Irish Daily Mail

MOURINHO MELTDOWN WRECKING BALL JOSE CLAIMS...

United’s US tour not worth watching Club have let him down on transfers Half of this line-up won’t survive season

- CHRIS WHEELER reports from Ann Arbor

WHEN Jose Mourinho left the place they call The Big House, Manchester United’s tour, their pre-season plans, their transfer business, their squad, just about everything in fact, felt like one big mess.

As if a 4-1 defeat by Liverpool in Michigan’s cavernous stadium had not given Mourinho enough problems, he decided to take a wrecking ball to anything in his sights.

United’s tour of the US? Not worth watching. Transfers? The club have let me down.

Nemanja Matic has had abdominal surgery that will rule him out of the start of the season, revealed Mourinho, taking the number of first-team players unavailabl­e to him this weekend to 17.

One of them, captain Antonio Valencia, came back from holiday out of shape according to his manager. Another, Anthony Martial, should have returned to the tour after the birth of his baby — but he has not.

Oh, and the match officials for Saturday’s game obviously came from the baseball leagues.

It was an extraordin­ary diatribe even by Mourinho’s standards. By the time he had vacated the stage en route to Miami for United’s final tour game against Real Madrid, it was difficult to know where to start.

It felt as though everything was starting to unravel before a ball has been kicked in anger and noone was safe from his indignatio­n.

You can only imagine the marketing men at Old Trafford recoiling in horror as Mourinho put into words what we have all known for a while on this trip. United may have finally pulled a huge crowd of 101,254 in Michigan after three disappoint­ing attendance­s in Phoenix, Santa Clara and LA, but the 55-year-old admitted fans are being short-changed by the lack of genuine stars on show.

He claimed half of the outfield players in the starting XI will not even be at United this season — a fair assumption considerin­g the line-up.

It’s understood that Internatio­nal Champions Cup organisers Relevent Sports have contacted United to voice their concerns over the lack of big names out here.

‘The atmosphere was good but if I was them I wouldn’t have come,’ said Mourinho. ‘I wouldn’t have spent my money to watch these two teams.

‘I watched Chelsea versus Inter earlier and people had decided the beach was better. The stadium was empty.

‘These people here came to enjoy the clubs they love in Europe. That is fantastic. But this is not our team, not our squad. This is not even 30 per cent of my squad. The majority of the players that played are not going to play. Some of them are not even going to belong to the squad. We are not playing here to improve the team or the dynamic. We are playing here to just survive and have some not very ugly results.’

Maybe clubs like United will think twice in future about scheduling high-profile tours like this so soon after a World Cup.

Paul Pogba, Romelu Lukaku, Marouane Fellaini, Jesse Lingard and Ashley Young are on holiday after the tournament in Russia.

Victor Lindelof is due back at Carrington today and Mourinho revealed that Marcus Rashford and Phil Jones have cut short their summer breaks to help the team. As quickly as he can get players back, however, the United manager is losing others to injury.

Matic had surgery in Philadelph­ia and has flown straight home to Manchester to recuperate. Valencia is already there after tearing a calf muscle in the game against San Jose Earthquake­s.

‘Antonio Valencia came from holiday, and I think too much holiday for him,’ said Mourinho.

Luke Shaw pulled out of Saturday’s game and then Chris Smalling was injured in the warmup. He had to be replaced by Eric Bailly, who was not even among the substitute­s at the start.

Bailly limped away afterwards with a swollen ankle, as did Ander Herrera. With Sergio Romero, Marcos Rojo and new signing Diogo Dalot completing the casualty list, it is not surprising Mourinho has no idea how his team will line up against Leicester at Old Trafford in 11 days’ time after a final friendly with Bayern Munich in Germany.

He fears that the absence of so many key players in America has forced others to risk themselves unnecessar­ily. ‘The accumulati­on of matches is killing progressiv­ely my brave boys, because I have some brave boys,’ he said.

‘We have four or five players that are “dead” because they care for the club. I just hope the boys on deserved holidays take care of

‘Antonio Valencia had too much holiday. His condition wasn’t good’ ‘The referee must have been called in by mistake from baseball’

themselves and somebody wants to do what Rashford and Jones do, which is to be back earlier because for the beginning of the season we are going to be in trouble.’

Martial is one of the players Mourinho has in mind. The Frenchman left for Paris last week to be at the birth of his baby son and has not returned.

‘He has the baby and after the baby is born — beautiful baby, full of health, thank God — he should be here and he is not here,’ said the United manager.

United were soundly beaten in Michigan. Xherdan Shaqiri’s wonderful bicycle kick added to Daniel Sturridge’s strike and two penalties that left Mourinho bristling.

With Mourinho in this kind of mood, the concern for the United hierarchy is that it could get a whole lot worse yet.

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