Irish Daily Mail

FURIOUS JOSE

Mourinho in a rage over stars missing final

- EXCLUSIVE By CHRIS WHEELER

JOSE MOURINHO is angry that Romelu Lukaku and Marouane Fellaini did not make more of an effort to play in the FA Cup final defeat to Chelsea.

Lukaku was a Manchester United sub at Wembley after telling Mourinho that he was not fit to start following an ankle injury.

United’s top scorer was confident he would make the starting XI until doubts crept in in the build-up.

Fellaini has missed the last three games of the season with a muscle strain and was not in the squad, even though sources close to the player claimed he would be available.

Mourinho is said to suspect that both players were protecting themselves so they would be fit for the World Cup.

‘When a player tells you he is not ready to start, then the question is how many minutes do you think you can play,’ said Mourinho when asked about Lukaku.

JOSE MOURINHO was conspicuou­s by his absence when Manchester United’s directors and senior figures gathered for a drinks reception at The Langham hotel in Marylebone on Saturday evening.

The players had been given permission to make their own plans in London and Mourinho, too, had slipped away into the night.

You couldn’t blame the United manager for not wanting to socialise in the wake of a Cup final defeat against his old club Chelsea. Mourinho is a serial winner and defeat has never sat comfortabl­y with him.

Truth is, however, there hasn’t been much to put anyone at United in a party mood for quite some time. Mourinho’s joyless demeanour since arriving at Old Trafford two years ago has been mirrored by his players on the pitch.

Here, in the sunshine at Wembley, on an occasion made for a great FA Cup final, one game rather summed it all up.

Yes, Chelsea played their part in denying us a spectacle and defended deep after taking the lead. Mourinho, of all people, would have identified with that. But United lacked the guile and imaginatio­n to open up their opponents. It was hard to watch without recalling how this is a club once synonymous with attacking football; the standardbe­arers for flair and entertainm­ent, so often showcased in this great competitio­n.

Mourinho’s United are capable of taking off the handbrake, as they showed after a stupefying first half. But, on the whole, they are stuck in the lower gears. The days when United thrilled a generation with their football, and not only their own fans either, seem very distant now after five years under David Moyes, Louis van Gaal and Mourinho. Not once since Alex Ferguson retired have his old club scored five or more goals in a Premier League game. Manchester City have done it 17 times and Liverpool 12.

Credit where it’s due. The number of points and goals have picked up again over the last two seasons under the Portuguese coach. United are firmly back among the Champions League elite and in contention for trophies. This was his third cup final in 15 months.

There is no doubt, too, that they have suffered by comparison to Pep Guardiola’s rampant City, who would have given even Ferguson’s greatest teams a run for their money.

But Van Gaal was sacked by Ed Woodward straight after lifting the FA Cup, more for the turgid nature of his football than a failure to qualify for the Champions League. Two years on, and having spent £300million, could you honestly say United are that much better to watch now?

As Woodward, Avi Glazer, Bobby Charlton and David Gill filed forlornly out of Wembley and headed for Marylebone on Saturday night, they will probably have been asking the same questions as the rest of us. Why do marquee players such as Paul Pogba and Alexis Sanchez look so average while Eden Hazard rises to the big occasion for Chelsea? How have United become so reliant on Romelu Lukaku? They scored twice in almost six-and-ahalf hours of football before their top scorer returned from injury off the bench at Wembley to little effect. Why have vibrant young players such as Anthony Martial and Marcus Rashford apparently lost the trust of the manager and, as a result, their confidence? It was baffling to watch a team with so much attacking talent shift the ball sideways from flank to flank in Wembley’s wide open spaces without purpose or penetratio­n.

Simply throwing more money at the problem this summer won’t necessaril­y help, considerin­g the lack of impact made by many of United’s signings in recent years.

The back four here were all Ferguson men. Goalkeeper David de Gea is the club’s player of the year once more.

Mourinho was always going to be an awkward fit for United, a club with such swashbuckl­ing traditions. But after making so much of the fact that he picked up three trophies in his first season at Old Trafford, the 55-yearold must accept the criticism for finishing his second one emptyhande­d. Even more so when entertainm­ent has been at a premium again.

‘Finals are not for playing, they are for winning,’ Mourinho once said, and he lost this one.

He claimed on Friday at United’s country retreat in Hertfordsh­ire that one game would not define their season, win or lose. As he reflected on the defeat, midfielder Nemanja Matic offered a different view.

‘Of course, when you win the trophy it’s different and you feel better,’ said the Serbian after losing his second Cup final in a row. ‘When you don’t win one year there is always more pressure the next year. When you play Manchester United, it’s a normal thing. We have to accept that and deal with it.

‘I think we need some players with experience to bring some more qualities to our team. After that, we can fight for the title and the Champions League also.’

United still look short of that level, particular­ly when you compare them to City in the Premier League and the best Europe has to offer. Somehow Mourinho has to get them there. Whether he can do it with a little more flair is another matter altogether.

As United’s staff and players left Wembley and dispersed around London on Saturday night, the omens didn’t look good.

 ??  ?? Down and out: United’s players at Wembley on Saturday
Down and out: United’s players at Wembley on Saturday
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland