Sun.Star Cebu

Man United starts again

- BY JOHN LEICESTER / AP Columnist @johnleices­ter

When you’re in a hole, stop digging: That’s the strategy Manchester United is pursuing by sacking Jose Mourinho.

Grumpy. Toxic. Whiny. Defeatist. Words that have sprung to mind in Mourinho’s plummet to mediocrity this season also risked washing off onto the United brand. At a time when the club is facing more intense competitio­n than ever — for fans, for revenue and for results on the field — from both establishe­d rivals and other teams fueled by foreign money like Manchester City, United couldn’t wait around for Mourinho to get his mojo back.

Mourinho and United always seemed like an odd couple. Their union in 2016 was one of convenienc­e, not a meeting of minds.

United wanted a big name. Serial trophy winner Mourinho was as big as they come.

For the coach who accumulate­d silverware in Portugal, Italy, Spain and in two spells at Chelsea, United offered a stage unmatched in size — it turned its greatest managers into legends, like Matt Busby and Alex Ferguson.

But United and Mourinho also made compromise­s that 2½ years later fed into their separation, announced in a terse, pro-forma, three-sentence statement from the team on Tuesday.

By hiring the tactical pragmatist who has always prioritize­d results over style and has zero qualms about winning ugly, United made its supposed love of attractive and attacking football ring hollow.

The compromise Mourinho made, which eventually proved fatal for him, was agreeing to work for a club that was never going to let him do everything his own way. Perhaps the self-described “Special One” imagined that, with time, he’d eventually be able to compel United and its players to follow his every command and that, like Ferguson, he would be able to buy, sell and bench whom he liked. But those days ended with Ferguson. As Mourinho lost his power struggles with the United board, getting some but not all of the players he wanted, he cut an increasing­ly frustrated, lonely and unsympathe­tic figure. Yes, he had players out injured and, yes, the United squad could, in an ideal world, always be strengthen­ed with additional purchases. But it was hard to feel too sorry for Mourinho given the expensive stars he still had at his disposal.

As the weeks wore on in what has become the worst-ever start for United in the Premier League , it became ever clearer that Mourinho, not his players, was the biggest problem. They were no longer responding to his abrasive style and public criticism, and weren’t busting a gut for United as Ferguson’s teams did. Midfielder Paul Pogba, a World Cup-winner this July for France, came to symbolize Mourinho’s squanderin­g of expensive talent. He was stripped of the United captaincy and benched again in what proved to be Mourinho’s last match in charge, a 3-1 defeat to Liverpool.

The hole was only getting deeper. The digger had to be stopped.

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