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Published 09:00 19 Jul 2015 BST
Updated 17:13 19 Jul 2015 BST

Here we consider both sides of the argument and ask in the style of the Clash: Should he stay or should he go?
The mercurial Argentine started the season in fine form. His slalom runs from deep, devilish delivery from wide positions and moments of genius like his goal at Leicester City marked him out a class apart. Since then he has suffered injury, the traumatic experience of an attempted break-in, and unsettling experimentation with his position.
The true value of a player like Di Maria will come in a settled side - playing alongside the likes of Bastian Schweinsteiger and Memphis Depay. He is the key to making a good team great; he is the incremental difference at the highest level. Any player of his rare skills would struggle to adapt to a new country, a different culture AND an embryonic side.
Currently he is wanting for confidence and form, but that doesn't mean you cash in at the earliest opportunity. The stats in terms of assists prove how important he has been to this United team in the most transitional of seasons. Given time, he can bloom at Old Trafford and treat the fans to the type of magical football he is more than capable of producing.
Di Maria's game slowly unravelled as the season has progressed. One can certainly list a number of mitigating circumstances as to why that is, but it's no less true. United started the season accommodating their new star name. The football was intermittently okay but generally poor. Di Maria may have shone as a singular highlight but it didn't work overall.
As the season wore on, Van Gaal adapted his tactics and the results improved. Many of United's best performances didn't feature Di Maria, whose propensity to lose the ball was a liability. Just because he's brilliant, it doesn't mean he's brilliant for this club and this manager. £60m is an obscene amount of money for a player who isn't a consistently match-winning talisman for the side.
It would be sad to see Di Maria go after only one season at the club, but if PSG are genuinely ready to offer United every penny of their initial outlay, there is no decision to make. That money could be better spent on a player better suited to the club and critically the manager.
It's simply a case of the right player, just the wrong time and place.
