Daily Mirror

INSIDE: YOUR N0.1 FOOTBALL PULLOUT

- BY DAVID MADDOCK

CARLO ANCELOTTI admits he fears teams in the Premier League’s bottom six more than those in the European places.

Everton’s record is remarkable this season, with the Italian’s side recording better results against sides in the top six than those in the bottom seven places in the table.

And as he prepares for Monday night’s visit by a Southampto­n team who are seventh from bottom, boss Ancelotti (above, with Dominic Calvert-Lewin) said: “I have to be worried because we are going to play against the teams at the bottom (over the next few weeks) where we have more problems.

“We have to be together to solve these kind of problems.

“I am convinced it is a really, really competitiv­e league, a really difficult league. You only have to look at the results of English teams in Europe, to see the league is at a really high level.

“And you have to consider also that the teams at the bottom are doing well also. To play against Fulham, to play against Burnley, or Newcastle is not easy.

“To play against

Southampto­n is not easy.”

It is even more difficult for Everton to play them at home, where the Blues have lost to the likes of struggling Fulham and Newcastle, and Ancelotti knows that must improve if his team is going to challenge for Europe.

“If we want to fight for the European position we have to improve our home run at Goodison,” he said.

“We have to pay attention to what we were not able to do in the last home games against Fulham and Newcastle.

“We want to avoid the problems we had in the games before.”

JOSE MOURINHO is set to unleash Gareth Bale on Burnley from the start tomorrow after witnessing a renewed beast being set free in midweek.

Since arriving from Real Madrid on loan, the returning Tottenham star (top) has struggled for physical, mental and emotional fitness, resulting in a series of stop-start performanc­es and cameo appearance­s.

But Mourinho (above) now feels the 31-year-old Welshman is in the best shape since his arrival.

And from the moment Bale swept Dele Alli’s pass into the back of the Wolfsberg net for his goal on Wednesday he finally achieved his “freedom”, according to the Spurs manager.

“You could see from his goal it was a confident shot,” said Mourinho.

“A player with fear or negative feelings would never have hit that type of shot. To strike the ball that way, I think that strike means a lot.

“It means freedom. It means freedom in relation to the brain muscle. For this you need to be in a good condition.

“He looks happier than ever, he looks confident. In training you can see he has his confidence back, the way he hits his shots. If a player feels great, if he is playing 100 per cent, and if the feeling are all good then there are no psychologi­cal problems or fears or barriers. He is in the best condition since he arrived.” Moreover, after Dele Alli (below) showed no ill effects from his 81-minute outing, Mourinho promised Tottenham fans more of the mouth-watering prospect of seeing the Fab Four of Alli, Harry Kane, Heung-min Son and Bale in action together soon.

So far they have only been on the pitch together for 13 minutes at the end of the 2-1 defeat by West Ham but – fitness allowing –

Mourinho plans to use them more in the run-in to the season.

“They can play together and they will play together for sure, unless something wrong happens to one of them, which I hope does not,” said Mourinho.

“But I don’t want to talk about Dele and Bale, as it looks like I forgot Lucas Moura, Erik Lamela, Steven Bergwijn, Tanguy Ndombele, Giovani Lo Celso and Vinicius. Because I don’t forget them.

“In relation to Dele, when you have players performing like he did, it’s easier for the team to play well. I’m happy with him. It’s been a difficult period. Sometimes small injuries in accumulati­on are more difficult than a big injury where after a few weeks or months you are back. Small injuries are mentally not good, with players disappoint­ed, lack of motivation, frustratio­n. He went through that. He came back.

“We had good conversati­ons, trained and now he’s well, playing minutes or part of matches.

“Not yet a 90-minute match but he went through periods and basically now 75 or 80 minutes. We need everybody and, in the case of Dele Alli, I’m very happy.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom