Tag: Mourinho

  • Mourinho deserves credit for Bale revival – Berbatov

    Mourinho deserves credit for Bale revival – Berbatov

    Former Tottenham striker Dimitar Berbatov says manager Jose Mourinho deserves credit for Gareth Bale’s form revival.

    Bale, on-loan from Real Madrid, is suddenly shining for Spurs.

    And Berbato told Betfair: “Look, we will never know what Mourinho’s ways are like at Tottenham, how he motivates the players or how he talks to them in private, but I’m sure that in the resurgence of Bale, José has something to do with it.

    “Let’s see, of course everything depends on the player, it’s true, but Mourinho is also part of that. He has worked with so many excellent footballers, so who better than José to help the great players get into their best form?

    “It doesn’t surprise me that Bale is back in shape with Mourinho, because he knows perfectly how to approach and deal with these things with Bale, how to manage his situation. He has been everywhere, won everything and managed the best.”

  • Bale future in Real Madrid’s hands – Mourinho

    Bale future in Real Madrid’s hands – Mourinho

    Tottenham manager Jose Mourinho believes Real Madrid are the only club that can determine the future of Gareth Bale.

    The Welshman had a slow start to life on loan at his old club this term.

    However, Bale has recently come to the fore, starting regularly in the Premier League and contributing vital goals and assists.

    There is no option to buy in the loan agreement that took Bale to Spurs this term.

    Speaking to reporters, Mourinho said: “In relation to that you should contact your colleagues in Madrid and they should ask (Zinedine) Zidane as he is a Real Madrid player.

    “He is not a Tottenham player so Real Madrid have everything in their hands. They have a player with one year of contract and have the power in their hands.

    “I just have a player on loan and I am trying to take the best out of the player for Tottenham Hotspur.

    “We try to take care of the player we have on loan for us but also for the respect we have for the club who loans the player.

    “If you want to ask anything about Gareth’s future ask your colleagues in Madrid to ask Zidane.”

  • Victor Moses rates Warnock highter than Mourinho as manager

    Victor Moses rates Warnock highter than Mourinho as manager

    Victor Moses considers Neil Warnock and Roberto Martinez to be better managers than Jose Mourinho, with the Nigerian leaving a Portuguese tactician he has previously worked with at Chelsea off his list of top coaches.

    Mourinho gave Moses few opportunities at Stamford Bridge between 2013 and 2015, with loan moves to Liverpool and Stoke sanctioned.

    That snub has not been forgotten by a man who remains tied to the Blues – with a stint at Spartak Moscow being taken in this season – and one who has found greater enjoyment working under bosses at Crystal Palace and Wigan.

    Asked to piece together a list of favourite managers he has worked under, Moses did find room for a couple of ex-Chelsea bosses as he told Spartak’s official website: “[Antonio] Conte is on this list.

    “He helped me to believe in myself. And that’s purely from a human perspective and not because he found me a new position on the right side of the defence.

    “Next Roberto Martinez, Rafael Benitez. Neil Warnock, with whom I made my debut at Crystal Palace. [Domenico] Tedesco. And also Mark Hughes.”

    Quizzed on his decision to snub Mourinho, Moses added: “Without a doubt, Jose is a cool pro, I respect his achievements. But there wasn’t the necessary connection between the player and the coach.

    “In the end, I tried in training, I wanted to play, but Mourinho had a different opinion.”

    Goal

  • I will be in Tottenham’s history – Mourinho

    I will be in Tottenham’s history – Mourinho

    Tottenham manager Jose Mourinho offered a defiant defence of his work at today’s Europa League presser.

    In a monologue on the demands placed on managers and his own legacy in his press conference to preview Wednesday’s Europa League game with Wolfsberger, Mourinho said he isn’t feeling “depressed” about the situation and still “wakes up wanting to come to work”.

    He also insisted his relationship with Spurs chairman Daniel Levy remains strong and hit back at suggestions some players had grown tired of his training methods.

    He said: “It’s positive in the negative that you say I’m not used to this but I want to know which coach has always had blue sky and never cloudy or a bit dark?

    “Perhaps only a coach who is always at a dominant club in a league. It shows how beautiful my career has been.

    “Does it make me depressed? No. It’s a challenge.

    “I work for the club, the players and the supporters. I always feel I have to give them so much. It hurts me and it is a great challenge for me and I believe I can give it.

    “I give it everywhere I’ve been and I’m more motivated than ever.

    “I never felt what normally coaches felt when the results are bad, they are lonely men. That’s what we normally are. I never felt that in this building.

    “I feel not only respected but supported. Everybody in the same boat. Nobody is happy but nobody is depressed. I feel positive.

    “Maybe a bit weird for you after losing so many matches but I’m positive. I’m not happy but I wake up wanting to come here.

    “Everybody is loving training and working hard with so many matches.”

    Later in the press conference, he added: “Thank God I’m not the manager I was. We all evolve.

    “Sometimes I had problems, not in terms of results as I didn’t have many bad results, but day to day problems and I reacted in a much more emotional way. Instead of helping myself I was creating more conflicts.

    “As an example I left Chelsea as a champion. Maybe your experience as a journalist tells you that people with more experience can deal with negative things better.

    “We are calm. I am not happy but maturity helps and I am feeling very confident.

    “I believe that we will win through and that I will be in Tottenham’s history through good reasons rather than bad.”

  • Mourinho enduring worst period of managerial career

    Mourinho enduring worst period of managerial career

    Tottenham boss Jose Mourinho is enduring the worst period of his managerial career.

    Spurs were again on the wrong end of defeat at West Ham on Sunday.

    Opta stats report Mourinho has earned 81 points after 50 league matches in charge of Spurs, his lowest total at this stage in any managerial stint:

    124 points – Porto

    126 – Chelsea (1st spell)

    113 – Inter

    123 – Real Madrid

    114 – Chelsea (2nd spell)

    95 – Man Utd

    81 – Spurs

  • Tottenham​ chief wants Brendan Rodgers if Mourinho leaves

    Tottenham​ chief wants Brendan Rodgers if Mourinho leaves

    Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy has identified a replacement should Jose Mourinho leave the club.

    The Portuguese is under some pressure given recent results, and the fact Spurs have slipped out of the Premier League top four.

    According to Eurosport, Levy does have some issues with Mourinho’s management, including the sidelining of Dele Alli.

    However, Mourinho is not in immediate danger.

    Should he depart, Spurs will target Leicester City boss Brendan Rodgers.

  • Tottenham face huge pay-out if Mourinho sacked

    Tottenham face huge pay-out if Mourinho sacked

    Tottenham face a huge pay-out if they sack manager Jose Mourinho.

    The Athletic says Spurs would have to pay Mourinho almost £35million if they sacked him now.

    The Portuguese boss has two years and four months left of his current deal that sees him earn £15m a year.

    The Portuguese’s deal, which runs until the summer of 2023, has no exit option for either side.

    That would mean Spurs chairman Daniel Levy having to pay out the remainder of his contract if he were to swing the axe – although there are no current plans to do so.

    The 58-year-old signed a three-and-a-half-year deal to replace Mauricio Pochettino that is worth the same as his contract at Manchester United.

  • “Modern penalty”: Mourinho lists reasons for Tottenham’s defeat

    “Modern penalty”: Mourinho lists reasons for Tottenham’s defeat

    Tottenham suffered their fourth defeat in the last five Premier League games as Manchester City took all three points at the Etihad on Saturday.

    Despite going close from a Harry Kane free-kick that hit the post when the game was goalless, City took control and led at half-time through a Rodrigo penalty before Ilkay Gundogan netted twice after the break on a difficult evening in the northwest.

    It was City’s 16th successive win in all competitions and they now haven’t conceded a goal in seven straight home games.

    Tottenham were unlucky not to take the lead when Kane stepped up to take a 14th-minute free-kick from 20 yards out, curling right-footed over the wall but his effort crashed against the post and City eventually cleared.

    Instead, it was the hosts who broke the deadlock from the penalty spot in the 23rd minute, after Gundogan had been clipped by Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg close to the byline.

    Referee Paul Tierney pointed to the spot, VAR confirmed his decision and Rodrigo took the penalty, firing to Hugo Lloris’ right and although the goalkeeper got a good hand to it, the ball crept into the bottom corner.

    Although they dominated possession, that was City’s only shot on target in the first half, but they added to the scoreline five minutes into the second half when Phil Foden and Raheem Sterling combined, with the latter finding Gundogan inside the area and his left foot shot from 10 yards went past Lloris, who again got a hand to the ball but couldn’t keep it out.

    It wasn’t until just before the hour mark that Tottenham had their first shot on target, Tanguy Ndombele’s deflected effort looping up into Ederson’s hands, with the goalkeeper then playing a key role in City’s third in the 66th minute.

    Spotting the run from deep of Gundogan, Ederson hit a 60-yard ball through the middle into his path, the midfielder holding off the challenge of Davinson Sanchez before sliding beyond Lloris.

    However, Jose Mourinho pointed to fatigue and the concession of a “modern penalty” as contributing factors in Tottenham’s loss to Manchester City.

    Speaking to Spurs TV after the game, Jose said: “Going in a football direction, I believe that in the first half, we were good, we started the game very positively, we didn’t fear them, didn’t have problems, didn’t have any defensive problems, even playing in an offensive way like we tried to do. Once more, unlucky, the Harry Kane ball, I don’t know how it’s not a goal, and unlucky with another penalty of modern days. But I liked the team in the first half, very positive.

    “In the second half, when you concede a goal after five minutes, it’s very hard, because then it’s the fatigue plus the emotional side. The guys fought until the end, and I feel the result is too heavy, too heavy. It gives me another feeling… of if we get into that (Carabao Cup) final in the same physical condition as them, let’s go.”

    However, Mourinho was asked for his interpretation of a “modern penalty”.

    He said: “A modern penalty is one even if you touch with a nail inside the box it can be a penalty.

  • Bale’s upbeat Social Media Post ‘Totally Wrong’ – Mourinho

    Bale’s upbeat Social Media Post ‘Totally Wrong’ – Mourinho

    Tottenham manager Jose Mourinho said on Friday that Gareth Bale’s upbeat midweek Instagram post was a “contradiction” with reality, insisting that the Wales international had reported fitness concerns.

    Bale, on loan from Real Madrid, missed Wednesday’s 5-4 FA Cup defeat at Everton after he was absent from training on Monday and asked for a scan following some discomfort.

    The 31-year-old, who has struggled to make an impact since his return to Spurs, was an unused substitute in Sunday’s 2-0 win over West Brom.

    Despite not being available for the trip to Goodison Park, a social media update from the Welshman a day earlier stated: “Good session today.”

    Mourinho was quizzed on the Bale’s availability ahead of Saturday’s match at Premier League leaders Manchester City.

    “It was a contradiction between the post and the reality,” the Portuguese said at his pre-match press conference.

    “Since the beginning of the season in relationship to everything, I try to be very private and try to keep everything indoors, but I felt I needed to address the situation.

    “Probably the post was not even his responsibility, I don’t know. But the post was showing ‘training session great and I am ready’ and was totally wrong.”

    Mourinho said Bale had reported “not feeling good” and had asked for a scan.

    “He had a scan, the scan didn’t show an injury but his feelings were still there and coaches, sports science and medical people, we can never go against feelings because the player’s feelings are much more important than all of us,” said the Spurs boss.

    “So he was not ready for the game. It is as simple as that. If he is ready for tomorrow, he is selected for tomorrow.”

  • Champions Liverpool return to EPL top four after whacking Mourinho’s Tottenham

    Champions Liverpool return to EPL top four after whacking Mourinho’s Tottenham

    Liverpool returned to winning ways on Thursday with a 3-1 triumph at Tottenham Hotspur to see the English Premier League (EPL) champions move back into the top four.

    It was Liverpool’s first victory in their last five league games after playing four of those fixtures without scoring a goal.

    Son Heung-Min looked like he had given Spurs the lead with an early goal but the video assistant referee (VAR) took it away for a marginal offside.

    However, on the stroke of half-time, Roberto Firmino put Liverpool 1-0 ahead with an unmissable tap in.

    Spurs lost striker Harry Kane to injury before the second half, with Trent Alexander-Arnold doubling the visitors’ lead after he followed up the rebound from a Hugo Lloris save.

    “What I saw today it’s not about shape or form it’s about who we are,” Liverpool manager Juergen Klopp said, praising his side.

    “That was us. Second half especially it was us, it was a massive fight. We scored the goals in the right moments, the right people scored the goals. So, all good apart from their goal.”

    Denmark’s Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg instantly reduced the deficit as he fired in his first goal for Spurs with a free hit from the edge of the box.

    “The second half we had to make changes, we lost Harry, had to change the structure of the team,” explained Mourinho, who revealed Kane had injured both ankles.

    “First minute, same mistake, second goal. Good reaction, another mistake and goal. It was a team fighting against its own mistakes.”

    Another goal was disallowed by VAR for handball in the build-up to Mohamed Salah’s strike.

    But Sadio Mane ensured the third Liverpool goal when he ruthlessly finished off Alexander-Arnold’s cross for a confidence-boosting three points.

    Liverpool’s first league win of 2021 sits them fourth on 37 points, four behind leaders Manchester City, while Tottenham remain sixth on 33 points.

    Both Liverpool and Spurs were the top two sides in the Premier League when they last met at Anfield in December with Firmino scoring the decider in a 2-1 win.

    But six weeks later, they were two teams struggling with form and injuries, scrambling for a top-four position.

    There was a lively start to the game as Mane missed a great opportunity to open the scoring and Spurs immediately retaliated to grab what they thought was an early breakthrough.

    Kane sent Son on his way to slot a low shot past goalkeeper Alisson but after a check by the VAR, it was ruled that the South Korean was offside by the heel of his boot.

    Mane was thwarted three times by Tottenham’s captain goalkeeper Lloris before the Senegal striker switched to provider for Firmino’s opener.

    Firmino sprinted through to catch Mane’s low cross to easily convert a goal that ended the Reds’ unusual run of seven-and-a-half hours without scoring.

    With Spurs deflated with the loss of Kane to injury in the second half, Liverpool surged forward and were instantly rewarded.

    Alexander-Arnold reacted first as Lloris pushed away Mane’s angled drive and the Frenchman could do nothing when the England international full-back pounced on the opportunity.

    The two-goal advantage disappeared in a flash.

    Steve Bergwijn picked out Hojbjerg lingering around the perimeter before the Norwegian unleashed a mighty strike that gave Alisson no chance of saving.

    There was more VAR controversy when a third goal from Salah was disallowed because of a handball by Firmino as he tussled for the ball with Tottenham’s Eric Dier.

    That would not matter in the 64th minute when Alexander-Arnold delivered an inviting pass to the far post where Mane was waiting to punch in the final blow.

    Liverpool’s schedule will get tougher in the next month as they will play four of the top seven teams by the end of February.