Manchester United Mania

Mark Hughes

Mark HughesBorn: 01 Nov 1963
Signed: 01 Jun 1980
Debut: 30 Nov 1983 v Oxford Utd (A) League Cup
Goals Total: 164
Appearances Total: 470
Position: Forward
Left United: 31 May 1995

They say the only way is down after you leave United, but few players move to a club like Barcelona, and fewer yet return to Old Trafford for a second even more successful spell with the Reds. Mark Hughes made a habit of doing things his own way throughout a brilliant career.

His love affair with United began in March 1978 when he signed schoolboy forms as a 14-year-old, but few would have believed that this young midfielder from Wrexham would go on to become one of the club’s greatest-ever goalscorers.

United youth coach Syd Owen was the man to spot Hughes’ potential as a striker and for that

every Red owes him a debt of thanks. Sparky made a goalscoring debut against Oxford in November 1983 and six months later marked his international debut against England with another goal.

In 1985 he was named PFA Young Player of the Year and picked up an FA Cup winner’s medal, but a contract dispute halted his progress with the Reds and a year later he was out of United and off to Barcelona, surprisingly snapped up by Barca manager Terry Venables.

Hughes never settled at the Nou Camp and described his Catalan move as “horrible”, scoring only four goals in 28 games.

A year later he was sent to Bayern Munich on loan where he refound his goalscoring touch and in July 1988 Alex Ferguson spent £1.5m on bringing him home. It proved to be a masterstroke. Hughes was named PFA Player of the Year in his first season back and rescued the Reds in the 1990 FA Cup final with two goals against Crystal Palace to force a replay that gave Ferguson his first trophy.

He was again named Player of the Year in 1991 and experienced glorious retribution with a man-of-the-match display in the European Cup Winners’ Cup final in Rotterdam, scoring twice in the 2-1 victory over old club Barcelona.

1992 saw another medal, this time the Reds’ first ever League Cup, and the next season saw him complete the domestic set with United’s first league title in 26 years.

Hughes’ new partnership with Eric Cantona lit the touchpaper for United’s title charge and later Sparky was moved to say, “I know the Frenchman changed my footballing life.” And while Cantona grabbed the headlines, it was Hughes’ 100th league goal against Crystal Palace that helped clinch the first ever Premiership crown.

Sir Alex once said: “Hughes was the best big game player I have known,”, never more so

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