Manchester United Football Club is the most popular football club in the world, with over 330 million supporters worldwide- almost 5% of the world’s population. The club has a long and colourful history. MAN U for Manchester United. This “short form” may be expedient for use by casual fans not knowing that it is a derogatory term for the club which leaves the more devoted and knowledgeable fan enraged. The term is only used by other supporters as utter insult to the club. The “U” is meant to be “You” by the rival fans. Manchester United are nicknamed UNITED, MAN UNITED, MAN UTD and RED DEVILS. There are no official songs with a ‘Man U’ word nor will one lay his hands upon official merchandise using that term.
The origin of ‘Man U’ lies in the song intended to insult the late great Duncan Edwards. West Brom fans started this: "Duncan Edwards is manure, rotting in his grave, man you are manure- rotting in your grave". There was brawl up on the old Scoreboard End at Old Trafford in 1964-65 season when the West Bromwich Albion fans sang. A big battle took place with the home fans that outnumbered the visiting ones and hammered them. This Dudley born Busby Babe was a highly touted schoolboy in the midlands and had attracted a lot of clubs in early 50s. His signing for United left him with hatred from midland’s clubs. Liverpool and Leeds fans copied this with their own man you versions to insult the lads who died in the Munich Tragedy."ManU ManU went on a plane,
ManU ManU never came back again"
And
"Man U Never Intended Coming Home" (M.U.N.I.C.H.)
Most clubs did try to ban the chant in the 60s.However after United won the European Cup, it again sprang up but this time there was also ‘Who's that lying in the aircraft’, the West Brom fans parodied the United song ‘Who's that team we call United’. But by the end of the decade its use became widespread and the term "Man U" was used by almost all rival fans to tantalise United. Everyone knew what it meant. It was laughter at the death of Duncan and the Busby Babes.
A lot of the violence that happened with the United fans around that time was usually sparked by the words ‘Man U’.A place where the word ‘Man U’ could spell doom was Millwall. United played them when they were in the second division and the Policemen were asked to work despite having a leave. The League officials had even tried to stop allocating United fans a ticket to Millwall.The kick off was put forward to 11a.m. to try and stop the United fans from going down there. It was billed as the ‘fight of the century’. Although no violence took place inside the stadium, after the game more than 20,000 fans of United and Millwall combined mobbed down the Kings Road and knocked the place up. Amusingly when Teddy Sheringham signed for United he referred the club as ‘Man U’ and received hair-dryer treatment from Sir Alex Ferguson.
I hope after reading this all ardent United fans erase the word ‘Man U’ from their vernacular. Don’t be ignorant use the proper lingo. Glory Glory MAN UNITED!!!!
Cheerio!!!
-Pedantic Parit