Man Utd hero Roy Keane brands Jamie Carragher 'unprofessional' for thing he has 'never done'

Roy Keane
Roy Keane wasn't impressed upon hearing Jamie Carragher had missed his train after sleeping in -Credit:Stick to Football/YouTube


Roy Keane has slammed Jamie Carragher for his "unprofessional" behaviour after he missed the start of a football show due to oversleeping.

Keane, Carragher, Gary Neville, Ian Wright and Jill Scott are part of the popular YouTube programme Stick to Football. However, during the latest episode, Carragher was noticeably absent after Neville revealed that he had slept through his alarm and missed his train to the studio, reports the Mirror.

This revelation left Keane stunned, as he exclaimed: "How can you sleep through an alarm, I've never slept through an alarm in my life." Both Wright and Neville concurred, stating they'd never done it either, with Neville adding: "I've never known him do it, to be fair."

ALSO READ: Sir Dave Brailsford pushing for new Manchester United training ground

ALSO READ: Arsenal transfer ruined my international career – Sir Alex Ferguson revived it

An irritated Keane then queried: "So he's not turning up? " to which Neville responded that "he's going to be arriving late". Still irked by Carragher's lateness, Keane continued his tirade, stating: "That is unprofessional of him, isn't it?"

Carragher eventually arrived 50 minutes into the 80-minute show and was promptly teased by the panel. He quipped: "Am I still getting full pay or not? Sorry Roy."

Neville questioned whether he had been out drinking the night before, but Carragher insisted: "I was just knackered. Monday night football, Champions League this week."

Sign up to our United newsletter so you never miss an update from Old Trafford this season.

Once settled, Carragher reiterated his earlier comments made on Sky Sports, asserting that Casemiro's time at the top was over after a difficult stint as centre-back during United's 4-0 defeat at Crystal Palace.

Despite Keane and Wright showing understanding for the Brazilian, who was out of his usual position, Carragher clarified: "It wasn't just on one game. I did a piece on Casemiro at the start of the season against Tottenham."

He continued to critique Erik Ten Hag's tactics, adding: "I felt the man-to-man marking Ten Hag was doing was killing Casemiro, and it had been killing him for a year. He's not the most mobile and Ten Hag's system doesn't help him.

"That [his comments] wasn't a reaction to the game [against Palace], I feel like I've watched it all season with him. It was sad to watch him on Monday."