Man Utd had surprise Chelsea option as plan B for Alex Telles transfer

LONDON, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 23: Tammy Abraham of Chelsea celebrates with teammates after scoring his sides first goal during the Carabao Cup third round match between Chelsea and Barnsley at Stamford Bridge on September 23, 2020 in London, England. Football Stadiums around United Kingdom remain empty due to the Coronavirus Pandemic as Government social distancing laws prohibit fans inside venues resulting in fixtures being played behind closed doors. (Photo by Neil Hall - Pool/Getty Images)

Alex Telles was arguably the most exciting of Manchester United’s four deadline day signings. 

United secured deals for veteran goalscorer Edinson Cavani, teenage wingers Amad Diallo and Facundo Pellistri, as well as Telles on a hectic final day of the window that has divided within the fanbase.

While signings were made, key areas of weakness within Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s squad were not addressed as an elite centre-back or proven right-winger did not arrive at Old Trafford.

But the poor start to the season from Luke Shaw further exposed the need for competition in the left-back position and Telles is one of the most exciting attacking full-backs across Europe.

Telles, 27, scored 24 times in 127 games during four years at FC Porto, proving he has a true goalscoring threat from defence.

The Brazilian could allow Solskjaer to play a new five-at-the-back system with Telles at left wing-back and Shaw occupying the left centre-back role where he has previously impressed.

But it has emerged that United had another Brazilian as a plan B option if a deal for Telles fell through.

Transfer expert Fabrizio Romano has confirmed on his ‘Here we Go’ podcast that Chelsea full-back Emerson Palmieri was considered as an alternative.

Emerson hasn’t made an impact at Stamford Bridge since his arrival from Roma two seasons ago and supporters will be relieved that the club weren’t forced to move for the 26-year-old.

READ MORE: Dimitar Berbatov highlights Manchester United’s key transfer window mistake