Manchester United assistant manager Steve Holland has challenged the squad to aim higher than simply securing Champions League qualification, insisting the club’s stature demands a relentless pursuit of the top of the Premier League. Despite trailing leaders Arsenal by 15 points, Holland believes the team must focus on closing the gap rather than settling for a place among Europe’s elite.
United have enjoyed a resurgence since Michael Carrick took charge in mid-January. The team has climbed to third in the league table, with seven fixtures remaining. Their position was strengthened by Arsenal’s recent victory over Sporting CP, which ensured a fifth Champions League spot for English clubs next season. Holding a seven-point cushion over sixth-placed Chelsea, United are well-placed to return to the competition they have won three times.
Holland explained that the coaching staff is working to shift the players’ mindset. Instead of focusing on teams behind them, the emphasis is on winning each match and pushing closer to the summit. “The language we should be using as this club is to finish as close as we possibly can to the top,” he said. “Clearly, to finish in the Champions League places would be a good situation for us, but we should always be looking for more than that.”
To prepare for the final stretch, United held an intensive training camp outside Dublin during a rare 24-day break caused by international fixtures and early domestic cup exits. Holland noted the importance of regrouping during the hiatus. “The gap has been as big as you can have, really. We felt it was important to get the whole group together again and focus on finishing the season well. This was the perfect venue for that,” he added.
United’s campaign resumes against Leeds on April 13, beginning a decisive run of fixtures. They face Chelsea away and Brentford at home before hosting rivals Liverpool in May. The schedule also includes trips to Sunderland and Brighton, with a home clash against Nottingham Forest in between. To keep their slim title hopes alive, Carrick’s side must deliver a flawless run across these seven matches.
The challenge is steep, but Holland insists the mentality must remain ambitious. For a club with United’s history, he argues, success should be measured not only by qualification but by proximity to the top and pursuit of trophies. The message is clear: United must play with the determination to finish as high as possible, regardless of the points gap.
As the season enters its final phase, United’s focus is on consistency, resilience, and ambition. With Champions League qualification within reach and a slim chance of catching Arsenal, the team’s performance in the coming weeks will define whether this resurgence ends with mere qualification or a stronger statement of intent.




