Gary Neville believes it’s “far too early” to appoint Ole Gunnar Solskjaer as permanent Manchester United manager.

Solskjaer was given the United job on an interim basis as Jose Mourinho’s replacement in December.

The Norwegian has overseen nine victories in his first ten games, the latest of which was a 1-0 win over Leicester. Alexis Sanchez was sh*te.

But Neville believes that while his former teammate has boosted his chances of landing the job full-time, there is still much more work to do.

Asked whether Solskjaer should be given the job on a permanent basis now, Neville told Sky Sports: “No. I think that’s far too early.

“If you’d have said to me when he got the job what the chances were as a percentage, I’d have said probably 25 per cent.

“He’s had an incredible run. He’s got a far greater percentage chance now – maybe 50, 60 per cent – but Chelsea away in the FA Cup, PSG in the Champions League, Liverpool, today against Leicester. There’s a huge challenge coming in the next five, six weeks and I think the end of March, early April is the right time to assess the body of work that Ole’s done.

“He’s lifted the club on and off the pitch. It’s been an incredible turnaround, which shows you how bad the players felt before. I never realised how bad the players’ mood could have been to see the response since.

“There were certain players who, under Mourinho, played the best I’ve seen them – the likes of Lindelof and Lingard – but you’ve seen what’s happened since. Is this the reality of what those players can achieve or are we just seeing a boost? I think the answer is somewhere in between but we’ll see.

“If they beat Chelsea, beat PSG, beat Liverpool, Solskjaer is absolutely in the box seat and you’d be saying, ‘How can you not give it to him?’.

“The club have appointed two big names with the last two appointments and it hasn’t worked out.

“The idea of Ole going through that run of fixtures and coming out of it well, you couldn’t sit here conceivably and see another manager. But I think Ole himself will think, ‘Let’s get through February and March and if I’m doing what I’m doing now, I’ve staked a claim’. At this moment he is staking a claim but he knows there is massive challenges to come.

“The job that Ole is doing now is exactly what the club asked him to do – to get the club happy again on and off the pitch.

“However, is he the man to win them the Champions League and the Premier League? If the answer to that is yes, then they should give him the job.”