Senne Lammens is having a brilliant first season in goal for Manchester United and he has spoken about his big influences, his start at OId Trafford and those set-pieces.
A smile creeps across Senne Lammens’ face as he reflects on his latest trial by set-pieces as Manchester United No.1. The Belgian was put through the mill on Merseyside on Monday night, but departed earning rave reviews from everyone, from the Everton manager to one of his most successful predecessors.
Lammens dealt with Everton’s aerial onslaught in the calm, composed and unflappable manner that everyone at United has come to expect after spending six months with the 23-year-old, who joined from Royal Antwerp for £18.2million at the end of the summer transfer window.
The Premier League are under pressure to change the rules that allow penalty areas to turn into wrestling rings during corners. Kobbie Mainoo compared Everton’s approach to the Royal Rumble, which is putting goalkeepers under pressure like never before, but rather than join the chorus calling for change, Lammens admits there is a part of him that actually enjoys it.
FOLLOW OUR MAN UNITED FACEBOOK PAGE! Latest news and analysis via the MEN’s Manchester United Facebook page
“Of course, you try to protect a little bit the goalkeeper sometimes and maybe there are some situations where that could have been protected more,” he said.
“But for me, to be honest, if it continues like this, just the physicality in general and those corners, I sometimes even like it as well, yeah, I have to say.”
It is this mentality that is marking Lammens out as a different beast when it comes to goalkeepers. He has established himself as the club’s first-choice after just over 50 league games in Belgium and 21 matches for United.
Standing at 6ft 4ins tall and with a broad physique, Lammens is an ideal prototype for a Premier League goalkeeper in 2026. Those physical gifts have always come naturally to him and are helping him thrive in pressure situations this season, quickly earning the trust and appreciation of his teammates.
“For me, it’s just the way it is,” he said of the set-piece challenge. “It is the Premier League. It’s physicality and a bit of war in the [penalty area]. It’s also one of my strengths, so sometimes I like the challenge as well.
“It’s always been a bit of my strength, even in Belgium, which is less physical, but the principles are all the same. The technique is the same. Now it’s a little bit more bodies in front of you, but my teammates help me out as well with blocking the guys away from me. You have to be kind of big and not easy to be pushed around.”
If Lammens relished the madness of the Hill Dickinson Stadium penalty area on Monday, then a visit to Partington Central Academy Primary School on Wednesday wasn’t going to throw him off course.
Try MEN Premium NOW for just £1
The Belgian surprised a group of children as part of the Manchester United Foundation’s children’s book appeal throughout March, encouraging fans to donate new and pre-loved books to children in need.
Lammens took part in a Q&A and joined in some playground sports games, and the down-to-earth goalkeeper was touched by the hero’s welcome he received as he walked into the classroom.
He is still young enough to remember his own days looking up to his idols, and as an aspiring young goalkeeper, there were a couple in particular he watched closely.
“My biggest idol as a goalkeeper was probably [Manuel] Neuer.,” he said. “I take pride in being an all-round goalkeeper and I think that’s also why I was such a big fan of his because he didn’t really have a weak point or something that was clearly not the best thing in his game. So that’s something I probably take from him.
“I’m also Belgian, so Thibaut Courtois is always a big thing when I was growing up as well. And I think just his qualities and saving the ball are just world-class.”
Now he’s made a name for himself in the game, Lammens prefers to switch off from football when he leaves the training ground. He enjoys watching American sports and follows particular athletes, aiming to learn from their approach and mentality, and cites LeBron James and Kobe Bryant as two NBA influences.
Ensure our latest sport headlines always appear at the top of your Google Search by making us a Preferred Source. Click here to activate or add us as a Preferred Source in your Google search settings
When he is at Carrington, Lammens has been spending plenty of time with United’s 39-year-old goalkeeper, Tom Heaton. A former United academy graduate and England international, Heaton is third-choice but remains a big influence in the goalkeeping group, and he has been instilling in Lammens the value of doing the basics right and not giving the opposition any easy routes into the game.
But credit for the signing of Lammens has been directed to United’s goalkeeping scout Tony Coton, and the player himself revealed the detailed role Coton played in keeping him abreast of developments, with the transfer going down to the final days of the window.
“I’ve had contacts with United [for quite a while],” he said. “I think Tony Coton was probably one of the biggest ones. I had a good relationship with him from the beginning and especially my agent was always on a good relationship with him, so he was always honest with me and always open and everything he said has come true.
“He was just a big, big, big influence and like a big helping point in the conversations with United when the deal wasn’t done yet. He gave me a lot of confidence that that was the right step to do for me.”
Lammens was on the bench for the first three games after his move, but he has been an ever-present since making his debut in a 2-0 win against Sunderland in October, when his confident performance was met with chants of ‘are you Schmeichel in disguise?’
He wasn’t told he would be given a clear path into the team after signing, but he knew his chance would come. He has taken it with both hands and looks at home at a club of this size, with Michael Carrick describing it as a “huge jump” after Lammens’ performance on Monday.
“They warned me that Manchester United is a different animal, especially social media-wise,” he said. “They warned me that it is one of the biggest clubs, if not the biggest club.
“It’s Manchester United, one of the biggest clubs in the world, but also you have to look through that a little bit. It’s still a game of football, the game isn’t that much different.
“Of course, the quality is better, but you have to trust in yourself. There’s a reason I’m here, that I made the move. Those first weeks were a bit rough about getting used to it, but I always knew that I was going to be ready for it.”
Lammens made 173 saves for Royal Antwerp last season, the most of any goalkeeper in Europe’s top-eight leagues, but at United he is taking pride in proving that, like his hero Neuer, he has a good all-round game.
“The first thing as a goalkeeper, you have to make saves, that’s the most important thing, but I take a lot of pride in doing the other things well,” he said. “Maybe not always the box office stuff or the things people look at first. If you know a little bit about goalkeeping, that’s probably sometimes even as important for your teammates to trust in you and to help out the team.
“Sometimes in United, I don’t really have to do a lot of saves, a different kind of goalkeeping, but it’s also sometimes the most difficult, when there are only one or two saves to be made, but you have to make them.”
Lammens admits he reads social media and has noticed the positive reviews he is getting, especially from United supporters, but insists he won’t be distracted if the negativity comes his way.
He certainly seems to have his feet on the ground. At 23, he doesn’t seem to have changed much or let the success go to his head, and he is determined to never lose that mindset. “I hope not. I think that’s also something I try to show the world, that I’m just a normal guy as well, that everyone can make it.”
