Showing posts with label Mourinho:. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mourinho:. Show all posts

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Jose Mourinho: Billy the Chelsea Masseur Gave Team Talk vs. Manchester City

Jose Mourinho led Chelsea to a 1-0 victory over Manchester City at the Etihad Stadium on Monday night, and then told journalists that he hadn't been the mastermind of the win after all.

Instead, the Blues manager said that it was all down to the team's masseur, a Scot by the name of Billy McCulloch.

McCulloch gave the team talk to the Chelsea players rather than Mourinho, he claimed.

As reported from the post-match press conference (via Sky Sports):

I didn't speak to the team—I am serious! It was Billy the masseur who spoke to them.

He was screaming so much in his Scottish accent, going grrr, grrr, grrr, that I didn't understand, but the players were clapping so they must have got it!

The last time I spoke to them was at lunchtime. It was Billy's team talk, I'm telling you.

Billy was fantastic, I didn't understand, but it looks like the players did.

Chelsea were praised for their display, which stopped City's perfect run of 11 home wins in the Premier League this season.

Now, in the final third of the campaign, just two points separate the top three teams—Arsenal, Manchester City and Chelsea.

So what next? Arsene Wenger to hand over team talk responsibilities to the club physio? Cardiff chairman Vincent Tan to start picking the team? Actually, don't answer that.

This blog is powered by: http://visitwebpages.info/paypalchecks/

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

José Mourinho: the great manipulator faces his toughest test | Daniel Taylor

It would also mean United being closer in points to the relegation zone than top spot when they face Fulham on Sunday.
Yet it is not United who concern City. After the Chelsea game, the next six opponents for Manuel Pellegrini's team are Norwich (15th), Sunderland (14th), Stoke (11th), Aston Villa (10th), Hull (13th) and Fulham (20th). This is City's chance to establish a position of command before playing at Old Trafford and Arsenal in the space of five days at the end of March.
Mourinho has certainly been trying to get under City's skin. He is very clever in the way he does it, too, mostly because he has so much experience of it. Lots of compliments and almost startled innocence when he is asked why he fell out with Pellegrini in Spain, but enough throwaway lines here and there to manipulate the headlines and be noticed.
Everybody knew which team would immediately be implicated when he talked, without naming names, about clubs with a "dodgy" perception of the financial fair-play rules (clue: not Paris St-Germain this time) and there was a personal edge when he brought up, unsolicited, Pellegrini's error of not realising another goal against Bayern Munich would have meant City winning their Champions League group.
"The first thing to be successful in Europe is to know the rules of the competition, that's the first thing," the two-times Champions League winner helpfully volunteered.
On Pellegrini's part, there has been a look of weary, seen-it-all-before indifference. Some managers prefer to be self-contained, and City's is better described as vacuum-packed. "I never comment on anything Mourinho says," he says.
Mourinho, passing around flutes of champagne and clinking glasses at one recent press conference, is an entirely different beast. What stands out most of all is the sense of grievance he has towards City because of the acclaim they receive. More than once, he has taken exception to it and referred back to the hostilities that accompanied his title wins for Chelsea, in line with Roman Abramovich's rebuilding of the club.
"In my time we were accused of buying the title, no? Because our owner was Mr Abramovich, just arrived in the country. Maybe now people see City in a different way. I don't know. And I don't care. I don't envy the fact that they have this kind of protection, or whichever word it is."
He did follow that up by explaining that maybe super-rich owners were no longer a novelty, but it was all wrapped in the same accusation that Chelsea were taking FFP seriously.
This blog is powered by: http://visitwebpages.info/paypalchecks/