The Herald (South Africa)

MOURINHO IN QUEST FOR GLORY IN EUROPE

United manager’s Champions League battle gets under way

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HE has twice stunned Old Trafford into silence on Champions League nights, but as Manchester United make their competitio­n return, Jose Mourinho’s obligation is to make the old stadium roar.

In 2004, his Porto side sensationa­lly eliminated United in the Champions League last 16 and in 2013 he returned with Real Madrid to bring the curtain down on Alex Ferguson’s European exploits in the Old Trafford dug-out.

The Champions League has always been the competitio­n in which Mourinho has defined himself and he has already been talking up his chances of surpassing Ferguson’s record as the competitio­n’s most experience­d manager.

“I know that I am in the top five or six. I’m quite far, especially from the top one, but I will fight hard to go for that record,” Mourinho, who has overseen 133 Champions League games to Ferguson’s 194, said.

“Last season, I lost a season in the chase for this record but Manchester United is where Manchester United has to be and I’m happy with that.

“The Champions League night is a unique experience for everyone.

“I think it will be fabulous for the players and the fans to be back in the Champions League.”

The Old Trafford crowd’s first encounter with their manager in March 2004 exposed them to the full force of Mourinho the provocateu­r.

He raced down the touchline when Costinha’s late goal took Porto through, before witheringl­y proclaimin­g that Ferguson’s side “should be doing a lot better”.

Nine years later, the Mourinho who took his seat in the dugout was an altogether more conciliato­ry figure.

He claimed later he already knew about Ferguson’s impending retirement and his unusually diplomatic comments before and after the game suggested a desire to ingratiate himself with United’s fans and board.

“The best team lost,” Mourinho said after a 2-1 win for Real Madrid in the last 16 that hinged on a contentiou­s red card shown to United winger Nani for catching Alvaro Arbeloa with a high boot.

But rather than Mourinho leading United into the next campaign, it was the hapless David Moyes who managed to steer the club to the Champions League quarterfin­als.

United’s toils under Moyes and then Louis van Gaal mean Old Trafford has not staged a Champions League knockout game since April 2014.

They rediscover­ed the winning feeling in Europe under Mourinho last season by triumphing in the Europa League, but it is the Champions League where both he and United feel they belong. Mourinho, 54, dreams of becoming only the third manager to win three European Cups, after Bob Paisley and Carlo Ancelotti, and the first to do so with three different clubs.

But his stock in the competitio­n has dipped since his second success with Inter Milan in 2010, the Portuguese having failed to go beyond the semifinals in his three years at Madrid and 2½-year second stint at Chelsea. Both he and United also have reason to be wary of their first Group A opponents Basel, who visit Old Trafford tonight.

Four years ago, the first Champions League game of Mourinho’s second Chelsea tenure culminated in a surprise 2-1 home defeat by the Swiss club.

With Basel having avoided defeat on their two previous visits to Old Trafford in 2003 and 2011, Mourinho already has a score to settle.

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 ?? Picture: GETTY IMAGES/RICHARD HEATHCOTE ?? AIMING FOR THE TOP: Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho with new signing Romelu Lukaku
Picture: GETTY IMAGES/RICHARD HEATHCOTE AIMING FOR THE TOP: Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho with new signing Romelu Lukaku

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