A Champions League and Club World Cup winner with Chelsea, Mount was an injury-time substitute for United’s 2024 FA Cup final victory over Manchester City. He started the Europa League final defeat by Tottenham in May and was part of the United squad that finished 15th.
Not that the 26-year-old regrets leaving boyhood club Chelsea.
Speak privately to people who know Mount well and you get the impression restoring United’s fortunes offered the kind of challenge that enthused him.
Under Erik ten Hag at the time, the club made it clear they wanted him. That matters. It still does. That is why Amorim’s first words were perfectly put.
As the former Sporting coach assessed the squad he was inheriting, he knew in Mount he was getting a high-level, flexible player who could fit into a variety of different positions within his system, something Amorim felt he did not have enough of.
Left, right, as an orthodox number 10, as a six, or an eight, Mount has a range of experiences that make him very useful for a coach who regards adaptability as a key weapon.
“He’s a very smart player,” was Amorim’s response when asked about Mount on Friday before Monday’s Premier League game with Bournemouth. “He’s really technical.
“Sometimes being a technical player is not just having fun with the ball. It’s the quality of the pass, the reception, how to receive the ball. Mason can balance our team quite well.”
Amorim is not alone at United’s Carrington training ground in recognising Mount’s qualities. He is certainly not the only one genuinely glad a player who can offer so much is able to put injury issues to one side and deliver performances on a consistent basis.
No-one would argue the past couple of years have been easy. Mount himself has admitted dealing with two extended absences and a couple of smaller frustrating ones was tough.
But staff around Carrington admired the professional attitude Mount adopted throughout his various recoveries.
Training-ground sources have said the player left no stone unturned in pursuit of staying fit and was regularly one of the last to leave after long stints in the ice bath and sauna sessions.
He is regarded as a link within Amorim’s squad – someone who knits groups of players together – which has been particularly evident this season when, it is generally acknowledged, United’s players have remained tight and focused on delivering better results.
Mount is also well liked by non-football staff because he is helpful, which is not something that can be taken for granted in the playing department at United or any other club. He spends time with a couple of kids who are regulars outside the training ground, has spoken with them and their parents and still wears a bracelet one of them gave him.
These traits are all positives on a human scale.
However, in the pressurised world of the Premier League, they are side issues compared to delivering on the pitch – and just now, he is on a roll.
Outstanding in the win at Crystal Palace on 30 November, Mount followed up with an excellent performance against Wolves, who were admittedly poor at Molineux but proved they can be obdurate and diligent in their unlucky loss at Arsenal.
Goals in both victories have taken his overall tally for United to seven, to match his shirt number, a fact not lost on the club’s content creators who put them all on the app and launched a vote for which was the best. His second in the Europa League semi-final against Athletic Bilbao – a two-touch, 50-yard effort to seal a 4-1 win – came out on top.
The idea over the next few weeks and months is to widen that particular area of debate as United push for a European place – their overall aim – and try to secure a top-five berth likely to deliver a return to the Champions League a year before schedule.
