A look at every Manchester United season since Sir Alex Ferguson left
A look at the last eight years at Old Trafford, which has included four permanent managers, three major trophies and a world-record signing.
Since the trophy littered dominance under Sir Alex Ferguson, Manchester United have failed to emulate what the great Scotsman did.
Despite the £89million signing of Paul Pogba, paying Alexis Sanchez around £500,000 per week and £80million signing Harry Maguire, Man United remain without a Premier League title since 2012/13 - Ferguson's final season in the hot seat.
2013/14
David Moyes was the 'Chosen One' after being backed by his compatriot Ferguson. It was seen as a smart move at the time with Moyes having a respectable track-record at Goodison Park with Everton for more than a decade.
David Moyes had a torrid time at Manchester United, although he did reach the quarter-finals of the UEFA Champions League
2014/15
Meanwhile, Falcao struggled in front of goal, scoring just four times in 26 appearances. He would have another spell on loan in the Premier League with Chelsea and he scored just once in 10 games.
2015/16
Summer arrivals were large in number again as Van Gaal brought in the vastly experienced and successful Bayern Munich midfielder, Bastian Schweinsteiger.
Anthony Martial was signed from Monaco for an initial fee of £36million with it potentially rising to £57.6million
Despite an impressive window on paper, Martial appeared to be the only player to show promise, beginning with a debut goal against Liverpool as a substitution.
A 3-2 defeat to West Ham United at Upton Park's farewell game saw United miss out on a top four finish. Despite winning the FA Cup, Van Gaal was sacked by the club.
2016/17
Ed Woodward appointed Jose Mourinho as Van Gaal's replacement. The Special One - referring to himself as now the Happy One - was returning to the touchline for the first time since being sacked by Chelsea in 2015.
The ex-Real Madrid boss was viewed as the man to bring Premier League glory back to Old Trafford having won the league on three occasions with Chelsea in two tenures.
Major additions were brought in, starting with Zlatan Ibrahimovic, a striker Mourinho had worked with during his time at Inter Milan. Pogba also returned for a then-world record fee of £89 million. Henrikh Mkhitaryan and Eric Bailly were the other two signings made.
2017/18
Prolific striker Romelu Lukaku was signed from Everton for £75million and Nemanja Matic was signed from Chelsea, reuniting him with Mourinho from their time at Stamford Bridge. Defender Victor Lindelof was also brought in from Benfica.
Statistically speaking this was Man United's best league campaign since Ferguson's departure with the side finishing second with 81 points. Despite boasting a victory all 19 clubs in the season, Man City would win the league by 19 points.
2018/19
The summer of 2018 was a big season, especially after Mourinho had expressed his frustration during pre-season about being unable to sign Maguire.
Jose Mourinho won the UEFA Europa League and EFL Cup in his two-and-a-half year reign as Manchester United manager
Man United legend Ole Gunnar Solskjaer was brought in on an interim basis until the end of the season. With Ole at the wheel, the club's form dramatically changed as Pogba and Marcus Rashford inspired them back into the top four for a brief amount of time.
The remaining weeks of the league campaign proved to be very difficult, though. A poor set of results towards the end of the season saw Man United drop off and finish sixth, missing out on Champions League soccer by five points.
2019/20
Man United started off the season brilliantly as they ripped apart Chelsea's Frank Lampard on the opening day of the season to win 4-0. This was just the start for many impressive wins against the top sides.
The signing of Bruno Fernandes proved to be the turning point in Man United's season as they went unbeaten in the league from when he made his debut in February.
Bruno Fernandes has the same number of goal involvements as Lionel Messi since joining Man United (54) 🤯
— ESPN FC (@ESPNFC) February 21, 2021
Ballon d’Or calling? 🏆 pic.twitter.com/uUTVDmt73Q