Text message about Nick Cox speaks volumes about his Manchester United legacy

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Nick Cox has left behind a wonderful legacy in Manchester after spending a successful nine years at Man United.

"Today is Nick Cox's last day. How on earth that has been allowed to happen is beyond me," read a text from a contact.

Cox has departed Manchester United after nine years of service, six of which were spent as head of the academy.

In that time, Cox played a pivotal role in United's academy renaissance, helped 35 players make their senior debuts, secured top youth signings and oversaw an FA Youth Cup triumph.

Cox already had a foot through the exit door when the Under-21s played at Old Trafford in midweek, but he is understood to have followed the game. He would have smiled as the youngsters scored a last-minute winner at the Stretford End. That is the kind of experience he spoke so warmly about.

United are losing an integral cog in their academy. Cox has joined Everton to become their technical director and he will look back on his time in Manchester with great pride.

Cox joined United from Sheffield United in 2016. He joined as academy operations manager, working alongside Nicky Butt, and was promoted to academy head three years later.

"He leaves the academy in excellent shape to continue attracting and developing world-class talent, and well-rounded young people," said a club statement in June announcing he would leave.

Cox's main priority was supplementing the first team with academy talent, and he will look back on the players who made that step up during his tenure with huge fondness. However, he had just as much time for youngsters who didn't achieve that dream, the players whose careers were destined for elsewhere.

He was self-deprecating and generous with his time during interviews. Academy staff probably dread the sight of a reporter walking over to speak after a youth game, but Cox always engaged with a smile.

The Manchester Evening News provide extensive academy coverage and Cox provided insightful copy down the years. His last in-depth interview with the MEN was published in March and Cox, as usual, spent more time chatting in the Jimmy Murphy Building than was expected.

Covering the academy during Cox's tenure has been uplifting, especially at a time when United's first-team has often disappointed. The academy has always been there to produce special moments.

United finished 15th in the Premier League last season, but the Under-18s gave fans something to cheer about by reaching the FA Youth Cup semi-final. They were superb in the quarter-finals against Arsenal at the Emirates, but ran out of steam in the last four against eventual winners Aston Villa.

In 2021/22, United sacked Ole Gunnar Solskjaer and remained in the doldrums with Ralf Rangnick. That season coincided with the U18s winning the Youth Cup for the first time since 2011.

That night, Cox said: "As the kids are running across the pitch, I'm looking and I'm seeing the Under-23s, too old for the competition, there, with their mates racing across the pitch as well. That was amazing. That was a group of mates, that was a group of kids, living out their dreams tonight."

The Class of '22 were a supremely talented bunch of young players. Alejandro Garnacho was the star of the team, but the likes of Kobbie Mainoo, Dan Gore and Rhys Bennett sparkled.

Cox tells the story of how United signed Garnacho from Atletico Madrid in 2020. Garnacho, then 16, was persuaded to join over Zoom while Cox's children bickered about a video game in the background.

Garnacho made 144 senior appearances for United. The winger scored against Manchester City in the 2024 FA Cup final and was sold for £40million in the summer, making him United's fourth-highest sale in their history.

Through Cox's leadership, the academy regained its reputation. Facilities at Carrington improved, allowing the club to keep talents like Mainoo, who in previous years might have signed for City.

Mainoo joined the club's academy aged nine, but he spent time with United and City before then. The midfielder chose to join United's academy and although City attempted to lure him away at ages when it would have been possible, he chose to stay each time.

Cox understood the importance of talent retention, but recruitment was equally important during his tenure. Alvaro Fernandez arrived in the same transfer window as Garnacho in 2020 and now plays for Real Madrid.

Fernandez was educated at Carrington in the latter stages of his development and feels like the one that got away. Erik ten Hag overlooked Fernandez, but academy staff are proud of his journey since leaving.

More recently, Cox played a pivotal role in the signings of Toby Collyer, Harry Amass, Ayden Heaven and Chido Obi. The opportunity to sign Collyer, regarded as one of the finest young midfielders in England, came about unexpectedly, but Cox's work helped United to be at the front of the queue for his signature.

Club sources were keen to give Cox the credit he deserved for signing Obi from Arsenal, describing his work as "crucial". The young striker's arrival last year was considered a genuine coup.

Cox told the MEN: "Because he holds a Danish passport, the whole of Europe was open to Chido. We quite simply became aware of the fact that Chido was about to make a move to Europe.

"He’d been to visit a club and identified the club where he was going to potentially end up. We thought if this player is available and is looking to leave, then we should make every effort we possibly can to sign him.

"The pretty familiar formula for Manchester United's senior and youth teams has always been having the best local players and adding some of the best talent from further afield.

"If you look back, it's George Best, it's Bobby Charlton, or it's Duncan Edwards from further afield, added to a group of local lads. Then fast forward and it's someone like Paul Pogba."

The statistics from Cox's time at the club read well. United academy graduates played 25 per cent of first-team minutes between 2019 and 2024 - only second to Bayern Munich in the top five leagues - and United ranked second in the Premier League for minutes given to teenagers last season.

Cox oversaw the continuation of United’s record of including an academy in every first-team matchday squad for over 4,200 games. That record has recently seemed under threat.

The U18s won three national trophies in 2023/2024. And in the last two seasons, the U13s, U14s and U15s have been national champions. Delivering results was crucial, but Cox genuinely cared about the academy and his passion for youth development was obvious when you spoke to him.

Cox was well-versed in the club's rich academy history. He wanted children to understand they were following in the footsteps of legendary United academy graduates each day.

The 47-year-old became a patron of the Manchester Munich Memorial Foundation and visited Manchesterplatz as part of an academy delegation. “It is my job, in part, to make sure that our youth players fully understand and embrace the great legacy and history of our football club," he said.

Cox was born in Welwyn Garden City in Hertfordshire, but felt part Mancunian due to his lengthy association with United.

He deserves credit for establishing the academy alumni programme, which has ensured that former players remain actively engaged with the academy and receive access to support, help and advice.

United's has been a forward-thinking academy. They were the first academy in England to introduce a player-coach role with the U21s, something that Liverpool subsequently copied.

The pro experience programme was created, which saw young players train with EFL and non-league clubs while still playing for the academy to prepare them for potential loans.

Cox helped raise £100m from academy sales, but he never wanted the academy building to become a cash cow for first-team signings. Of course, academy sales have become important due to Profit and Sustainability Rules, but Cox was an advocate of promoting talent from within.

Cox faced challenges along the way. The academy has been United's only well-functioning area in the post-Sir Alex Ferguson era, but that hasn't stopped Ineos from making changes.

When mass redundancies were made, the academy lost talented staff members. Cox has worked in difficult circumstances at Carrington over the last 18 months, with reduced resources due to cost-cutting.

Ineos scaled back the coverage of the academy on MUTV. There is still no dedicated social media account for academy content, or a specialised junior communications executive for media enquiries. That means existing resources and staff members have been stretched, often working long hours.

It will be a near-impossible task for Cox's successor, Stephen Torpey, to emulate his work.

Cox leaves behind a wonderful legacy. Just ask the players who worked with him.

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