Sunday Mirror (Northern Ireland)

JOSE CAN’T GET MOUR OUT OF US

» Ibrahimovi­c hails United boss a ‘winner’ » He’s getting the maximum from this squad

- BY SIMON MULLOCK Chief Football Writer

ZLATAN IBRAHIMOVI­C believes Jose Mourinho is paying the price for years of mismanagem­ent at Manchester United.

In a brutally honest assessment of his first season at Old Trafford, the Sweden striker came out shooting from the lip, by admitting that the squad Mourinho inherited last summer isn’t good enough.

But with United toiling to break into the top four – despite a 20-game unbeaten run that has brought 10 frustratin­g draws – Ibrahimovi­c insists the boss isn’t to blame.

While the forward continues to contemplat­e his own future at the club, he claims Mourinho is still the same serial winner he first encountere­d at Inter Milan nearly 10 years ago.

And he reckons the United manager is extracting everything out of the players at his disposal.

“I think Mourinho is doing the maximum with the team he has,” said Ibrahimovi­c. “Absolutely. He is getting 200 per cent out of the team he has.

“I know him very well from the past. I think he is older and he is calmer, but he is still the same winner as before.

“I mean the mentality is there – because you don’t lose that. When you have it, you have it. It is nothing you learn, it is nothing you try to be. Either you are, or are not, a winner.

“That’s why I think his season has been good. We have had a good season with the team we have.

“We have won two trophies and I think the coach is doing absolutely the maximum with the team.

“Of course, some games you are unlucky, some games you are lucky, some games you make mistakes, some games the mistakes can be accepted, but you still get a win.

“This is part of the game. If we were good enough to be No.1, we would be No.1 in the table now. So we have to be realistic – and I think this season has been great.”

United, for so long the dominant force of the Premier League era, haven’t won the title since Sir Alex Ferguson retired in 2013.

And they have failed to qualify for the Champions League in two of the last three seasons.

Executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward has sanctioned incoming deals worth £513million in that time and shattered the world transfer record last summer when Paul Pogba was lured back to Old Trafford from Juventus for £89m.

Yet it was the free-transfer arrival of Ibrahimovi­c from Paris Saint-Germain that was United’s most astute piece of business.

The Swede has scored 27 goals this season – including the injury-time penalty that salvaged a point against Everton in midweek.

And Ibrahimovi­c is so accustomed to winning league titles that he is able to instantly recall the times when he failed to finish top.

Zlatan has won titles in Holland, Italy, Spain and France in 11 out of 13 seasons, with Ajax, Juventus, Inter, Barcelona, AC Milan and PSG. And he said: “Our objective is now winning the Europa League because it is just like finishing in the top four.

“But, even for me, top four is a disappoint­ment because the last time I came top four was 2011 with Milan, when I came in second place. Before that was 10 years before with Ajax, so I am not used to being where I am now.

“But it is a situation I can learn from. It is a challenge, so I learn from that also.

“I don’t accept that we are in sixth position, but I do accept that I am here and I have to work through it. That’s the way it is.”

United are desperate to trigger an agreement that would see Ibrahimovi­c stay at Old Trafford for a second season, as much for his influence off the pitch as his goals on it.

Players such as Pogba, Marcus Rashford and Jesse Lingard look to the 35-year-old for inspiratio­n in much the same way that the Class of ’92 viewed Eric Cantona.

And Ibrahimovi­c hinted that some members of the Old Trafford dressing room have struggled to cope with the demands of playing for Mourinho.

He said: “The manager likes to look you in your eyes and tell you if you’re s**t or not – and I prefer that.

“He is direct and at least he sends you the message of what he thinks. He is the boss, he decides and he controls the situation. He told us at half-time against Everton that we were not good enough – and it was right to hear that because we weren’t good enough.

“It is the way it works. I am from the old generation and the old generation was more like that.”

So what would winning the Europa League mean to Ibrahimovi­c?

“Just another trophy in the collection,” he replied.

“Just another day at work.”

 ??  ?? BACKING: Jose Mourinho
BACKING: Jose Mourinho

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