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    Originally posted by Sarb View Post
    If he left it at that fair enough. But he doesnt. He basically forced Anders Frisk to retire, gouged a fellows eye to name a couple other things. I believe UEFA labelled him poison after what happened with Frisk.

    His players and coaching team bring the game into totsl disrepute. Its not even gamesmanship. Drogba swearing into the camera too.

    Press in Italy and Spain loathe him. For some reason press here lap it up

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      Me!

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        He is going to be at his very vilest best leading up to our game.

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          Originally posted by greenbloodred View Post
          There can't be a bigger cunt than Mourinho in all of world sport. There's a few knackers in US sports, can't just think of their names but i hear them talked about on a sports radio show without really taking in what they're on about.
          Warren Gatland is an odious prick but he's not on terms with cuntchops Jose.
          For those who don't follow rugby - the Irish are very, very bitter towards the Welsh coach - Warren Gatland
          Another MASSIVE game

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            Originally posted by EwarWoo View Post
            I'm sure Mourinho would do the same but that would still just make him a cunt who happened to do a good thing, just like Ronaldo. They're not sociopaths.
            Felching ≠ Gerbilling

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              My god, if we just smash them next week, I will be so happy

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                Originally posted by Rigadon View Post
                For those who don't follow rugby - the Irish are very, very bitter towards the Welsh coach - Warren Gatland

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                  Originally posted by greenbloodred View Post
                  There can't be a bigger cunt than Mourinho in all of world sport. There's a few knackers in US sports, can't just think of their names but i hear them talked about on a sports radio show without really taking in what they're on about.
                  Warren Gatland is an odious prick but he's not on terms with cuntchops Jose.
                  Michael Vick?

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                    Most of the coaches in the US who are a bit 'awkward' like Bill Bellichick, Gregg Popovich and others are nowhere near the level of Mourinho's and his **** level. For Mourinho to be despised in both Italy and Spain shows how repugnant his behaviour is.

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                      Heard a bit of talk sport's version of the Sunday supplement earlier and they were laying into him. The press are getting bored of his antics

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                        Originally posted by Reece View Post
                        Heard a bit of talk sport's version of the Sunday supplement earlier and they were laying into him. The press are getting bored of his antics
                        About time
                        The only gracious way to accept an insult is to ignore it; if you can't ignore it, top it; if you can't top it, laugh at it; if you can't laugh at it, it's probably deserved.

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                          Originally posted by Exiled_red View Post
                          About time
                          My thoughts exactly

                          About ****ing time.
                          Another MASSIVE game

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                            It's finally happening perfect timing as well

                            Jose Mourinho loses his head, Rui Faria loses the plot.. but guess what? It's everyone else's fault

                            link


                            An embarrassing way to bow out of the title race was worsened by the conduct of Jose Mourinho and his staff, who only wanted to play the blame game
                            Jamie McDonald
                            Embarrassing: Mourinho is forced to restrain Faria
                            This is how it normally pans out in Jose Mourinho’s world – aggro, recriminations, *nastiness, malice and** victimisation.

                            Often, there’s triumph at the end of it all, sometimes failure.

                            And as he dragged away one of his trusted lieutenants by his hair, even Mourinho will know which way this Premier League season is now going.

                            This may have been the day Mourinho’s bluff about the *deficiencies of his squad was called.

                            He probably had it spot on after all – not good enough for the title, a work not so much in progress as only just begun.

                            With three pretty hopeless strikers, by the way. His intimation, not mine.

                            But this was also the day when the refereeing industry *administered their own justice to Jose.

                            Disgracefully, his loyalists could not take it. Has there been a more unedifying sight than Mourinho having to resort to the most basic methods to contain Rui Faria? Not since Jose – still smarting from his recent FA fine no doubt – poked a rival coach in the eye over in Spain.

                            Throw in the Ramires forearm smash and you have an *ignominious and probably *decisive setback to Chelsea’s title hopes.


                            Too often, Mourinho’s teams have taken their slavish devotion to the image of their manager too far. His backroom staff certainly do. Faria should count himself lucky if he remains in a job this morning.

                            Had he not been restrained by Mourinho, there is no telling what he would have done. He had lost the plot.

                            Chelsea should not be aggrieved with Mike Dean’s performance. The decisive penalty WAS a penalty. And, of course, Dean overlooked the Ramires offence. Ramires has form. Bizarrely, Mourinho tried to shovel responsibility for Ramires’ *gruesome offence against Karim El Ahmadi on to Chris Foy.

                            Presumably, even he cannot saddle Dean with blame for the premeditated blow to the side of Seb Larsson’s head. The only blame Dean should shoulder is not spotting the offence.

                            The Football Association will rectify that oversight and Ramires can pack away his Premier League boots.

                            But Dean should not be *castigated. This was yet another game pockmarked by spurious appeals, *play-acting and snide fouls. And widespread dissent.

                            A brush-past makes the same players fall over who are grappling like prop forwards ahead of a corner.
                            .
                            Referees’ senses are being scrambled by the relentless con-artistry . If a team is wronged, then tough – because there is not a blameless side out there. If Chelsea feel they have been wronged, then tough. They are one of the least *blameless. The *inevitable loss of Ramires will give Mourinho another wagon for his circle. The siege mentality will surface.

                            Everything is against them. The enthusiastic, amateur judges in their Wembley offices, the fixture schedule generated by their own progress and, of course, the *limitations of his strikers.

                            Now, the odds are stacked against them.

                            Mourinho will go to Anfield with the chance to do Manuel Pellegrini a favour but with an unlikely title only a vague possibility, although that assumes Liverpool take care of business at Carrow Road today.

                            That is not guaranteed. What is guaranteed is that it always turns out this way with Jose. There’s always aggro, always malice, always someone to blame – and then he either wins or loses.

                            He's losing this one
                            From an other article in the Mirror this little beauty as well

                            Chelsea could be hit by three disciplinary charges after their title bid turned into a night of shame.

                            FA hawks will study Jose Mourinho’s sarcastic post-match comments, in which he “congratulated” referee Mike Dean for his “unbelievable” performance in the Blues’ shock 2-1 defeat by Sunderland. The Chelsea manager added that referees’ boss Mike Riley had “organised things with referees doing well according to their objective”.

                            Mourinho’s assistant, Rui Faria, will almost certainly be hauled into the dock after Mourinho had to physically restrain him from confronting Dean following the Black Cats’ controversial late winner from the penalty spot.

                            And midfielder Ramires faces a retrospective four-match ban for elbowing Sunderland’s Seb Larsson off the ball – which would end his Premier League campaign.
                            Last edited by Boogs; 21-04-14, 07:21 AM.
                            Go **** yourself

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                              FA hawks? Psshh. They don't see **** unless they want to.

                              Still, it's good that all three issues will (hopefully) be dealt with.

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                                Took him less than a season to revert to type.

                                Remember this !

                                José Mourinho declares himself 'the happy one' after his Chelsea return

                                Link to video: José Mourinho unveiled as the new manager of Chelsea – in video
                                Returning to Chelsea José Mourinho insisted he is no longer "a special one" but a humble one, vowing to introduce a stability that has been lacking for both the Portuguese and the club since he first departed six years ago.

                                "I am the happy one. Time flies. It feels like it was a couple of days ago but it was nine years ago [when I first arrived]. Since then, a lot of things have happened in my professional life. I have the same nature, I am the same person, I have the same heart and I have the same emotions relating to my passion and my job, but I am a different person," said Mourinho, who leaves his previous role at Real Madrid with claims that he "damaged" Spanish football ringing in his ears.

                                In contrast to his first arrival, Mourinho went out of his way to avoid discord or disharmony, endlessly repeating that he is "very calm" and "very relaxed".

                                Mourinho first arrived at Stamford Bridge in 2004 sweeping into the club and declaring he was "a special one", winning Chelsea's first title in 50 years and retaining it the following year. He won five major trophies in three years before parting with the owner Roman Abramovich.

                                He said on Monday that at the age of 50 he is better able to manage his emotions and ready to commit himself to building a dynasty at a club who have churned through 10 managers in a decade since Abramovich bought the club in 2003.

                                "We are ready to work together again. We have much better conditions to succeed and deliver what this club wants, which is stability," said Mourinho. "Now I am prepared for that. Before I wasn't. Today is June 10, Portuguese Day. I always loved adventure in the past, I was always a bit of an explorer."

                                The Portuguese, who has won league titles in Italy and Spain since leaving England, said that he plans to stay until the "last day" of his four-year contract and beyond, and has learned from his experiences around Europe.

                                "Sometimes people talk about older people in a negative way. Experience in life is something very important, particularly if you use it in the right way. I analyse myself every day as a manager, as a leader, as a member of a club," he said.

                                "Nine years is a big difference. When I arrived here in 2004, you pushed me a lot to have a stronger approach. You know me, you know my history in the British game and the European game. I just want to be calm. To give my best every day."

                                Mourinho claimed that there is no need to repair his relationship with the club's Russian owner and that they had parted by mutual consent, despite the swirl of furious discord that surrounded it.

                                "Of course it was a sad moment, but I don't regret that decision because I went to Inter where I had probably the best moment of my career and after that I went to Madrid where we had the record of the best team in Spanish history," he said.

                                "For Chelsea, things went well too. It was a decision that was difficult for both of us but it was a decision that was made by mutual agreement. It wouldn't be possible to be here today if we had real problems."

                                More than 200 journalists and camera crews, including many from overseas, packed into a suite in Stamford Bridge's West Stand where six months earlier Rafael Benítez had been presented in a fractious press conference.

                                The former Porto, Inter and Real Madrid manager claimed that he did not regret missing out on the Manchester United or Manchester City vacancies. "I am where I want to be. I wouldn't change it for anything. It's my job and the job I want. It is the job I was offered and I accepted immediately," he said.

                                Mourinho bristled only slightly when asked by Andrés Iniesta's claim that he had damaged Spanish football during his fractious spell at Madrid.

                                Mourinho said it was a comment motivated by his success in ending Barcelona's dominance: "I damaged Spanish football by being the man that broke Barcelona's dominance. It looked like a dominance without end – Real Madrid won the cup final against Barcelona, the Super Cup against Barcelona, we won in Barcelona and won the historical championship of 100 points and 121 goals. I hurt them."

                                He said he would meet with the Chelsea captain John Terry, sidelined by Benítez due to loss of form and injury, next month. "The future is to meet John on July 1st. I know what he can give, let's try and get the best and let's try and make him again a very important player that he couldn't be last season."

                                But he warned that those players who remain at the club from his first spell, including Terry and Frank Lampard, could expect no special favours. "There are still a few boys from my time. It's always good to go back and see people who gave everything to me when I was here. They know me and there will be no privilege for them. They know my nature as a manager. They don't have an advantage," he said.

                                "I think Chelsea did very well to get these young boys with great potential. I will be more than happy to work with them. A club like us always has the ambition to add a couple of players to improve the squad."

                                Mourinho has already been linked with a host of signings but said his first task would be to meet with the existing players. "My first job is not to say I need money with a lot of zeros and say I need to change the team. In the past three days, the media has linked us with 20 new players. I need to be fair with the existing players. A couple of new signings is normal but the main objective is to know what we have."

                                Only when asked about his weaknesses as a coach, did a flash of the old Mourinho return: "My weaknesses? Not many. But I try to improve. And hide [them]."

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