Mourinho headed back to Chelsea
Real Madrid’s Champions League campaign had just ended in defeat when Jose Mourinho spotted an opportunity to send a message.
Even though Madrid can still end a
mediocre season – mediocre by its high standards, anyway – with the Copa
del Rey title, Mourinho is laying the groundwork for a divorce,
dropping heavy hints about a return to the English Premier League and
Chelsea, the team he managed from June 2004 to September 2007.
‘’I know in England I am loved,’’ he
said during a news conference in Madrid after Tuesday night’s
elimination. ‘’I’m loved by the fans. I’m loved by the media that treats
me in a fair way, criticizing me when they have (to), but giving me
credit when I deserve it. I know I’m loved by some clubs, especially
one. And in Spain the situation is a bit different because some people
hate me. And many of you are in this room.’’
Fans in west London were stunned when
Mourinho’s relationship with Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich broke down
in 2007 after three-plus seasons that included league titles in 2005 and
2006 – the first for the club since 1955 – and the 2007 FA Cup.
Each of his successors – Avram Grant,
Luiz Felipe Scolari, Guus Hiddink, Carlo Ancelotti, Andre Villas-Boas,
Roberto Di Matteo and Rafa Benitez – has been judged against Mourinho’s
achievements and allure.
Few, if any, have succeeded in matching his success and charisma, particularly not Benitez.
Installed as interim manager in November
despite fan opposition that turned his early matches into a cauldron of
hatred, Benitez’s reign has underlined the need for a unifying figure
to serve as the permanent manager. Benitez already has said he will be
leaving when the season ends next month.
‘’One day, naturally, I have to be back,’’ Mourinho said last month in London, where he kept a home. ‘’Chelsea is in my heart.’’
Chelsea players are bracing for the return of the colourful leader.
‘’Everyone who loves Chelsea hopes
Mourinho will return,’’ Chelsea defender Bransilav Ivanovic was quoted
as telling Serbian newspaper Vecernje Novosti.
Chelsea hasn’t been close to winning the
Premier League since Ancelotti delivered the title in 2010, and Chelsea
isn’t even assured of a Champions League berth for next season.
‘’With (Mourinho) we can be stronger as a
club,’’ Ivanovic said in the Serbian interview last week. ‘’It would
add another dimension to Chelsea, and it would be sure to help us become
one of the main contenders for the title.’’
Mourinho has retained his swagger in
recent years while appearing to tone down some of the bravado, engaging
in fewer conflicts with rivals and referees.
It’s unlikely soccer would witness a
repeat of the frenzied dash down the touchline by Mourinho at Old
Trafford following a second-round win in 2004 en route to the Champions
League title with Porto.
When Mourinho’s Madrid won at United in
March, he even quietly headed toward the dressing room before the final
whistle blew and then praised the losers.
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