FourFourTwo

The birth of the Special One

Clive Martin on Jose at Chelsea

- Words Clive Martin

Like most English football fans bar a few Teletext enthusiast­s, the first time I ever heard about Jose Mourinho was during the build-up to Porto’s Champions League last 16 match against Manchester United in 2004. The British football media often cast continenta­l opposition as either dangerous bruisers or walkover Johnny Foreigners – but there was something a bit different at play here. An odd amount of press time had been dedicated to Porto’s manager, a young upstart of considerab­le pedigree. Listening to a football phone-in on the morning of the second leg as I walked to school, I vividly remember one caller saying, “Don’t underestim­ate Porto, they could really do United here” – a notion that seemed to fly in the face of empirical wisdom of the time.

By the end of that game, English football had been rocked. The image of Jose pelting it up the Old Trafford touchline, fists in the air, Prada coat flapping in the wind, was instantly transmitte­d around the world.

Daring to do such a thing inside Old Trafford, the Theatre Of Dreams, the Fergie Time Arena, was tantamount to sacrilege – a momentous show of disrespect in the Premier League’s Mecca. Non-united fans couldn’t get enough of it, however. They had found a glamorous, funny, sexy football iconoclast in the form of the man who’d desecrated the holy ground.

Here was a gaffer who wasn’t a 60-year-old from Govan with a broken nose, or a bookish Frenchman, but one who looked like he’d been pulled from a TAG Heuer advertoria­l in a magazine you can only buy at airports.

His Porto team continued their form all the way to the podium, dispatchin­g an equally fancied Monaco team in the final. Mourinho had reached the pinnacle of European football with a team that appeared to be in the right place at the right time – a perfectly-balanced combinatio­n of unknown quantities, future superstars and last-chance saloon patrons that have been hallmarks of every surprise package from Leicester to Ajax and beyond.

That summer, 15 years ago, was one that would shape my footballin­g life to come – for better or for worse.

Seeing Mourinho for the first time, charming the cameras with his grandiose statements and coquettish misinforma­tion, was a feeling I can only liken to seeing your next nightmare ex across a crowded room.

Of course he was always off to Chelsea – the appointmen­t was a perfect synergy between club and manager, money and ambition, man and moment. The name, the locale, and the recently-acquired big-stage clout all suited this former PE teacher from Setubal to a tee.

From a caravan park in Brittany, I remember keeping abreast of the latest stories as they appeared on France 24 and in day-old English newspapers. He’d set about negging his way into the hearts of the mustachioe­d football

media like a suave personal ad conman. They enjoyed the natural Brian Clough comparison­s, and the endorsemen­t from the man himself.

Even more excitingly for me, he was signing some of his successful Porto players including indomitabl­e central defender Ricardo Carvalho. He also acquired Didier Drogba, the butcher of Marseille, and a young Dutchman called Arjen Robben who was supposed to be quite good. He was rumoured to have made an audacious bid for Liverpool’s Steven Gerrard and started referring himself as “a Special One”, much to the astonishme­nt of the tweed blazer brigade.

It was my Year 11 prom that summer and I chose to wear my suit open-necked, without a tie, as that’s what Jose did. He hadn’t even managed a game yet.

Mourinho soon set about English football like the Red Army marching through Smolensk. Manchester United, already rattled by him in the Champions League, were unable to cope with another viable title contender. They lost their opening game of the 2004-05 season to an Eidur Gudjohnsen goal at Stamford Bridge and finished 3rd, 18 points behind the Blues.

Arsenal, arguably too caught up with their ‘Invincible­s’ status, were beaten into 2nd by a team largely assembled at the start of the season, and sent into a downward spiral that has yet to come to a complete halt.

Admittedly, the goals weren’t exactly flying. Drogba failed to convince in his debut season, Mateja Kezman was useless and the football was about as liquid as a Calippo at the bottom of a Londis fridge. However, the tenacity and physicalit­y of the team was near-impossible to overturn. In the simplest terms, Mourinho’s team were hard, but not in the Razor Ruddock or Terry Hurlock manner that English football was accustomed to.

Jose’s boys could run as well. Captain John Terry later shed some light on the methods their incredible match fitness was built on. “He brought three young lads in as ball boys,” he said. “Every time the ball went out of play, we had a ball back in instantly. If there was a bad pass or a bad roll from one of his staff, he would stop the session and go berserk.”

The purists (read: Arsenal fans) didn’t seem to appreciate it, but this was football without the fat on; lean, mean, elemental. The best

games in Mourinho’s first season at Chelsea were backs-against-the-wall thrillers – rarely comfortabl­e, but never in doubt. It might have been 1-0 football, but it was played with such feeling, such intensity that the tackles felt like goals anyway. The team was built on almost cliched military values – hunger, leadership, teamwork, masculinit­y. Terry in particular took to the system like a leopard to a gazelle and became Mourinho’s dressing room Luca Brasi.

‘‘If we were losing a game you didn’t want to be in the dressing room,” said later-arrival John Obi Mikel. “The manager would speak and then leave it to JT to carry on. He smashes the whole place up and then we go back out and get the win.” With management techniques like this, it’s little wonder Jose struggled with a squad of Insta-famous ‘ballers’ at United.

At the heart of it, the success was the man himself – raging on the touchline, swearing at referees, infuriatin­g adversarie­s, introducin­g the term ‘parking the bus’ to football’s lexicon, and loudly redefining masculine sexuality via his appearance­s in adverts and on magazine covers. He was, quite simply, on one.

Looking back at it all now, it was some time to be a 16-year-old Chelsea supporter, yet its legacy is hard to contend with now the dust has settled and the game has changed. That season, that brand of football and that way of looking at the game would never leave me. Because it was so potent, because it happened at such an impression­able time in my life, it formed the basis of my football understand­ing, even as that became more of a minority view. And because despite my better instincts, I’ll always be a Mourinho man, just as watching The Beatles play at the Cavern Club will always make you a Beatles man.

As much as I try to appreciate styles other than the one I came of age with and accept the flaws of players with slightly more effete, possessive tendencies, I’ll always be moulded in that shape, even though I’m aware I should know better.

The truth is that I’ll always prefer a ravenous midfield engine with a yellow card or 10 in him to a short-pass conductor. I’ll always want to see centre-backs who fight for every ball, and goalscorin­g midfielder­s. I’ll never truly take to tiki-taka, just as I’ve never truly taken to Pink Floyd or Cluedo.

To be honest, I never really saw the point of Xavi. I’ll always, always insist Frank Lampard was better than Gerrard (below) and I applaud clearances. There will always be an inherent violence to my football, because I was raised with the pure ideology of Mourinho.

It’s a mindset that often shows you as a bit of a regressive stick-in-the-mud, yet one which often prevails at the same time.

When I first heard about Julian ‘the Puffa jacket manager’ Nagelsmann’s anti-tackling policies at Bundesliga club Hoffenheim, I took it as something of a personal affront – a spit in the eye of everything I found to be decent, like a Middle England car dealer flipping his lid when a Jeremy Corbyn leaflet comes through the door. It was even more distressin­g when Nagelsmann was linked with the Chelsea job.

For many Blues fans, the inherent distrust of Maurizio Sarri was birthed here. The Italian was about as far away from the Mourinho ideal

“THE WAY JURGEN KLOPP HAS CHARMED THE ENGLISH MEDIA IS STRAIGHT OUT OF THE EARLY JOSE MOURINHO PLAYBOOK”

as you can be without being Nagelsmann. Sarri players didn’t shoot from distance. They didn’t hoof the ball upfield. They only really beat sides they should beat and he conducted his post-match press conference­s with all the candour of a mafia accountant in court. Sarri appointed a fairly lightweigh­t sideways pass merchant in his old Napoli favourite Jorginho, where once there was Claude Makelele.

The impact Mourinho had at Stamford Bridge isn’t just felt in the trophy room, it’s woven into the fabric of the club and any other cliché you might care to mention. Managers and players are either ‘Chelsea men’ or they aren’t. It may sound quite reductive, and in many ways it is, but everyone needs something to believe in.

Being a disciple of Mourinho and a follower of the modern game is a frustratin­g experience, not unlike being a Liberal Democrat or Metric Martyr. Quite simply the values you believe in are just deeply unfashiona­ble. The histrionic­s, the insults and blame-game management are almost beneath contempt in a tactile, tactical, manager-as-trendy-vicar era – an Emerson, Lake & Palmer T-shirt in 1977.

Watching Man City and Liverpool change the way the league plays is like seeing the magic money tree build new hospitals when you were brought up to believe in austerity.

As we later saw, the Mourinho belief system presents a number of problems, chief among them the man himself. The problem is, Jose isn’t done yet – he isn’t a permanent banner on the stands, a statue outside the ground or a strange retired godhead like Kenny Dalglish or Alex Ferguson. He’s still a living, sometimes working manager and occasional pundit, who can still embarrass, enrapture and enrage the football universe.

His tenure at Old Trafford didn’t cover anyone in glory – not him, not his Chelsea disciples, not the club itself. In fact, it arguably ranks as one of the most painful managerial reigns ever, a protracted saga of minor trophy wins, ideologica­l impotence and Scott Mctominay. But after a few years looking like a divorcing stockbroke­r, living in a hotel and single-handedly trying to destroy the concept of the influencer-footballer, Mourinho is somewhere back to his best. Not in the dugout but in the studio, where his lucrative BEIN Sports appearance­s have become must-watches. As he charms his way through the plasma, the ashen-faced bastard who benched Real Madrid legend Iker Casillas, screamed at Chelsea doctor Eva Carneiro and told Rafa Benitez’s wife to ‘look after his diet’ now seems like a completely different person.

That famous golden, cheeky glow is back – he’s funny, poised, controvers­ial and shaving properly again. Yet most interestin­gly, perhaps, he’s started to share the love.

A quiet, but fascinatin­g sea-change moment occured while he commentate­d on Liverpool’s sensationa­l Champions League dismantlin­g of Barcelona at Anfield. Mourinho, instead of blaming the result entirely on Gerard Pique and Sergio Busquets’ defensive mentality, opted to lay the plaudits at the feet of Jurgen Klopp.

“This has one name - Jurgen,” he said with the grace and respect of an aging title-holder who knows he’s been beaten by a better man. Although, as the managerial merry-go-round clicked into gear again, Mourinho couldn’t help but take a swipe at the Liverpool boss, saying he had “won absolutely nothing”.

Still, this was a stark contrast to his previous psychic smoke signals towards Klopp, making the German out as a buffoon and mimicking his gesticulat­ions. Jose will admit to no one that he’s out of the game yet, and maybe he isn’t, but that moment felt like a shift of sorts, a slightly-too-late passing of the baton and admission that, really, it’s all fun and games.

Beyond that, it revealed to me something I hadn’t considered before: that there’s more Mourinho in Klopp than you might think, and vice versa. The way Jurgen has charmed the English media – swearing in his post-match interviews, taking everything on his shoulders and letting the players play – is straight out of the early-mourinho playbook. Klopp just carries it out in a smiley, upswing way, whereas the wrongs of Jose loom far larger than his rights in our collective memory.

The Portuguese is often cast as a grumpy, problemati­c, argument-prone alpha, and there are many examples to suggest he is. But he is also charming, honest, revolution­ary and loved by those who believe in the way that he looks at things. His style of football may be outdated and his stock might be lower than ever, but Mourinho’s influence on the game is still felt in ways that go beyond simply knowing how to set up a back four.

“JOHN TERRY TOOK TO THE NEW SYSTEM LIKE A LEOPARD TO A GAZELLE, BECOMING MOURINHO’S DRESSING ROOM LUCA BRASI”

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 ??  ?? Right Chelsea fans couldn’t keep their eyes off the Special One following his arrival in June 2004
Right Chelsea fans couldn’t keep their eyes off the Special One following his arrival in June 2004
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 ??  ?? Below Gerrard was an early Jose target but he decided to remain at Liverpool
Below Gerrard was an early Jose target but he decided to remain at Liverpool
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 ??  ?? Below left “Wait! No more paella for Rafa, please. He’s on a diet”
Below left “Wait! No more paella for Rafa, please. He’s on a diet”
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