Football Soccer - Ajax Amsterdam v Manchester United - UEFA Europa League Final - Friends Arena, Solna, Stockholm, Sweden - 24/5/17 Manchester United's Paul Pogba celebrates with the trophy after winning the Europa League Reuters / Michael Dalder Livepic

Manchester United’s Paul Pogba took a step towards helping repay his world record transfer fee with the opening goal in their Europa League win over Ajax Amsterdam on Wednesday which gave them a place in next season’s lucrative Champions League.

Pogba, who rejoined the 20-times English champions last summer from Juventus for £89 million, fired United ahead in the 18th minute in Stockholm helped by a massive deflection off Colombian defender Davinson Sanchez.

Henrik Mkhitaryan added the second three minutes after the break to kill off Ajax, who fielded the youngest ever starting lineup in a European final with an average age of 22.

As well as striking the scrappy opener, the energetic Pogba popped up all over the pitch, forming an effective midfield trident with Marouane Fellaini and Ander Herrera, outmuscling and nullifying the inexperienced Dutch side.

It was no man of the match performance — that honour went to Herrera — and not exactly the glitzy display United smashed the transfer record for, but Pogba’s decisive role will help ease the pressure on him after an underwhelming first season at Old Trafford for both the France international and the team.

It will also help United’s coffers. The club earned €6.5 million for beating Ajax, three million more than their opponents, and will collect €12.7 million for entering the group stage of the Champions League.

An additional €1.5 million is up for grabs for each win in the Champions League group stage, while reaching the last 16 would bring an extra windfall of €16 million.

“The goal was to win all the way through this season. We’ve done it, and we’re proud,” Pogba said.

Pogba also played in the League Cup final victory over Southampton at Wembley Stadium but missed the Community Shield win over last season’s Premier League champions Leicester City having only just joined the Old Trafford club from Juve.

Meanwhile, Juan Mata praised Jose Mourinho’s remarkable knack for coming out on top on the biggest occasions after Manchester United beat Ajax Amsterdam 2-0 on Wednesday to signal the Portuguese coach’s 12th triumph in a final from 14 attempts.

Ajax coach Peter Bosz called the Stockholm showdown “boring” as his young impressionable side were nullified by a far more physical and experienced United side, who won the game with a goal in each half from Paul Pogba and Henrikh Mkhitaryan.

Mourinho, meanwhile, made no apologies for his tactics, remarking:

“There are lots of poets in football but poets don’t win many titles.”

The win preserved Mourinho’s perfect record in major European finals, adding to his 2003 UEFA Cup victory with FC Porto, and his Champions League triumphs with the same club in 2004 and then Italian giants Inter Milan in 2010 after beating Bayern Munich 2-0.

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