Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Man U takes the reins away from Mourinho

- STEVE DOUGLAS

Wanted: a coach to restore Manchester United to its former status as a major force in European soccer.

It was a task that proved beyond even Jose Mourinho.

United brought an end to Mourinho’s turbulent 2½-year spell at the storied English club by firing him Tuesday, an inevitable move that follows a pattern of bitter endings at the Portuguese coach’s recent teams.

“Be careful,” Mourinho said to reporters and photograph­ers through the open window of a car that whisked him away from the city-centre hotel where he lived throughout his time at United.

Indeed, these are worrying times for both United, which is arguably at its lowest point since the departure of longtime manager Alex Ferguson in 2013, and Mourinho, whose illustriou­s coaching career is at a crossroads as critics question if his abrasive approach on and off the field still suits modern-day soccer.

United said it will not hire a permanent replacemen­t for Mourinho until the off-season. The club will appoint a caretaker manager for the remainder of the season in the coming days.

The end for Mourinho at English soccer’s most prestigiou­s club came two days after a 3-1 loss at fierce rival Liverpool, the latest reminder of just how far United has slumped behind the top teams in the Premier League and Europe.

It was a result that left United sixth in the Premier League, 19 points off the lead after 17 games and perhaps more significan­tly, 11 points off the top four in the race to secure Champions League qualificat­ion for next season. It is United’s worst 17-game start to a league campaign since 1990-91.

“The club would like to thank Jose for his work during his time at Manchester United and to wish him success in the future,” United said in a statement released after Mourinho was told of his fate in a face-to-face meeting with executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward.

United won two titles in Mourinho’s first season — the English League Cup and the Europa League — but failed to capture a trophy in his second season, although runner-up spot in the league was its highest finish since Ferguson left.

Mourinho has historical­ly encountere­d problems in his third season in charge at clubs he has managed and it was no different at United.

His relationsh­ip with Paul Pogba, United’s record signing at US$116 million and the marquee arrival in Mourinho’s reign, appeared broken following a spat that started in the off-season.

Pogba, who hasn’t started for United in its last three games, wrote on Instagram “Caption this!” alongside a picture of him smirking in a post published soon after the announceme­nt of Mourinho’s departure. It was quickly deleted.

Mourinho has also publicly criticized other players, including Luke Shaw and Anthony Martial, during his reign.

Tellingly, the only public message from a United player in the hours following Mourinho’s departure was that post by Pogba.

Mourinho, who oversaw the outlay of $470 million on players while at United, also appeared to have a fractious relationsh­ip with Woodward, especially since the club’s board failed to back his wish to sign a central defender in the off-season. United has already conceded more goals in the league (29) than it did in all of last season.

Then there was United’s pragmatic and often-ponderous style of play under Mourinho that always seemed at odds with the team’s preference down the years for free-flowing, attacking play. Mourinho’s approach and tactics appear out of date and have been bypassed by younger, more forward-thinking managers.

After Sunday’s loss at Anfield, Mourinho said his players were brittle and couldn’t cope with the intensity and physicalit­y of Liverpool, historical­ly United’s biggest rival. United also lost 3-1 to neighbour Manchester City in recent weeks in another display that highlighte­d the team’s demise.

A serial winner of trophies throughout his coaching career — currently at 25 — Mourinho arrived at Old Trafford in 2016 as a supposed quick fix for United following its struggles after the retirement of Ferguson three years earlier. David Moyes, Ferguson’s hand-picked successor, and Louis van Gaal departed after 10 months and two years, respective­ly.

Mourinho lasted only marginally longer. He was at United the same length of time as he was in his previous job at Chelsea, when he was also fired just before Christmas in 2015 in his third season after accusing his players of “betraying” him.

In his six major coaching stints — at Porto, Chelsea, Inter Milan, Real Madrid, Chelsea again and United — Mourinho has lasted more than three years only once. That was in his first spell at Chelsea. Having signed a new contract with United in January until June 2020, he will reportedly receive compensati­on of $30 million.

Whoever replaces Mourinho will take over a team that reached the last 16 of the Champions League, where it will play Paris Saint- Germain over two legs in February and March. The interim coach’s priority will be to claw back that massive deficit to the top four and try to qualify for the Champions League, the minimum requiremen­t for big teams like United every season.

Tottenham manager Mauricio Pochettino is among the favourites with British bookmakers to take over on a full-time basis.

“We know a lot of rumours happen,” Pochettino said Tuesday. “But it’s not my business what happens in another club now. I’m so focused on delivering my best job, our best job, in this club.”

In some of Mourinho’s final public comments as United manager, he said “for sure we are going to finish in the top six ... but the better we can get is fourth position.” It smacked of a lowering in standards he used to criticize other managers of having.

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