The Irish Mail on Sunday

Mourinho slams critics for ‘wickedness’

After 70 minutes of sheer dismay, Jose’s men finally fight back but...

- By Stephen Davies

ALEXIS SANCHEZ came off the bench to seal an incredible 3-2 comeback win against Newcastle — and probably saved a raging Jose Mourinho his job.

United were 2-0 down and in tatters before bursting into life in a second half lit up by goals from Juan Mata, Anthony Martial and super-sub Sanchez.

An angry Mourinho stormed off the Old Trafford pitch snarling into a TV camera — with suggestion­s he was mouthing profanitie­s in Portuguese — before later blasting his critics.

‘As a friend of mine was saying, if tomorrow it rains it is my fault,’ said the United boss. ‘If there is difficulti­es with the agreements of Brexit, it is my fault. I have to be ready for all of this. There is too much wickedness and clear manhunting.’

Mourinho, whose job was under scrutiny after four games without a win, insisted the pressure being piled on to him is also getting to his players.

‘We started nervous, the team didn’t cope well with the pressure of the manhunting,’ he said.

‘I cope with it, with some sadness, but clearly some of the boys don’t; (Marcus) Rashford was sad on the pitch, (Scott) McTominay was scared.’

However, Mourinho was defiant over his position, despite claims that he could have been fired this weekend.

He stormed: ‘They gave me contract to July 2020. I didn’t point a pistol at them. They give me the contract because they wanted to.’

THEY said that Jose Mourinho was a dead man walking. They said that whatever the result against Newcastle, the manager who was once special, the man who was once the king of our game, would be gone by the time Manchester United played again.

And for 70 minutes of this game, the biggest team in the English game turned in a performanc­e of such abject misery that they might as well have had a corpse for a manager and cadavers for players. Then, just when it seemed that all was lost, the players who seemed to have forsaken their manager breathed new life into him.

Whether their stirring comeback from 2-0 down to 3-2 winners will be enough to save him remains to be seen. It was tempting to think that United and Mourinho were only saved here because they finally came up against a club even more dysfunctio­nal than they are.

And for almost three quarters of this match, Mourinho played silly games with his substituti­ons and his players played as if they had no love for their boss and no pride in their shirt. They played as if they had given up. They played as if they wanted Mourinho gone.

But in the end, they roused themselves. In the end, some instinct rose up inside them and they dredged up the victory that may prolong Mourinho’s tenure. Whether that just prolongs the agony of a managerial regime that seems to have run out of energy and run out of friends is a question for another day.

The reality is that this was still pretty desperate stuff from United. On the weekend when Liverpool and Manchester City play out a top-of-the-table clash, this was poor man’s fare.

United were lucky Newcastle were so dire and so low on confidence. Their comeback flatters them. They are still a world away from the best teams in the division. This was just a papering over of the cracks. This was a three-goal rally that makes things more difficult for Ed Woodward and his embattled Old Trafford regime. Defeat by Newcastle would have made it easier for him to end the agony.

After the internatio­nal break, United face Chelsea in the Premier League, Juventus in the Champions League twice and the derby against Manchester City in their next six fixtures. None of those sides will show the same mercy Newcastle showed them here.

None of them will fail to exploit the fault-lines that are still obvious everywhere within this divided club. When Mourinho made his last substituti­on in the 67th minute, he brought on Alexis Sanchez for Marcus Rashford, who had just run the ball out of play.

Mourinho turned his back on Rashford as the young forward left the field and bent down to pick up a bottle of water instead. Rashford ran straight to the bench. Relationsh­ip breakdown was everywhere.

Petty little melodramas are everywhere at Old Trafford now, of course. Mourinho puts one fire out and another one starts somewhere else.

Earlier in the week, his captain, Antonio Valencia, liked an Instagram post that called for Mourinho to be sacked. He recanted swiftly but not swiftly enough. When the United teamsheet appeared, Valencia was not on it. He was not even on the bench.

Despite that, Mourinho had strolled jauntily up the touchline before kick-off, affecting bonhomie and nonchalanc­e. He waved at fans, shook hands with Newcastle manager Rafa Benitez and even playfully squirted a jet of water over a cameraman from one of the drinks bottles lying around.

The smiles did not last long. After seven minutes, United failed to deal with an innocuous throw-in and, when Kenedy picked up the ball, Ashley Young allowed him to turn and Kenedy bent a left-foot shot around David De Gea from the edge of the box.

Mourinho’s mood was different now. He held out his hands wide in exasperati­on as United descended into disarray. ‘You’re getting sacked in the morning,’ the Newcastle fans sang at him, happy to forget their own troubles.

Three minutes later, Newcastle extended their lead. Once again, United’s defence was a shambles. The ball cannoned around on the edge of the area until it found Yoshinori Muto with his back to goal 12 yards out. It was Young, again, who allowed him to turn and he drilled a low shot past De Gea.

Even after the miserable start to the season that United have endured, this felt surreal. Their players did not know where to look. They seemed beaten already. They looked cowed and defeated. Mourinho windmilled his arms on the touchline, trying to rouse them. For the most part, they averted their gaze.

Newcastle almost went three goals ahead after 18 minutes when Jonjo Shelvey let fly from 20 yards but De Gea scrambled to his right and pushed his shot wide.

A minute after that, Mourinho took drastic action by substituti­ng Eric Bailly and bringing on Juan Mata.

That meant moving midfielder Scott McTominay to centre-half. McTominay has played there before, of course, but he looked

dreadfully ill at ease and Newcastle targeted him. Not for the first time, it almost felt as if Mourinho was indulging in self-sabotage.

United should have got a goal back when Romelu Lukaku curled in a cross from the right but Rashford glanced it wide with the goal at his mercy. United looked as if they did not have a clue what the manager wanted from them. ‘You’re not special any more,’ Newcastle fans sang.

United had another escape 12 minutes before half-time when Shelvey won a header on the edge of their box and the United defence allowed it to sail through to Muto a few yards out. He nodded it on and De Gea clawed it away at point-blank range.

At half-time, Mourinho tinkered again, dragging off McTominay, replacing him with Marouane Fellaini and moving Nemanja Matic into central defence. So Matic and McTominay had both played in central defence ahead of Victor Lindelof, who stayed on the bench. That is the same Lindelof who Mourinho paid £30million for from Benfica. Five minutes after half-time, United spurned another golden chance to drag themselves back into the game. Martin Dubravka produced a superb save to keep out a deflected shot from Paul Pogba but he could only parry straight into the path of Matic. The goal gaped. Matic smashed it high over the crossbar. But with 20 minutes remaining, United finally got a goal back. Anthony Martial was tripped on the edge of the area and Mata curled the free-kick over the wall into the bottom corner. Old Trafford revived and, a few minutes later, United were level. Martial was both architect and executione­r this time, exchanging passes with Pogba and then ramming his shot past Dubravka. Newcastle were reeling now and United’s victory seemed almost inevitable. It came in the dying seconds of normal time when Sanchez nodded in a cross and Old Trafford went wild. The goal added some veneer to a club that still feels, as one of its greatest servants Gary Neville observed the previous night, rotten to the core.

 ??  ?? FURY: Mourinho
FURY: Mourinho
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 ??  ?? UNITED boss Jose Mourinho walked out to a show of support from fans (left). But even though his team won, he walked off an angry man mouthing what appeared to be swear words in Portuguese into a camera At least fans are happy...
UNITED boss Jose Mourinho walked out to a show of support from fans (left). But even though his team won, he walked off an angry man mouthing what appeared to be swear words in Portuguese into a camera At least fans are happy...
 ??  ?? ROARSOME: Alexis Sanchez enjoys the moment after his winner
ROARSOME: Alexis Sanchez enjoys the moment after his winner
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 ??  ?? CHEER UP, WE’VE WON: Alexis Sanchez completes the fightback with his header (above) after Juan Mata had scored his side’s opener (below) but executive vice chairman Ed Woodward looks less than impressed (right)
CHEER UP, WE’VE WON: Alexis Sanchez completes the fightback with his header (above) after Juan Mata had scored his side’s opener (below) but executive vice chairman Ed Woodward looks less than impressed (right)
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