via Manchester United Comics and Edition

If you’ve been on Twitter or you’ve seen the screenshots on Facebook, you probably know by now that actress (and aspiring singer) Somaya Elkhashab is known for a lot of things. One of them is making memes of herself and her previous work, while another is interacting with her adoring “stans”.

Another thing she’s getting incredibly known for is her love-hate relationship with English football club Manchester United (and her particularly well-documented dislike of its coach Ole Gunnar Solskjær).

via Somaya Elkhashab

Because we know how much we occasionally enjoy going through her increasingly angry tweets, we know you certainly will! Don’t believe it? Just check out the ones below:

Apparently, Somaya thinks that Solskjaer is bribing Manchester United into being its coach. Granted, that’s what a lot of other long-suffering fans seem to think too.

via Somaya Elkhashab

The actress also holds great reverence for club icon Sir Alex Ferguson, citing him as a source of inspiration and a godfather she consistently looks up to.

via  Somaya Elkhashab

Can you guess what Somaya said the last time a fan asked her what she thought of one particularly disastrous football match? Yeah, that’s right—she called it chaos!

via Somaya Elkhashab

In this tweet, the star was asked who she’d prefer to have coach Man U. Naturally, she immediately went to Zinedine Zidane.

via Somaya Elkhashab

Much like every EPL Fantasy player, Somaya faced the misfortune of having a player she previously had as captain score…right when she un-captained him. Talk about bad luck!

via Somaya Elkhashab 

Remember every time you’ve heard about a football fan losing it over a team that’s doing its absolute worse? Well, you’re about to see this star going through that same rollercoaster of emotion. Here she is criticising her team for shoddy defending.

via Somaya Elkhashab

Comedy comes from those we least expect it from, doesn’t it? Just invoking the spiritual realm rather than admit having a struggling goalkeeper hasn’t been done often enough, we think.

via Somaya Elkhashab