China Daily (Hong Kong)

Mourinho feels the love despite Chelsea jibes

- By AGENCE FRANCEPRES­SE in London

With Chelsea six points from a first Premier League title since 2010, manager Jose Mourinho happily turned a deaf ear to suggestion­s his team is unloved by neutrals.

Chelsea dazzled during the season’s first half, putting several teams to the sword but with the finishing line in sight it has tightened up in trademark Mourinho fashion.

After a run of seven wins by a one-goal margin, it was taunted with chants of ‘Boring, boring Chelsea!’ during Sunday’s 0-0 draw at Arsenal but Mourinho said he did not care about the perception of his side.

“I have lots of love,” he said in a mock, romantic voice.

“If you tell the truth, people will fall in love with us. But you have to say the truth and sometimes you don’t. If you say the truth, we will walk in the street and people will throw kisses to us.”

If Chelsea wins at Leicester City on Wednesday, it can secure the title with victory at home to Crystal Palace on Sunday and Mourinho believes his team will be a worthy champion.

“If we do that, and I think we are going to do that, we will be champions being top of the league since day one,” he said.

“Only top teams can do that.”

Mourinho confirmed he

Van Gaal bemoans MU’s Liverpool boost will once again be without Loic Remy at the King Power Stadium as the France striker continues to nurse a calf problem.

With Diego Costa also sidelined and Didier Drogba short of fitness, Mourinho fielded Oscar at the tip of his attack against Arsenal, only for the Brazilian midfielder to be taken to hospital at halftime for scans after a heavy collision with home goalkeeper David Ospina.

While Arsenal created the better chances in the second half, striker Olivier Giroud barely had a kick, prompting Mourinho to pay an effusive tribute to his captain, John Terry.

“I told John Terry in the dressing room that he made fantastic performanc­es with me but this was his best,” the Portuguese said.

Cesc ‘grateful forever’

Making his return to the club where he previously spent eight years, former Arsenal captain Cesc Fabregas experience­d a day of contrastin­g emotions.

He was conspicuou­sly booed by sections of the home support and was booked for diving in the first half, but warm applause burst through the wall of jeers as he made his way off in the 90 th minute.

“I won’t deny that it was a special day for me,” said the Chelsea midfielder, who left Arsenal for Barcelona in 2011.

“To be substitute­d at the end and feel the love of the Arsenal fans meant a lot to me. I’m grateful for the life they gave me.

“Some people will be disappoint­ed in me for the reasons why I left but I am grateful forever.”

Asked for his thoughts on the hostility Fabregas had faced, Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger, who blooded the Spaniard as a 16-year-old, said only: “I’ve seen much worse.”

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