Since retiring as a player in 2007, Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has thrown himself headlong into club management. A year after hanging up his boots, he bossed the Manchester United Reserves, a position he held for two years, winning the since-disbanded Premier Reserve League in 2009-10, along with the Lancashire Senior Cup in 200809 and the Manchester Senior Cup in 2009. His early managerial successes led to him being offered the opportunity to coach the Norwegian national team in December 2008, which he turned down due to his commitments to United. Instead he went on to manage Norwegian side Molde, and has since led them to successive Norwegian titles, in 2011 and 2012. Solskjaer has been linked with a number of managerial jobs in England, such as the Aston Villa and Blackburn positions, and said in 2012 that he would like to become manager of United - but not as Sir Alex Ferguson's successor. Understandable, given how tough an act the Scot was to follow, as Moyes is finding out, but how about as the latter's successor? Solskjaer is Manchester United through-and-through and played an iconic role in their legendary 1998-1999 season, helping them claim an historic treble.