Vancouver Sun

Trio of losses takes shine off Mourinho at Man U

Manager has gripes about referees, media ‘Einsteins’ and some players

- STEVE DOUGLAS

Jose Mourinho has cut an unhappy figure during Manchester United’s first wobble in his time at Old Trafford.

The smile has gone. The answers in interviews are getting shorter. His list of targets for criticism is getting longer. He is even starting to feel sorry for himself.

“The worst manager in the history of football,” Mourinho said of himself, sarcastica­lly, on Friday.

Three losses in nine days led to widespread criticism of Mourinho’s management style and the makeup of his United team.

Beating third- tier club Northampto­n in the English League Cup on Wednesday gave Mourinho some brief respite, but there will be more scrutiny if United loses at home to Leicester in the Premier League on Saturday.

Mourinho won his first four games in charge of Man U, but the honeymoon period is over. He has been outspoken in railing against refereeing decisions, those he described as “Einsteins” in the media, and against even his own players on occasion over the past two weeks.

Mourinho said Friday he was “upset with nothing” and was a “lucky guy,” saying his only gripe was what he perceived as unfair criticism of his players from outsiders.

“I should protect them, I would love to protect them, ( but) I can’t,” Mourinho said. “It is something that is completely out of my control.

“But with me, it’s fine and with the Einsteins it’s fine,” he added. “They can speak, they can write, they can criticize the work of other people, but I am a good man.”

Yet, it was Mourinho who was criticizin­g United players Luke Shaw, Henrikh Mkhitaryan and Jesse Lingard after poor performanc­es or individual mistakes during recent matches.

One player he continues to support is captain Wayne Rooney, who has taken the brunt of criticism during United’s poor run.

Mourinho said he believes there is a direct correlatio­n between Rooney’s slump in form and some criticism England’s record goal scorer received after his performanc­e in England’s 1-0 win over Slovakia in World Cup qualifying on Sept. 4.

“Honestly, I think there was a Wayne before the Slovakia-Eng- land and a Wayne after SlovakiaEn­gland,” Mourinho said, adding that he in no way held England manager Sam Allardyce responsibl­e for any loss of form.

“I am not blaming Sam, not at all. I am blaming the people who, after the England- Slovakia were, in my opinion, too strong with somebody that is a very important player in the history of English football,” Mourinho said.

Mourinho’s comments came a day after Rooney said he wasn’t affected by the disparagin­g remarks.

“I’ve had that my whole career,” Rooney said, “a little bit more of late, I think, but that’s football. I listen to my coaches and my teammates, the people around me, and I don’t really listen to what a lot of people out there are saying because a lot of it is rubbish.”

Mourinho has a big call to make on Rooney, who was the only firstteam regular to play the full 90 minutes against Northampto­n. That means he might be left out for a match against Leicester that comes less than 72 hours later.

Mourinho said Anthony Martial will miss the game because of calf and ankle problems sustained in the 3-1 loss at Watford on Sunday.

 ?? DAVID DAVIES/ PA VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? After winning his first four games as Manchester United manager, Jose Mourinho has endured heavy criticism following three losses in nine days. Man U faces Leicester today.
DAVID DAVIES/ PA VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS After winning his first four games as Manchester United manager, Jose Mourinho has endured heavy criticism following three losses in nine days. Man U faces Leicester today.

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