For years, Bruno Fernandes has been one of the most debated players in football.
Too emotional. Too aggressive. Complains too much. Not a “big-game” player. Stat-padding. System player.
None of that matters anymore.
Bruno Fernandes has officially been named the 2025-26 Premier League Player of the Season after carrying Manchester United back into the Champions League and producing one of the greatest creative midfield seasons the league has ever seen.
And honestly, it was deserved.
Fernandes finished the season with 20 assists, tying the all-time Premier League record previously shared by Thierry Henry and Kevin De Bruyne. He also added eight goals while leading the entire league with an absurd 132 chances created.
That is not just elite production — that is historically dominant playmaking.
What makes the season even crazier is that Manchester United were not exactly viewed as title favorites entering the year. Yet Bruno dragged them into a top-three finish and back to the Champions League while becoming the heartbeat of the entire club.
Every big moment seemed to involve him.
Late winners. Through balls nobody else sees. Long-range screamers. Set pieces. Press resistance. Leadership. Chaos. Bruno was everywhere.
Even people who dislike Manchester United have started admitting it.
The craziest part is that Fernandes did this while constantly playing through heavy minutes and pressure. While other stars were rotated or protected, Bruno basically never stopped running. Week after week, he looked like the only player on the pitch capable of creating danger for United.
And now the awards are piling up.
He already won the Football Writers’ Association Footballer of the Year award earlier this month, and now he adds the Premier League’s biggest individual honor to his resume.
At this point, the conversation around Bruno Fernandes has changed completely.
This is no longer just a “good Manchester United player.”
This is one of the defining Premier League midfielders of his era.
The assist numbers put him alongside Thierry Henry and Kevin De Bruyne in league history. And unlike some attacking midfielders who disappear when their team struggles, Fernandes somehow became even more important when United needed him most.
You can hate his antics. You can hate Manchester United. You can hate the constant complaining to referees.
But you cannot deny the production anymore.
Bruno Fernandes just delivered a season that will be remembered for a very long time.








