Tag: Manchester United

  • Going, going …

    Like him or hate him, Jose Mourinho knows his job as a soccer coach. He doesn’t fail to tell his foes what he has achieved when his teams are tottering. He believes in his tactics. He likes to win the big games to always be in reckoning. But, why does Mourinho like to fish in troubled waters? Why can’t he take his eyes off controversies and allow his tactical savvy count in his teams’ matches? Why does Mourinho insist on having his way when pitched against big stars or key personnel in his teams’ operations?

    Or is it that Mourinho talks too much? How could Mourinho be so insensitive to the players’ contributions to the team’s previous matches, irrespective of the fact that a resurging West Ham beat Manchester United at home last weekend with what he told them in Monday’s training session?

    “I see sad people. I see people who don’t look like they lost the game. I see so-so. You can be with a very sad face, and you can be a fantastic actor and inside of you, you are very happy. So sometimes what you see is not what you get,” Mourinho said.

    Nonsense. Who picked the players for the game, Mourinho? What did you do when things were going awry? Mourinho should stop passing the buck now that the team is tottering in the same way he gets all the accolades when the team shines in matches.

    What is clear in Mourinho’s coaching notebook with his European sides is the fact that his third year with them is always troublesome. Mourinho’s list of ‘enemies’ in the third year would have been long enough to consume the Special One. The question to ask is if Mourinho hasn’t noticed this third year hoodoo to cast and bind it out of his resume?

    What was Manchester United’s management expecting from Mourinho, whose sojourn is marked with controversies? Why the Old Trafford folk chose Mourinho over  Mauricio Pochettino remains a misery, especially as the Argentine had distinguished himself with Tottenham. Safe for the Special One’s pedigree and feats achieved,  Pochettino was the Red Devils’ best choice, since the team is strictly conservative in outlook, with incredible feats. The club missed it by recruiting Mourinho in 2016 to replace an achieving Louis van Gaal, 48 hours after winning the English FA Cup. Retributive justice? No way; Mourinho won the only trophy not on Manchester United’s boardroom’s shelf – the Europa Cup – two years ago.

    Mourinho spends big in the transfer market. He likes the big stars but has failed to tolerate their nuances. Mourinho latches on any opportunity to show that he is the boss. He dislikes legends in clubs like we saw when he confronted Iker Casillas at Real Madrid and Wayne Rooney at Manchester United. He went for Tito Vilanova’s jugular in one memorable touchline altercation. Of course, who has forgotten how Mounrinho’s sideline brush with Eva Carneiro for tending to Eden Hazard at Chelsea, which landed the Special One in hot water in the courts? Or is Mourinho paying the prize of lampooning Manchester United’s “football heritage”  immediately the team was beaten home and away by Sevilla last season in the UEFA Champions League?

    Mourinho likes direct football style. No flair until the game is safe with goals inside the opponents’ nets. Mourinho’s game plan isn’t fancied by those who want to be thrilled during matches, which is what Manchester United’s fans are used to. So, recruiting Mourinho meant tampering with the fan’s patience. Gone is Sir Alex Ferguson’s fascinated display, even though he could also play the Mourinho style.

    Old Trafford was the slaughter slab for teams. Today, it has lost that fear factor as teams inflict devastating defeats on the Red Devils to the consternation of the fans. Where did Mourinho get it wrong? Could it be that his counter-attacking option has caught up with him? What does he say to his players at half-time? Mourinho used to make fantastic changes he makes to correct flaws in his

    teams’ play? Where has the Midas touch that changed the tempo of games gone?

    Could this period be Manchester United’s bad patch which most teams will go through every season? Mourinho complained about the team’s recruitment pattern in the summer. He identified Liverpool FC’s recruitment as one that will keep other title contenders on their toes, even though the Anfield giants have not won the English Premier League (EPL) trophy since the competition began. Who approved the recruitment of players?

    Why didn’t Mourinho emulate his Liverpool counterpart, Jurgen Klopp, who sold more players than what he had bought to balance the books? Paul Pogba’s truancy didn’t start today. Mourinho ought to have shipped him out this season, knowing that his market value is high, having won the Russia 2018 World Cup with France. In December, Pogba would have gone for close to £250 million, enough cash to buy eight players who will give their all at £240 million. The eight new players would have improved the team’s quality of play since no one would be sure of his shirt.

    Will Pogba send Mourinho out of Manchester United or will the team’s management trade off Pogba in January for peace to reign? As a short term measure on Wednesday, the club’s directors placed a media ban on Pogba, who confirmed this after Tuesday’s pulsating barren draw against Valencia at Old Trafford. ‘‘You want me dead? I’ve been told I’m not allowed.’’ 

    With his right to speak inhibited, Pogba took to the social media to reassure fans after Tuesday night’s game. He wrote: ‘‘Let’s keep fighting United. ’’

    Mourinho admitted at Tuesday night’s pre-match press conference that: ‘‘The crest on the chest is more important than the name on the back of the shirt.’’ He also told MUTV before kick-off: ‘‘From the supporters I cannot ask any more. I cannot ask for more than they are giving at home. Away, with bad results, I cannot ask for more. I think it’s time for the people on the pitch to show them that they love the club as much as the fans.’’

    Having been accused by Scholes of being “out of control’’ with regard to his news conference quotes, Mourinho showed impressive restraint when he faced the media: ‘‘I don’t need to know what he said. He can say what he wants to say. I’m not interested. Freedom of speech. It’s a free country, he can say what he wants. Freedom of speech. Especially Manchester United fans. I respect them 100 per cent. ’’

    Will Mourinho survive this onslaught from critics? Looking very unlikely, if one visits Manchester United’s fans’ website where 70 per cent of the voters want the Special One out? Many of them wish that Newcastle upsets Manchester United at home this weekend. It wouldn’t happen because the Magpies are at the bottom of the league table. It would be tragic for the Red Devils, if Mourinho leaves now. Will the players allow Mourinho lose his job? Again, not likely as represented with some of their comments since Thursday.

    Asked whose idea it was to form a huddle before kick-off, Fellaini said: ‘Everybody. I think everybody is behind the manager. We have to do our best and do our job. We showed it today but we have to do better (against Newcastle) on Saturday.

    ‘Everyone is going in the same direction to try to improve and to do better. I think we wanted to show that we are together. I think it was a bad day against West Ham. We were all bad. Today, I think we showed improvement and we have to keep going.

    ‘It was much better than West Ham. We put in energy and effort, we ran forward, we tried to score the goal. Okay, we didn’t but we have to keep going.’

    Fellaini acknowledged the importance of United’s game with Newcastle at Old Trafford this weekend after Mourinho failed to win at home four games in a row for the first time in his career. Mourinho should get over this third year jinx.

    Thankfully, Zinedine Zidane called him to dissociate himself from the talk of replacing Mourinho at Old Trafford, stressing that the rumour was at the realm of his managers and that he had told them he wasn’t interested. Interestingly, Zindane seems to prefer a return to Juventus ahead of Manchester United or any other club.

    It will be sad if Mourinho exits Manchester United because of a players power game, having been a victim of this disturbing development in club football as Chelsea FC of London’s manager. Pundits have suggested that Mourinho lost the dressing room at Real Madrid to the players’ power, hence he was eased out.

    Of course, we haven’t read the last of likely replacements for Mourinho, going by the new story that former Chelsea manager Antonio Conte is now being pencilled down for the job. Unfortunately, it doesn’t look like a deal to scale through, even though United fans will want Conte. Conte is enmeshed in a law suit with Chelsea’s management over alleged wrongful dismissal.

    Will this be Mourinho’s last encounter with controversies? Mourinho thrives in controversies. He likes being heard and enjoys tackling his foes frontally. Take controversies out of Mourinho, then you have ‘killed’ him.

  • France boss Deschamps defends ‘misunderstood’ Pogba

    France manager Didier Deschamps believes Paul Pogba’s strained relationship with the media is due to the “unfair criticism” he has received in the past.

    Deschamps said the misunderstood Manchester United midfielder had learned to cope with it.

    Pogba played an important role as France won the World Cup in Russia this year.

    The 25-year-old has however been criticised by the media for not consistently exerting his influence at United amid talk of a rift with manager Jose Mourinho last season.

    “I have spoken to him about his relationship with the media and I think he is been unfairly criticised in the past.

    “That is why there has been this aggressive vibe and he had this strained relationship,” Deschamps told the British media.

    “But criticism is part of the job and I think you learn to take that on board as you get more experienced.

    “That is what happened with him and I think he has gained some respect.”

    Deschamps said the outside world had an incorrect perception of United’s record signing.

    Read Also: ‘We can limit outstanding Messi’, says France coach Deschamps

    “The rest of the world, and certainly in France, has an image of Pogba that doesn’t really reflect who he is.

    “There’s this idea that he’s a bit individualistic, that’s not the case,” former France international Deschamps added.

    “He joined us ready to become a world champion and he took the whole squad with him.”

    Meanwhile, Pogba said United had to attack more when playing at Old Trafford, following their disappointing 1-1 draw against promoted Wolverhampton Wanderers on Saturday.

    “We are at home and we should play much better against Wolves. We are here to attack,” Pogba said.

    “When we play like that, it’s easier for us. I think teams are scared when they see united attacking. That was our mistake.

    “Maybe the attitude should be better and we should play better because, again, we are at Old Trafford.

    “We should just attack and press like we did against Tottenham, Liverpool, Chelsea and Arsenal last season.”

    United host Derby County in the League Cup third round on Tuesday before travelling to West Ham United in the Premier League on Saturday.

  • Angry Mourinho shows plenty of defiance but has few answers

    Manchester United Manager, Jose Mourinho stormed out of his news conference, following Monday’s 3-0 home defeat by Tottenham Hotspur.

    Mourinho was ranting about the three titles he won with Chelsea and demanding “respect” from reporters present.

    The conference came shortly after he had stood at length in front of a mainly empty Stretford End applauding United’s fans.

    It added to a somewhat bizarre epilogue on another miserable night for the 20-times English champions.

    “We lost against Sevilla (last season in the Champions League last 16) and we were booed because we deserved it.

    “Today the players left the pitch after losing at home and they were applauded because they deserved it, so we keep trying, trying, trying,” Mourinho said.

    “What was the score? This (holding three fingers up). What is this also? Three Premierships I have won, more Premierships than the other 19 managers put together.
    Me three, the two,” he said. “Respect, respect, respect.”

    Perhaps the performance for the media was intended to show his defiance in the face of two defeats from the opening three games of the season.

    Read Also: EPL: United beaten 3-2 as Brighton add to Mourinho’s woes

    Maybe he felt that a display of passion would go down well with the supporters at Old Trafford, who, it should be noted, showed no sign of turning against him.

    Or was Mourinho just deflecting from the fact that he lacks any answer to the most obvious question facing him.

    The question is: how to sort out a defence that has leaked six goals in two games and was opened up with ease by Spurs after the break?

    Mourinho had made it clear during the off-season that he wanted to sign at least one new centre-half and the performances of the five he has employed this season have amply demonstrated he was right.

    Eric Bailly was not even on the bench against Spurs; Victor Lindelof came on for the injured Phil Jones and made a series of mistakes.

    Also Chris Smalling, who had made a key tackle in the first half to deny Dele Alli, was left standing by Lucas Moura for the third goal.

    Exactly why United did not bring in a new player in that department, whether it be Leicester City’s Harry Maguire, Tottenham’s Toby Alderweireld or Bayern Munich’s Jerome Boateng.

    The players were all linked with the club and their absence in that department remains unclear.

    Mourinho has denied there is a rift with united chief executive Ed Woodward about the lack of transfer activity.

    But there is no straight answer from either party about why the club failed to bring in a new central defender.

    What the former Chelsea manager is clear about is that he doesn’t have a clue what combination can sort out the mess, “No,” he said.

    “Because in the first game Lindelof and Bailly, now Jones and Smalling but now Jones is injured and in the next match will be Smalling with another one.

    “When Marcos Rojo comes he will also be an option. I don’t know my best back four.”

    There isn’t much time for Mourinho to find the right solutions — United are already six points behind the Premier League’s top four — Spurs, Liverpool, Chelsea and Watford who all have 100 percent records.

    It is hard to see this united team challenging for the title but there is a real danger that their poor start could turn into a much deeper slump.

  • Full Time: MAN UTD 0 – 3 SPURS @ Old Trafford

    Tottenham has defeated Jose Mourinho’s led Manchester United side sound and silly at Old Trafford in the Premier League match played on Monday.

    An opening goal from Harry Kane with an header at the 50th minutes and a brace from Lucas Moura in the 52nd and 84th minute sealed the victory for the visitors.

    After the match Kane described the victoru as a big statement.

    He said, “Harry Kane has been speaking to Sky Sports after that emphatic win for Spurs.

    “That’s massive. To come here and win the way we did is a big statement. Three wins out of three, it’s a fantastic start. We did well to come in at 0-0 at half-time. In the big games, the first goal is so important.

    “We then saw the game out great. This is the only way we’re going to win the league. The top six is so strong now you have to stay at the top all the way through. This will give us huge belief and this is the type of game we have to win.”

    TOTTENHAM TEAM NEWS

    Team to play Man Utd: Lloris, Trippier, Rose, Alderweireld, Vertonghen, Dier, Dembele, Alli, Eriksen, Moura, Kane.

    Subs: Vorm, Davies, Sanchez, Aurier, Winks, Lamela, Llorente

    MAN UTD TEAM NEWS

    Team to play Tottenham: De Gea, Valencia, Shaw, Jones, Smalling, Matic, Fred, Herrera, Pogba, Lingard, Lukaku.

    Subs: Grant, Lindelof, Young, Fellaini, McTominay, Sanchez, Rashford.

    Match Preview Below

    OPTA STATS

    • A team from London hasn’t won away against Manchester United in the Premier League since Spurs’ win on New Year’s Day 2014 – since then, London clubs have taken just seven points from a possible 66 at Old Trafford (P22 W0 D7 L15).
    • Manchester United’s next Premier League home defeat will be their 50th in the competition at Old Trafford. Thirty-one per cent (15) of their Premier League home defeats have come since 2013- 14; the first season without Sir Alex Ferguson in charge.
    • Since taking over at Manchester United ahead of the 2016-17 Premier League season, Jose Mourinho has guided his team to 153 points – 16 fewer than opponents Spurs and 31 fewer than rivals Manchester City.

    ‘We are on the way to being a bigger club’

    Tottenham Hotspur manager Mauricio Pochettino: “We are a big club of course, we need to be bigger of course and we are on the way to being a bigger club.

    “But after four years, many people say we haven’t won anything.

    “That is history. We are trying to set the basis to win, we are breaking records about good results but of course it is not enough.”

    ‘Matic a different level of experience’

    Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho speaking before the match said,

    “If I don’t play [Antonio] Valencia, [Nemanja] Matic, [Jesse] Lingard when they are ready I don’t think you’d accept it. You’d ask why I don’t play important players in the team when they are ready to play.

    “Tottenham had similar problems, every professional player, a guy like Matic who came from surgery, for 90 minutes, they have to be ready to make that effort.

    “He’s a player who gives balance to the team, Andreas [Pereira] has done well but Matic is a different level of experience and I think we need that.

    “You can expect 11 players, I hope to see fighting hard with great organisation when we don’t have the ball but also expect a team of 11 to be involved in an attacking dynamic when we have the ball. We have to score goals to win the game.”

  • EPL: United beaten 3-2 as Brighton add to Mourinho’s woes

    Manchester United’s troubled start to the English Premier League (EPL) season took another unexpected twist as they lost limply 3-2 at Brighton & Hove Albion on Sunday.

    Woeful defending led to two Brighton goals in two first-half minutes as Glenn Murray and Shane Duffy outsmarted United’s 117 million pound back four to demonstrate why manager Jose Mourinho had sought to upgrade it.

    Eric Bailly was particularly exposed and, having conceded a needless corner that led to Duffy’s first Premier League goal, he blundered in to foul Pascal Gross, who put away the penalty via David de Gea’s leg on the stroke of halftime.

    Although Romelu Lukaku had earlier reduced the deficit with a trademark header, United looked ill-equipped to mount a comeback and Paul Pogba’s injury-time penalty, after Marouane Fellaini was brought down, made the scoreline closer than the match.

    In his post match reaction, Mourinho noted the his team made too many errors which cost them the game.

    “Too many mistakes. We were punished by the mistakes. Sometimes you make mistakes and are not punished but we were punished by every mistake we made. The third goal was too hard.

    “An accumulation of mistakes and punishments with goals was giving happiness and confidence to Brighton.

    “I was not expecting big mistakes. We are not speaking about small mistakes. We were punished by this. When you lose your confidence then it’s the normal tendency to lose that confidence and game plan.

    “When we scored the first goal I thought we can win this game then the third goal comes in this incredible way.

    “Then you try to believe the second goal could give us a chance to go for it, but it was too late,” he said.

  • Lukaku to return early to help depleted Man United – Mourinho

    Belgium striker Romelu Lukaku has curtailed his vacation and will join Manchester United at the start of their Premier League campaign, manager Jose Mourinho has said.

    Mourinho called for the club’s World Cup participants to shorten their rest days after last month’s tournament to help United.

    The club have also been hindered by injuries, and hope to avoid a poor start to the league season.

    England duo Phil Jones and Marcus Rashford were already set to return early and United will now be boosted by Lukaku’s decision.

    Man United prepare to host Leicester City in their first league game on Aug. 10.

    “We will have (Victor) Lindelof who started training two days ago,” Mourinho said after United’s 2-1 win over Real Madrid in the pre-season International Champions Cup (ICC) on Wednesday.

    “Marcus Rashford, Jones and Lukaku are coming back three days early to try to be available for the team.”

    The Portuguese boss praised his senior players for the intensity they showed in United’s pre-season tour but insisted the fixtures did not reveal anything new strategically.

    “I didn’t learn anything (tactically). I know what (Ander) Herrera is, I know what (Juan) Mata is, I know what (Alexis) Sanchez is, I know what they are…

    “I know the kids need time to grow up,” Mourinho said.

    “The boys tried everything, they gave everything, they know we have to try to fight for the best result but tactically it means nothing.”

    United have won two of their five pre-season fixtures so far and will be keen to make a quick start in their quest to win silverware this season.

    Mourinho was unsure, however, if Anthony Martial would return in time to play Sunday’s final friendly against Bayern Munich.

    The Frenchman left the team’s pre-season tour early to attend the birth of his daughter.

  • Returnee Man U Ladies set for 2018-19 campaign.

     

    Manchester United have announced their women’s squad ahead of the upcoming 2018-19 campaign.

    Manager Casey Stoney, a former Liverpool player and England international, has talked up the chances of her ‘young’ and ‘exciting’ squad.

    Stoney has taken seven players from her former club, while including two current England internationals in Alex Greenwood and Siobhan Chamberlain.

    The Red Devils Women’s side will get pre-season under way on Sunday against Liverpool

    MAN UNITED WOMEN’S SQUAD

    Lizzie Arnot (previous club: Hibernian), Fran Bentley (Man City), Siobhan Chamberlain (Liverpool), Charlie Devlin (Millwall), Leah Galton (Bayern Munich), Mollie Green (Everton), Alex Greenwood (Liverpool), Kirsty Hanson (Doncaster Rovers Belles), Martha Harris (Liverpool), Naomi Hartley (Liverpool), Lauren James (Arsenal), Aimee Palmer (Bristol City), Emily Ramsey (Liverpool), Lucy Roberts (Liverpool), Ebony Salmon (Aston Villa), Jess Sigsworth (Doncaster Rovers Belles), Kirsty Smith (Hibernian), Ella Toone (Man City), Amy Turner (Liverpool), Millie Turner (Bristol City), Katie Zelem (Juventus)

    Stoney left Liverpool in February after retiring from the game, and has brought both Greenwood and Chamberlain along with Martha Harris, Naomi Hartley, Emily Ramsey, Lucy Roberts and Amy Turner from the red half of Merseyside.

    Midfielder Katie Zelem has also left Juventus after one season in which she won the Serie A title, to return to Manchester.

    The team was brought together after United confirmed they would be reassembling their Women’s team and enter into the FA Championship division.

    Of the fresh squad seven players – Fran Bentley, Kirsty Hanson, Ella Toone, Millie Turner, Hartley, Ramsey and Zelem – have returned to the club where they spent their youth years at the centre of excellence.

    ‘I’m more than aware that we’re bringing 21 strangers together but I’m really excited about the squad and the future of this team.’

    England goalkeeper Chamberlain tweeted following the announcement to reveal her pride at being able to join up with United.

    She wrote’I’m incredibly honoured to be joining the biggest club in the world. I can’t wait to pull on the shirt and represent the club with such a fantastic group of players and staff”

    Prior to the birth of the new Ladies in Red, United were the only premier league club without a women’s team having scrapped their side in 2005.The new side will be presented with their first challenge on Sunday, when they come up against Liverpool in a behind-closed-doors friendly.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Coach: Sweden is easy to analyse, difficult to beat

    Sweden Coach Janne Andersson has full confidence in his team’s straightforward but effective tactics as he prepares his side for their World Cup quarter-final clash with England on Saturday.

    Andersson’s men are aiming to reach the last four for the first time since 1994 when they finished third in the United States.

    Sweden’s success at this year’s World Cup has been built on defensive organisation and clinical counter-attacks which saw them finish top of a group containing holders Germany.

    Sweden, devoid of a free scoring talisman in the wake of Zlatan Ibrahimovic’s international retirement, has worked hard on being difficult to breakdown and a major threat from set-pieces.
    Andersson says he is unlikely to spring a surprise on England Coach Gareth Southgate.

    “There was a coach once, who said his team was quite easy to analyse but difficult to beat. That is a good description of us,” Andersson told reporters on Friday.

    “It shouldn’t be that difficult to get an idea of what we do.
    “We are strong in our beliefs and have been from the outset. The players are very loyal to our ideas.”

    Captain Andreas Granqvist has embodied this collective philosophy most of all.

    Read Also: World Cup: Sweden into quarter-finals, Switzerland out

    The 33-year-old journeyman defender has formed a formidable centre back pairing with Manchester United’s Victor Lindelof, as well as scoring twice from the penalty spot in Russia.

    “We are a team and we do this together, on and off the pitch and this is behind our success so far,” said Granqvist.

    “We might not have the best team on paper or individually, but as a team we are very high achievers and this symbolises all of us.”

    One key area where the quarter-final could be won or lost is on set-pieces, with both teams excelling in this regard so far.
    Sweden has scored twice from set plays, while England has scored three, the most at the tournament.

    “The set piece situation will be a clear factor – for the first time I think we are coming up against a country that is more or less on par with us in that respect,” warned Andersson.

    “That will be a fight to get to the first ball.”

    If Sweden managed to defeat England, a team they have only lost to twice in the last 15 meetings, they will face either Russia or Croatia in the semi-final.

  • Man United top EPL Club Earnings

    Manchester United received more money than any other club that featured in the premier league last season, the English Premier League has announced.

    On Thursday the official prize money for the 20 English Premier League clubs for the outgone season was revealed, with Manchester United who were second receiving more.

    Manchester United received over £149m more than champions Manchester City despite ending the season with the most points ever (100) in Premier League history. Liverpool were third with £145.9m despite ending fourth.

    The payments are determined by final position in the league and how many times a club’s games are broadcast live in the United Kingdom and internationally as well as facility fees and other factors.

    United, has the biggest fan base in the UK, had the most games watched on television (28) along with Liverpool and Arsenal, while City had 26.

    West Brom, who were relegated got the lowest amount of over £94m.

  • FIFA meets with top clubs over $25bn investors offer

    The ruling body FIFA has met with seven leading clubs including Real Madrid and Manchester United to discuss a 25-billion dollar offer from investors for a revamped Club World Cup and a new global Nations League, the New York Times reported.

    The paper said that officials from Real, United, Manchester City, Barcelona, Bayern Munich and Juventus Turin were invited to FIFA’s Swiss headquarters on Wednesday over the controversial issue.

    The paper quoted FIFA as saying that “today’s meeting allowed us to observe a real interest for a complete reform of the Club World Cup and the development of a new model of competition that would benefit the entire football community around the world.”

    Read Also: Budweiser kicks off ‘Light Up The Fifa World Cup’ global campaign

    FIFA president Gianni Infantino revealed the offer from yet to be identified investors to the governing body’s council two months ago.

    The investors are allegedly ready to dish out a maximum 25 billion euros for the two competitions between 2021 and 2033.

    The proposal has been met with stiff resistance from various sides including Europe’s UEFA and club organizations.

    Critics fear an even more blown up match calendar and rich clubs becoming even richer.

    NAN