Cape Times

Mourinho must prove himself again in Pep battle

-

LONDON: Jose Mourinho finds himself in the unaccustom­ed position of having to prove himself all over again as he prepares to open up a final trophy front with Manchester United today.

Much of the heat on the Portuguese comes as a blowback from the other side of Manchester where City have blazed such a scorching Premier League trail that has overshadow­ed United’s second place in the table and easy progress to the Champions League knockout phase.

United are favourites to see off Championsh­ip side Derby County in the FA Cup third round today. But being cast as Manchester’s support act clearly grates with Mourinho, particular­ly when combined with suggestion­s that he is tactically inferior to his rival, Pep Guardiola.

Mourinho’s recent grouchines­s, when he hit out at former United player-turned-pundit Paul Scholes, bemoaned his lack of spending power and even slapped down City supporter and former-Oasis guitarist Noel Gallagher, has added to the impression that he is weighed down by his battle with the Spaniard.

Although the pair’s relationsh­ip appears healthier than when they were last pitted against each other as managers of Real Madrid and Barcelona in La Liga, Mourinho is clearly struggling with being seen as second best.

He was right to point out that the United squad he inherited was inferior to the one Guardiola took over at City, which had the likes of David Silva, Sergio Aguero and Kevin De Bruyne in place.

While the media has acclaimed the Spaniard’s impact on such players as Raheem Sterling and Fabian Delph at City, the re-emergence of United’s Jesse Lingard, Juan Mata and Anthony Martial under Mourinho has not received equal billing.

Lingard has been a revelation since Mourinho switched him to a more central role, scoring six Premier League goals since the start of last month. Only Tottenham’s Harry Kane has a better record.

The next month could prove crucial for both club and manager. With Romelu Lukaku and Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c injured, Mourinho has the opportunit­y to continue with the 4-3-3 formation that worked so well in Monday’s 2-0 Premier League win at Everton.

The absence of a recognised frontman provided freedom to others, with Martial, who scored an excellent goal at Goodison Park, and a more advanced Paul Pogba the obvious beneficiar­ies.

If that formation represents the future then it is also a throwback to the one Mourinho first employed when he arrived at Chelsea in 2004, although to persist now without a Didier Drogba or Lukaku-type focus would be a departure.

One of the criticisms levelled against Mourinho this season is that he is too rigid in his thinking. It is pointed out that while Guardiola happily works with different backroom staff, Mourinho relies on the same, tight support team.

Having tasted success all over Europe in his 15 years of management, to put himself on a par with Alex Ferguson in terms of continual silverware at United, particular­ly in the shadow of Guardiola, represents the final challenge of Mourinho’s career.

Yet even winning the Champions League this season may still see Mourinho’s methods criticised because so much emphasis is now placed on the way teams play. Even though United are just nine league goals short of the 54 they managed last term, they have been cast as unwilling to go toe-totoe with City and Liverpool.

Mourinho won’t worry too much about that, but clearly feels the need to reinforce some parts of the team.

The club will provide the resources to support his vision, which could yet yield the Champions League and FA Cup plus a second-placed league finish this season. Perhaps only Guardiola would bet against him; for Mourinho, there remains everything to play for. – Reuters

 ??  ?? JOSE MOURINHO: Next month could be critical for club and manager
JOSE MOURINHO: Next month could be critical for club and manager

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa