
Disquieting news conferences are nothing new with Jose Mourinho. Even during his heyday with Porto, Chelsea and Inter, they were usually cold, beguiling encounters, a glance into the war room of a calculating general.
But where once there was intrigue, now there is bitterness and boredom. Mourinho’s latest 20-minute diatribe in the United States came after weeks of frustration, in which he rattled off barbs at Liverpool, Anthony Martial, Paul Pogba, Antonio Valencia, young players and the transfer window, like some vitriolic Gatling gun with a stuck trigger.
You might have noticed the military theme by now. That’s because Mourinho and Manchester United are gearing up for a fight: a fight to stay relevant in a modern gung-ho game as their rivals threaten to vanish over the horizon. And it seems Mourinho knows it.
“This is not my squad,” Mourinho protested after United’s 4-1 International Champions Cup loss to Liverpool. Sometimes it’s difficult to know who is, or who even wants to be.
The latter two have left, Pogba has had a rare taste of life on the bench, and it’s hard to see where the next marquee arrivals will come from. Mourinho has been very clear about wanting two new players but, despite his continually strong track record on United’s commercial front line, Woodward has looked unable to deliver beyond the deals for Fred, Diogo Dalot and Lee Grant.
The Gareth Bale rumours stopped surprisingly quickly this time, and speculation of a bid for Mateo Kovacic, set to join Chelsea on loan, was met by claims the midfielder does not fancy playing the Mourinho way. It means United head into Friday’s Premier League opener against Leicester City with no upgrades on converted 30-something wingers as full-backs, nothing to bolster central defence or the wide attacking positions, and the likelihood that Matteo Darmian and Anthony Martial will have to start despite wanting to leave.
The concerns are magnified by the way their rivals have strengthened. Manchester City added Riyad Mahrez to a record-breaking side that finished 19 points above United, while Chelsea jettisoned the tired Antonio Conte to bring in bold, brash Maurizio Sarri and Jorginho, the midfielder who embodies his style. Arsenal finally look like a team with a plan under Unai Emery, having accepted Emirates Stadium would not collapse into rubble if Arsene Wenger were removed. And while Jurgen Klopp might have abandoned his principles by spending close to £200m in this window, he has strengthened every one of the weak points of a team that played a Champions League final three months ago. Well, at least that brought a smile from Mourinho.
United still have time to buy and are not bereft of quality – let’s not forget that last term’s haul of 81 points was the most they have managed in the Premier League since Alex Ferguson bowed out.
The fear is now that, unless Mourinho abandons his grouching and rallies his troops to his cause, 2018-19 will be another season where he and United are talked of in terms of what they were, and how long ago those glory days seem to be.