Friday, 27 May 2016

JAMIE CARRAGHER: Pep Guardiola SHOULD be worried... no way Jose Mourinho will change!

Jose Mourinho was named the new Manchester United manager on Friday
The Portuguese doesn't tick every box for United but will win trophies
The Premier League will boast some of the best names next season
Jurgen Klopp, Pep Guardiola and Antonio Conte will go head-to-head
Mourinho and Guardiola will reprise rivalry dating back to La Liga days

Manchester United XI under Jose Mourinho: From Zlatan to Saul Niguez

By JAMIE CARRAGHER FOR BE INFORMED
PUBLISHED: 13:38 GMT, 27 May 2016 | UPDATED: 15:07 GMT, 27 May 2016

Spain might have the best players and by Saturday night they will have won both European club competitions after the all-Spanish Champions League final — but the invasion of the great managers will electrify the Premier League and confirm it as the place to be.
The Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho (22 trophies) battling it out with Manchester City’s Pep Guardiola (21 trophies). Then there’s Chelsea’s Antonio Conte (three Serie A titles) slugging it out with Liverpool’s Jurgen Klopp (a dual Bundesliga winner and Champions League finalist) and Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger (17 trophies).

It means no other competition can rival England’s big league for expertise and swagger.
Jose Mourinho was named the new manager of Manchester United on Friday morning on a four-year deal
Jose Mourinho was named the new manager of Manchester United on Friday morning on a four-year deal
Some claim Mourinho does not play in the style preferred by United supporters but he will deliver trophies 
Some claim Mourinho does not play in the style preferred by United supporters but he will deliver trophies 
The Premier League will boast some of the best names next season including Pep Guardiola and Jurgen Klopp
The Premier League will boast some of the best names next season including Pep Guardiola and Jurgen Klopp
Whether you are a fan of his ways or not, you cannot deny that Mourinho is box office and will get United challenging for silverware straight away. The man is a serial winner.

Along with plenty of others, I have said for a long time that he doesn’t tick every box for United, but there is only one box they want ticking now — the one that says ‘trophies’. And they’ve got the best man for the job for that. In 14 attempts, he’s won eight titles across Europe. That’s more than a 50 per cent success rate!
United had the chance to get him three years ago but went for David Moyes, believing they didn’t need Mourinho and the baggage he brings.
The argument then was that he was not the right fit for Old Trafford, but what the last three years have shown is that no manager can be what Sir Alex Ferguson was. He was a one-off in the modern game for promoting young players, playing with style and being able to stay out in front
Mourinho follows in the footsteps of Sir Alex Ferguson who won an incredible 13 Premier League titles 
Mourinho follows in the footsteps of Sir Alex Ferguson who won an incredible 13 Premier League titles
Sir Matt Busby stands alongside Paddy Crerand (left) and George Best (right) after winning the European Cup 
Sir Matt Busby stands alongside Paddy Crerand (left) and George Best (right) after winning the European Cup 
The other man to do that was Sir Matt Busby. Both Busby and Ferguson lasted over two decades at the club but they are the only two men in United’s history to be successful playing such attacking football. They also promoted youth, Busby with his Babes and Ferguson with his Class of ’92.
Busby and Ferguson are giants of the game and other United managers tried to bring success - including the likes of Tommy Docherty and Ron Atkinson - but couldn’t pull it off. So for all the talk of the ‘United way’, the achievements were based around two extraordinary managers.
Clubs like Barcelona and Ajax bring in managers to suit the club and have ideas of the way they want to play regardless of the manager’s c.v. Luis Enrique, for instance, was sacked at Roma but has thrived at Barcelona.
United thought, when Ferguson left, that they could go down the same path, but it hasn’t worked for them. Others have caught up and overtaken them.
Moyes was very hard-working but he lacked the positivity and risk-taking that United fans had been used to. Louis van Gaal believed that a combination of a Dutch philosophy and his impressive c.v. would propel United forward, but it hasn’t.

Now they’ve finally turned to Jose: a man who won’t please everyone but a man who won’t change his way of playing. And why should he?

Mourinho replaces Louis van Gaal who, despite delivering the FA Cup this season, was dismissed on Monday
Mourinho replaces Louis van Gaal who, despite delivering the FA Cup this season, was dismissed on Monday
Moyes lacked the positive mentality needed at a club of United's stature and was sacked after 10 months
Moyes lacked the positive mentality needed at a club of United's stature and was sacked after 10 months
At times he will strangle a game if he feels the opposition are superior. For prime examples, look at the games between his Real Madrid team and Guardiola’s Barcelona. I’m sure Jose always felt his rival Guardiola had the strongest line-up in those titanic El Clasico battles, so he had an advantage.
Pep won five of those 11 clashes, and Jose just two, but with United’s spending power Mourinho will be able to go head to head with his great rival. They are playing on an even playing field — and he will relish that.

Also, it is harsh to say Mourinho doesn’t play good football. He broke plenty of Premier League records with Chelsea, while Real Madrid outscored Barcelona in two of his three La Liga seasons
Mourinho, then managing Real Madrid, shakes the hand of Barcelona boss Guardiola during a great rivalry
Mourinho, then managing Real Madrid, shakes the hand of Barcelona boss Guardiola during a great rivalry
As for not bringing young players through, if they are top class, he plays them. He played 19-year-old Carlos Alberto in the Champions League final at Porto, he gave a chance to Raphael Varane at Real Madrid and picked Davide Santon at Inter when he was a teenager. So Marcus Rashford will be fine if he carries on as he is.
One man who won’t be fine, though, is Guardiola. He left Barcelona for a number of reasons but one of them, I’m sure, is the continual baiting to which he was subjected to by Mourinho in the media. It is inevitable, at some point, that theme will return. Guardiola must be thinking: ‘Oh no, not him again.’

Mourinho arrives at Old Trafford with a point to prove and, as a Liverpool supporter, it worries me! It should also worry the rest of the Premier League — he is coming back to win.
Marcus Rashford, pictured during England duty, will be hoping to continue his dramatic rise under Mourinho
Marcus Rashford, pictured during England duty, will be hoping to continue his dramatic rise under Mourinho
MAN OF THE WEEK - BRENDAN RODGERS
Eyebrows will have been raised in some quarters about his decision to re-launch his managerial career in Scotland but, from Celtic’s point of view, this is a major coup.
Their last two appointments were Ronny Deila, who arrived unheralded from Norwegian side Stromsgodset, and Neil Lennon, who was taking his first job in management, so to recruit someone who two years ago took Liverpool to within two points of the title shows how well Celtic have done.
The feeling in Glasgow is this appointment rivals that of Martin O’Neill in 2000 but for Rodgers — who has agreed a 12-month rolling contract — to be remembered in similarly glowing terms, winning the Scottish Premier League won’t be enough if he wants to come south again and fight for trophies.
What sets O’Neill apart is his achievements in Europe in 2002-2003, when Celtic knocked the Liverpool team I played in out of the UEFA Cup en route to facing Jose Mourinho’s Porto in a final they dramatically lost 3-2.
O’Neill was able to sign players such as Chris Sutton and John Hartson from the Premier League but Rodgers recognises he won’t be buying from that market, as it’s difficult for Scottish clubs to buy top-level players from England. That, of course, is a negative but Rodgers didn’t let it influence his decision. He wanted to get back to work and is excited about the idea of trying to put what is undoubtedly a huge club back on the map in Europe.
I’ve played at Parkhead under the floodlights and sat in the stands for Champions League games against Ajax and Barcelona.

It’s an unbelievable stadium when it is bouncing and I know from experience Celtic have got a very good manager to get them what they want.
Former Liverpool boss Brendan Rodgers has taken charge at Celtic in what is a major coup for the Bhoys
Former Liverpool boss Brendan Rodgers has taken charge at Celtic in what is a major coup for the Bhoys
I WANT TO SEE DIEGO SIMEONE TRIUMPH

I hope on Saturday that it’s Gabi, Atletico Madrid’s captain, lifting the Champions League trophy in Milan.
I still feel for the club and their manager Diego Simeone after the last final between the two Madrid clubs in Lisbon two years ago, when Real equalised in the third minute of injury time and went on to win in extra time.

I was there that night and was surrounded by Atleti fans and the disappointment on their faces has stayed with me. They were league champions then but to lose that game to your biggest rivals was a bitter blow and, after playing second fiddle in the city for their entire history, this is a chance for them to put it right.


Diego Simeone and his Atletico Madrid side have another chance of Champions League glory against Real
Diego Simeone and his Atletico Madrid side have another chance of Champions League glory against Real
Psychologically, Real, with their 10 European Cups, still have a stranglehold on this trophy and will approach this game with an expectation to win.
The one person who won’t share that mentality is Atletico’s outstanding manager Simeone, who continues to build and then rebuild a team that punches above its weight against the powerhouses of Spain.
The purists will want a Real Madrid win - Atletico are as defensive as any team you can remember in big games. But I can’t help admiring their intensity and organisation, especially Diego Godin at the back. Another man I should mention is my old Anfield team-mate Fernando Torres, who probably can’t believe he’s playing in a Champions League final for his hometown club after his ups and downs of the last few years.

If Atletico win I’m sure it will mean even more to him than the World Cup or European Championship he has won with Spain.
Sportsmail columnist Jamie Carragher hopes it will be Atletico captain Gabi lifting the Champions League
Sportsmail columnist Jamie Carragher hopes it will be Atletico captain Gabi lifting the Champions League

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