Marcus Rashford‘s career has been full of highs and lows, from his breakout at Manchester United to his current Barcelona tenure; he has been a prominent public figure.
Born in Manchester on October 31st, 1997, he was raised in Wythenshawe, in South Manchester. Rashford’s story began in Manchester. He joined Manchester United’s academy as a child and became one of the club’s great modern youth products.
He was often referred to as a true ‘Manc’, meaning someone who speaks in a Mancunian accent, related to Manchester and the surrounding area.
His first-team breakthrough came in 2016, when he scored twice on his debut against Midtjylland in the Europa League, then followed it with two more goals against Arsenal in the Premier League. Almost overnight, he went from academy prospect to one of the faces of United’s future.
That early rise also pushed him quickly into the England setup. Rashford made his senior international debut in 2016 and soon became part of England’s tournament squads. Over the years, he has played at major competitions, operated across the front line, and built a reputation as one of the country’s most recognisable attacking players.
After being one of the most promising attackers in the League, Rashford fell out with Erik Ten Hag and then Ruben Amorim at United, mainly due to ‘attitude problems’. Every small action of his was reviewed under a microscope in the media.
After the fallout, he had a short loan stint at Aston Villa before moving to Barcelona.
The move to Barcelona marked a major reset. Leaving the Premier League environment, even on loan, allowed Rashford to step away from the constant noise around England.
At Barca, he was joining a club with its own demands, but also one where his pace, direct running and ability to play across the attack could be used in a different way. It felt like a chance to reshape the way people spoke about him.
Rashford has put that into motion, scoring 14 goals and assisting 14 times for Barcelona so far this season. With his most recent goal coming in El Clásico, where Barcelona beat Real Madrid 2-0 to win the title.
In the 9th minute of the game, Barcelona got a free kick from a tight angle on top of the box. Rashford stepped up to take it, curling it towards the far corner, putting Barca up by 1 with a stunner of a free kick.
Rashford was asked about his goal in a post-match interview, where he mentioned the tight angle and being inspired by his teammates to shoot.
“Tbh in the beginning I wasn’t gonna shoot. I didn’t see the angles & Courtios is really big. I didn’t feel it wasn’t gonna be a goal. But Dani & Pedri told me “shoot shoot”!
— ᴘɢ² (@angrygavi) May 10, 2026
It’s good it went in bcz in training yesterday I didn’t score any”
Rashy 😂😂 pic.twitter.com/y89FztNNdx
However, fans noticed something different, a slight Spanishness in his Brit accent.
Rashford talked about the training session before the match, he said, “Because yesterday in the training, I don’t score any.”
Fans found this funny and spotted the Spanish influence in his native English accent. They joked that the Spanish lessons he has taken have made him start speaking the way Spaniards do.
Did an English boy just say “I don’t score any”😂😂
— TobyWrites (@tobyasky) May 10, 2026
He’s taken so much Spanish lessons, he’s losing his English😂😂
He’s literally speaking like a Spaniard pic.twitter.com/6qZt26jMw4
What sort of English is rashford speaking!! Spain has changed him 😭😭😭😭😂😂😂😂 https://t.co/AFZxTAeyGi
— WAZIRI II (@YAGABI_90) May 10, 2026
In another interview, fans spotted the same accent, as he spoke to a reporter.
When asked about his season at Barcelona, Rashford said,” I come here to win” which was another thing fans found funny.
Marcus Rashford: "If I was a magician, I would stay at Barcelona" 🪄 pic.twitter.com/H1rtRT75HA
— BBC Sport (@BBCSport) May 10, 2026
English fans had also noticed similar moments with Harry Kane, who they thought was speaking with a German influence after joining Bayern, and Joey Barton speaking English with a French accent during his time at Marseille.
It is a common adaptation seen in football players all over the globe.
When a player moves abroad, they are suddenly speaking in dressing rooms, interviews and press conferences with people whose first language may not be the same. So they often start doing a few things without even realising it. They slow down, soften their accent, and try speaking more clearly so the locals can understand them.
This sounded very different to the thick ‘Manc’ accent that fans have usually seen in interviews from Rashford.
REFERENCES:
FC Barcelona. (2026, April 24). Rashford | 2025/2026 player page | Forward | FC Barcelona Official website. Barça. https://www.fcbarcelona.com/en/football/first-team/players/13565/marcus-rashford
Garrett, P. (2010). Communication accommodation theory. In Cambridge University Press eBooks (pp. 105–120). https://doi.org/10.1017/cbo9780511844713.007
Marcus Rashford – Stats 25/26. (n.d.). Transfermarkt. https://www.transfermarkt.co.in/marcus-rashford/leistungsdaten/spieler/258923
Reporter, G. S. (2017, February 20). Joey Barton speaks English with a French accent – video. The Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/football/video/2012/nov/26/joey-barton-english-french-accent-video?utm_source=chatgpt.com
Sky Sports. (2025, March 28). Bayern Munich: How good is Harry Kane’s German? Take a look as the Bayern striker has his language lessons. Sky Sports. https://www.skysports.com/football/video/12606/13337228/how-good-is-harry-kanes-german-speaking-take-a-look-as-the-bayern-munich-striker-has-his-language-lessons?utm_source=chatgpt.com
Whitebloom, G. (2025, July 24). What Went Wrong for Marcus Rashford at Man Utd? SI. https://www.si.com/soccer/what-went-wrong-for-marcus-rashford-man-utd
Wikipedia contributors. (2026, May 10). Marcus Rashford. Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcus_Rashford#Early_life



