‘Bright prospect’ James Wilson faded after great start

JW v WolvesGREAT things were expected of James Wilson after he scored two goals on his Manchester United debut.

Caretaker manager Ryan Giggs gave the 18-year-old the opportunity to prove himself at first-team level in a home game against Hull City in 2014 and he was instantly repaid.

Wilson UtdA few months later, Wilson signed a four-year contract, with new manager Louis van Gaal describing him as “one of the brightest young English prospects”.

But that early promise evaporated as injury problems and the emergence of the talented Marcus Rashford overshadowed his progress.

“I wanted to get out of my comfort zone on loan at Brighton and while I was there Rashford came through,” Wilson told ESPN. “I came back and never really got that chance again. Injuries were a big thing.”

The Biddulph-born striker eventually severed ties with Old Trafford in the summer of 2019 having first joined United in 2002 aged only seven.

In the season after his impressive debut against Hull, he made a further 17 appearances for United and scored two more, but he appeared in only one Premier League game and one League Cup game in 2015-16, and didn’t feature for United’s first team again.

JW England u21Wilson represented England at under 16, under 19, under 20 and under 21 levels but a career in England’s top-flight proved elusive and he is now playing for Scottish Premiership side Aberdeen.

One of several loan spells Wilson had away from United saw him join Brighton’s ultimately unsuccessful bid for promotion from the Championship in November 2015.

Although he showed glimpses of real quality, and scored five goals, he often seemed to be fatigued and ended up making just 12 starts plus 15 more from the bench.

Perhaps, rather unfortunately, he is best remembered for being caught by the TV cameras vomiting on the pitch immediately before a game against Wolves on New Year’s Day.

Wilson’s start for the Seagulls was impressive enough: a goal on his full debut in a 3-2 win over Charlton Athletic. “I remember picking the ball up on the edge of the D and just drove at the centre backs. They backed off, I managed to get my shot away and it went through their ‘keeper’s legs,” he said in a subsequent Albion matchday programme.

He followed that one with the opener in a 2-2 draw away to Derby County.

Tomer Hemed and Sam Baldock were more often than not manager Chris Hughton’s preferred selection up front although Wilson rewarded Hughton’s decision to give him his first start for two months in place of Hemed in a home game against Reading on 15 March. He scored the only goal of the game and Albion edged into second place as the promotion race hotted up.

JW scores v DerbyHe also scored (above) in the fifth minute of added on time to secure Albion a point in their penultimate league game at home to Derby, but when runners-up spot eluded the Seagulls courtesy of the last-game 1-1 draw at Middlesbrough, and when Albion failed to overcome Sheffield Wednesday in the Championship play-offs, Wilson returned to Old Trafford.

At the start of the following season, he was on his travels again, this time to Derby, but his season-long loan ended prematurely in October 2016 when he sustained an anterior cruciate ligament knee injury that sidelined him for months.

While he eventually returned to action in United’s under 23 side, he didn’t get a first team chance under Jose Mourinho and instead spent the second half of the 2017-18 season on loan to Sheffield United where he scored once in nine appearances.

He spent the whole of the 2018-19 season on loan at Aberdeen, scoring four goals in 32 games and then signed for them permanently in the summer of 2019, aiming to reignite his career. But having not scored in 16 games in the latter part of 2019, he was allowed to return to the Manchester area, signing on 31 January 2020 for League Two Salford City.

James Wilson Aberdeen