'No brainer from me' - Whatever happens with Kean Bryan and Sheffield United, his personal turnaround deserves recognition
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It's been some turnaround for a player who, one fan crudely remarked earlier this season, had been seen more times in OK! magazine than on the pitch for United.
But there has always been a player in Bryan - even if his rare appearances in cup football for the Blades were not the ideal circumstances to show it.
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Hide AdBad players don't come through Manchester City's academy, and certainly aren't given the captaincy by a legendary former leader in Patrick Vieira when he was in situ at the Etihad campus.
But it has taken until the last six months or so of his Bramall Lane contract for Bryan to finally get the chance to show what he can do on a consistent basis, and he has taken it.
Bar the odd rick, like a short backpass which Timo Werner gleefully seized upon against Chelsea, he has been solid on the left of United's three-man back line, both in defence and attack.
And Bryan, still only 24 years old, is making a good fist of meeting his manager Chris Wilder's recent challenge, to earn himself a new contract offer this summer.
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Hide AdIf social media is anything to go by - and at the minute, with crowds still banned from games, it's the best judge of a fanbase's mood that we have - then the majority of United supporters would not be averse at all to Bryan being offered fresh terms as the Blades prepare for a return to the Championship.
"He’s definitely earned one for me," Matthew Grayson said. "He’s improved so much and the run of games can only help him get better."
Fellow Blade Tom Fontana said: "Thrown into the deep end, he’s been one of the positives of a disappointing season. Just a shame for him that his competition will be the calibre of Jack."
And David Wilkinson added: "Kean Bryan is one of the lowest earners in the first team squad, if not the lowest earner, yet he does what we all want to see in a United shirt... he tries. He puts in 100 per cent. No brainer for me. Could do with more cut from that cloth."
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Hide AdThe fly in the ointment in all this, of course, is that even if he is offered a new deal, Bryan may decide that his footballing development is best served elsewhere.
He spoke very well in a recent interview about his desire to play games - something he hasn't done an awful lot of at Bramall Lane - and, in an ideal world for United, he would start the season as understudy to a player of immense quality and - until this season, at least - reliability, in O'Connell.
But holding his own against the likes of City and scoring against Manchester United, he looks a long way from the player who flattered to deceive against the likes of Barnet and AFC Fylde. Whatever happens with Bryan and United in the future, it is a turnaround that deserves to be applauded.
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