The Mail on Sunday

United are screened off by Jose

As £89m Pogba is made to wait for his United debut, today is ...

- By Joe Bernstein

JOSE MOURINHO has built a partition around the first-team changing area at Manchester United’s Carrington training ground to keep them separate from other players.

United’s original open-plan dressing room has had doors and glass windows installed to prevent anyone walking through the first-team section on their way to the gym or other parts of the complex.

Mourinho wants to keep his senior squad as a tight-knit group and does not want any dissatisfa­ction from outsiders proving a distractio­n.

The manager told eight players, including Bastian Schweinste­iger, Adnan Januzaj and Andreas Pereira, to train with the Under-21s until they moved to other clubs.

Though Januzaj, Paddy McNair and a number of other players have since left United, several ‘outcasts’ remain, including strikers James Wilson and Will Keane, midfielder Joe Riley and defenders Tyler Blackett and Cameron Borthwick-Jackson.

Pereira hopes to go out on loan, while Schweinste­iger has attracted interest from clubs in England and Germany, though his £160,000-a-week wages are a major stumbling block.

Morale is said to be low among the rejected players and a team of ‘seniors’ that included Schweinste­iger and Januzaj were heavily beaten by a youngsters side last week.

Mourinho said he allowed £5million McNair to join Sunderland rather than have an unhappy player return to United after a loan spell.

MANCHESTER United’s first Premier League game under Jose Mourinho will feel like a final audition for many of the stars on view at Bournemout­h today. With £100million man Paul Pogba sitting out the game due to a onematch ban, others have the chance to show Mourinho they deserve a place in his bright new era.

Make no mistake, Pogba is arguably the only midfield player or forward guaranteed a Premier League place for United this season.

Everyone else will have to fight, particular­ly as Mourinho has confirmed he will play two different systems. One of those, a 4-3-3, has no room for a No10 which means even captain Wayne Rooney and £28m summer signing Henrikh Mkhitaryan will be vulnerable.

So the stakes this afternoon are high, on an individual as well as a team basis.

Mourinho played 4-2-3-1 in United’s pre-season games, with Rooney in behind Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c. His success when he first arrived at Chelsea was built on a 4-3-3, in which flying wingers Damien Duff and Arjen Robben operated either side of Didier Drogba.

This time, Mourinho has to create a properly functionin­g XI using 25 top-class internatio­nals.

Unlike most managers who keep their cards close to their chest, Mourinho has the confidence to explain what he is trying to do beforehand — rather like boxer Muhammad Ali used to predict the rounds in which he would stop his opponents.

‘Two systems. Two systems,’ he emphasised. ‘Players are only comfortabl­e when they know what to do. So we are not going to play three, four, five or 10 systems.

‘The principles of play that we work on every day are about systems with lots of similariti­es, in order for the players to be comfortabl­e with that.

‘The systems are adapted to their qualities so we can get the best out of them, and so we can adaptpt to the qualities of our oppoonents if that’s the case.

‘Eventually, during a match, sometimes you are pushed to different situations, but what is most important is that the players should feel comfortabl­e on the pitch.’

After a spending blitz on Pogba, Ibrahimovi­c, Mkhitarita­ryan and £30m defender Eric Bailly, Mourinho and everyone else expects United to challenge at the top.

That journey begins today without banned Pogba, who will stay in Manchester to boost his fitness.

Everywhere he looks, Mourinho is spoilt for choice. Assuming he plays 4-2-3-1 today, he has Morgan Schneiderl­in, Ander Herrera, Michael Carrick and Marouane Fellaini competing for two places. Rooney will start as No10 aware that Mkhitaryan and Juan Mata can d do the job if he falters. Ibra Ibrahimovi­c has Marcus Ra Rashford breathing down h his neck at No 9 and t the choices out wide a are plentiful. Last w weekend’s Wembley h hero, Jesse Lingard, A Anthony Martial, M Memphis Depay and Ash Ashley Young. Mkh Mkhitaryan can play in a 4-2-3-1 but not really in a 4-3-3 when out-and-out pace is the key. No wonder Mourinho is looking forward to the real stuff having traipsed around China, Sweden, Wigan and Wembley for pre-season familiaris­ation. ‘I don’t like friendlies. Friendlies give me a strange feeling,’ he said. ‘You want to win but at the same time, there are more important things than winning.

‘You go to the game and the changes are already organised before it starts, it doesn’t matter what the result is at half-time. I don’t like the feeling. I like competitio­n.

‘The Premier League is the marathon and this is the starting point of a long marathon. Yes, I’m excited. I like this. Even when we’re not playing, I try to know the results, who scored, who is winning and losing. It’s special.’

Nine younger players have left United since Mourinho arrived. But he still believes if you are good enough, then you are old enough and 18-year-old Rashford will have his part to play this season.

‘I like him a lot,’ said Mourinho. ‘Of course, he’s a young boy. At his age, he can have ups and downs, and you have to be ready to support him if that’s the case. But potentiall­y, he’s a very good player. He knows how to be a profession­al, the way he works, the way he lives — very good. He’s one of my important players. He will play a lot.’

At the other end of the age scale, Rooney knows he is no longer the biggest fish in the pond as he approaches his 31st birthday.

He will be keen to seize his chance today because he looks particular­ly vulnerable if Mourinho switches to a 4-3-3 when Pogba is available, starting against Southampto­n at Old Trafford on Friday.

A 4-3-3 does not require a No10, Mourinho has already dismissed the captain’s chances of playing in midfield and he does not have the speed to play wide. Vice-captain Carrick, who at 35 is starting his 11th season with the club, welcomes the competitio­n.

‘I have said all along this club needs the best players to push and challenge each other,’ he said.

‘It’s good to have a couple of big personalit­ies come into the dressing room. It feels like a good mix. It’s only a part of it though, we need to get the results.’

It is Mourinho’s job to make that happen.

Given the quality of players at his disposal, nobody is safe if they want to play with Pogba in the Premier League rather than be part of the Thursday night Europa League side.

And he will use that fear factor to keep standards high.

‘People can use all the words they want but the reality is that no player is happy when he is not playing,’ said Mourinho.

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