The Manica Post

Jose Mourinho: What went wrong at Roma?

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CRESTFALLE­N, Jose Mourinho departed Roma’s training ground, Trigoria, for the last time with tears in his eyes and amid screams of ‘we love you mister’ from the fans who adored him and repeatedly sold out the stadium to support him.

The facts remain - the Gialloross­i have had a difficult season.

Sitting in ninth place, 22 points behind league leaders Inter and five points behind fourth-placed Fiorentina, more was expected of a side that featured the likes of Paulo Dybala, Romelu Lukaku, Euro 2020 winner Leonardo Spinazzola and Leandro Paredes.

In fact, not since the 2002-03 season had the capital club collected so few points from their first 20 games of the season.

When the Friedkins purchased Roma in the summer of 2020, the first interview on the club’s website revealed their ambitions.

“This is already one of the biggest football clubs in the world - playing in possibly the most iconic city in the world,” said new owner Dan Friedkin. “We have the fans, the passion, the history and the ambition - if we win on the pitch and act in the right way off it, we can showcase AS Roma to millions of people in Rome and all over the world.”

The Friedkins - Dan and son Ryan - were clear they wanted a project that would grow the Roma brand and attract the attention the club deserved. It’s no surprise that Mourinho was chosen to take over as coach of the club in May 2021, much to the delight of Roma fans.

‘A poor return on investment’

About £100m (113m euros) net was spent in the summer of 2021 to appease their new coach and Mourinho repaid the owners’ faith by winning the inaugural Europa Conference League, Roma’s first trophy in 14 years and the club’s first continenta­l trophy since 1961. ADVERTISEM­ENT

But points in Serie A proved harder to come by and it was clear Roma were targeting qualificat­ion to the Champions League to bring in much needed funds to further the project. Two consecutiv­e sixth-placed finishes were considered a poor return on investment­s.

Having accrued only 29 points this season, Italian football finance experts Calcio e Finanza calculated that during Mourinho’s tenure, each point in the league has cost Roma close to 3.5m euros (about £3m). Financiall­y unsustaina­ble.

Results aside, the football has also come under heavy fire. In the Europa League semi-final against Bayer Leverkusen, the Gialloross­i were heavily criticised for their defensive style, progressin­g 1-0 on aggregate.

“It’s a shame that in a semi-final at such a high level, this type of play can be rewarded. They made things very ugly at the end,” steamed Leverkusen midfielder Kerem Demirbay.

Results are all that matter and Roma deserved to be commended for their gritty displays, even if they didn’t ‘entertain’. This season, however, the players looked tactically confused and limp in several matches, as evidenced in Sunday’s game at AC Milan.

Milan manager Stefano Pioli and Mourinho arrived under pressure having both been knocked out of the Coppa Italia the week before. It took Milan only 11 minutes to open the scoring and they ran out 3-1 winners after putting in one of the most impressive displays of the season.

Well prepared and perfectly organised, the Rossoneri knew exactly how to punish their opponents with effective patterns of play to ensure yet another Roma defeat. Mourinho simply cannot beat Pioli and has never managed it before.

In fact, the Portuguese has secured only four wins against the big sides in Italy during his time there. Too low for a team that boasts the third highest wage bill.

Mourinho’s ‘very real bond’ with Roma fans

The squad, it must be noted, has suffered too many serious injuries.

Roma have been without Chris Smalling nearly all season, Tammy Abraham is still not ready to return from a cruciate ligament injury and forward Dybala, their most important player, has already missed 69 days of action and 12 games.

Mourinho has been vocal about the injuries and on his inability to rely on players such as midfielder Renato Sanches, brought in on loan over the summer - but it begs the question why the club targeted so many injury-prone players, and how did Mourinho sanction it? —

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