Ruben Amorim's squad will be given a significant makeover in the summer transfer window.
Manchester United announced the signing of Matheus Cunha on the opening day of the window and they are hoping Bryan Mbeumo will be the second fresh face through the door.
United triggered to £62.5million release clause in Cunha's contract at Wolves, which will be paid over three instalments, and a similar fee will be needed to persuade Brentford to allow Mbeumo to leave.
Ruben Amorim does not have a warchest to play with, but Cunha and Mbuemo would take the summer spending to more than £120m and player sales will be important to offset incomings.
It's no secret that United need to sell players this summer and, conveniently, there are three players who have decent resale value at the front of the queue to exit Old Trafford.
The first of those is Marcus Rashford, who will be available for £40m. Rashford missed the end of the season at Aston Villa with a hamstring injury, but he showed enough during his temporary stint at Villa Park for a club to take a chance on him - Barcelona have been heavily linked - this summer.
Rashford's sale will be considered as pure profit in the books. His departure will be key for the transfer budget, although shifting Antony and Jadon Sancho is also high on the agenda.
Sancho will not be joining Chelsea on a permanent transfer, which means the Blues will now pay a £5m penalty charge to United to break the agreement they signed last summer.
It's unprecedented for a club to pay £5m to break their obligation agreement and the ordeal is embarrassing for Sancho, whose career has sadly nosedived over the last few years.

It also means a new buyer must come to the table for Sancho. There have been murmurs of interest from Turkey and United will hope they can bank £20m minimum for the winger.
Antony could be remembered as the worst Premier League signing ever, but he was tremendous during his Real Betis loan and the Spanish club would like to sign him permanently.
The Brazilian must be sold for £32.5m to avoid a PSR loss on his transfer from Ajax, but that would make him Real Betis' record transfer and they probably don't have that capital to spend.
Again, that means United need to find a new willing buyer for Antony this summer, but his stock has improved due to his hugely successful loan stint and £32.5m feels like a fair valuation.
The fourth sale up Amorim's sleeve is Alejandro Garnacho, who was informed he could find a new club this summer after a private breakdown with United's coach at the end of the campaign.
Napoli and Chelsea were interested in signing Garnacho in the January transfer window. The fee of £40m was talked up, but United should be holding out for at least £50m for Garnacho.
Garnacho has proven himself in the Premier League, he is an Argentine international and has not reached his ceiling. He is worth £50m because of the untapped potential he possesses.
Amorim was asked if Garnacho had played his final game for the club after the win over Aston Villa and said: "Garnacho is one more player of Manchester United, so I don't know what is going to happen in the future. He is a normal player."
United's head coach added: "Garnacho is a Manchester United player who was not in the squad today, but he is a normal player in our club and I have no news that will change [that]."
Amorim has handled Garnacho intelligently in public to protect his transfer value, giving him minutes on the post-season tour, but the 20-year-old is expected to have played his final game for the club. The combined sales of that quartet would total 142.5m.