 
I appreciate everyone deserves a second chance, but your article is a month old, it's not exactly old news.

Although he may be on the road to change, he can't have totally reformed his life in 4 weeks.

I haven't posted the article ;)

I think the article was 2 months old but the news in that is really old.. Hope I'm not wrong..
 
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