Jose Mourinho Biography




Jose Mourinho
extracted from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia, distributed under the GNU Free Documentation License

José Mourinho
Personal information
Full name José Mário dos Santos Félix Mourinho
Date of birth 26 January 1963 (1963-01-26) (age 45)
Place of birth    Setúbal, Portugal
Height 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)1
Club information
Current club Inter
Teams managed
Years
2000
2001–2002
2002–2004
2004–2007
2008–
Clubs2
Benfica
U.D. Leiria
F.C. Porto
Chelsea
Inter


* Appearances (Goals)

José Mário dos Santos Félix Mourinho, GOIH (pronounced [ʒuˈzɛ moˈɾiɲu]) (born 26 January 1963 in Setúbal) is a Portuguese football manager. He is the current manager of Italian club Inter.

The son of Portuguese goalkeeper Félix, Mourinho started out as a player but he was unsatisfied with his mediocre career and switched to management. After spells working as an assistant manager and a youth team coach in the early 1990s, he became an interpreter for Bobby Robson. Mourinho learnt much from the veteran coach and worked with him at top Portuguese teams Sporting and Porto, and at Spanish giants Barcelona.

He began focusing on coaching and impressed with brief but successful managerial periods at Benfica and U.D. Leiria. He returned to Porto in 2002, this time as head coach, and soon became a force to be reckoned with, winning the Portuguese Liga, Cup of Portugal and UEFA Cup in 2003. Greater success followed in 2004 as Mourinho guided the team to the top of the league for a second time and won the highest honour in European club football, the UEFA Champions League.

Mourinho moved to Chelsea the following year and won two consecutive Premier League titles in 2004 and 2005, among other domestic honours. He often courted controversy for his outspokenness but his victories at Chelsea and Porto established him as one of the top football managers, well regarded by both his peers and the press. Additionally, he was named the world's best football manager by the International Federation of Football History and Statistics (IFFHS) for both the 2004–05 and 2005–06 seasons. After a fall out with the Chelsea hierarchy he moved to Serie A, signing a three year contract with Inter in mid-2008. Within three months he had won his first Italian honour, the Italian Supercup.

Contents

Early life and career

Formative years and education

Jose Mourinho was born in 1963 to a large middle-class family in Setúbal, Portugal; the son of Félix Mourinho and Maria Julia Mourinho. His father played football professionally for Belenenses and Vitória de Setúbal, earning one cap for Portugal in the course of his career. His mother was a primary school teacher from an affluent background;3 her uncle, Mourinho's great uncle, funded the construction of the Vitória Setúbal football stadium. However, the fall of Antonio de Oliveira Salazar led to the family losing all but a property in nearby rural Aires.4

Mourinho was a popular and competitive child and his mother encouraged him to be successful in his endeavours.4 Football was a major part of his life and his father recalled being very impressed with his knowledge of the game. Footballing commitments in Porto and Lisbon meant that Félix was often separated from his son. Still, the young Mourinho managed to spend time with him and as a teenager he would travel by any means necessary to attend weekend matches. By this time his father had changed from player to coach and in turn the young Mourinho became a student of the game, observing training sessions and scouting opposing teams.5

He wanted to follow in the footsteps of his father by becoming a footballer and he joined the Belenenses youth team. Graduating to the senior level, he played at Rio Ave, where his father was coach, Belenenses and Sesimbra but it became evident that he would not excel as a professional, lacking the requisite pace and power.67 Conceding to his shortcomings, he chose to pursue the dream of becoming a professional football coach instead.3 His mother had different ideas altogether and enrolled him in a business school. Mourinho attended the school but dropped out on his first day, deciding he would rather focus on sport, and chose to attend the Instituto Superior de Educação Física (ISEF) to study sports science.4 He taught physical education at various schools and after five years he had earned his diploma, receiving consistently good marks throughout the course.5 After attending coaching courses held by the English and Scottish Football Associations, former Scotland manager Andy Roxburgh took note of the young Portuguese's drive and attention to detail.8 Mourinho sought to redefine the role of coach in football, mixing coaching theory with motivational and psychological techniques.3

Entering management

Leaving his job as a school coach, Mourinho looked for paths into professional management in his hometown, becoming youth team coach at Vitória de Setúbal in the early 1990s. Working his way up the ladder, he accepted the position of assistant manager at Estrela da Amadora.8 Mourinho yearned for greater challenges and in 1992 an opportunity arose to work as a translator for a top foreign coach. Bobby Robson had been appointed as the new manager of Lisbon side Sporting and the Englishman required a local coach with a good command of English to work as his interpreter.6

Initially, the move was a step away from management but as an interpreter Mourinho earned Robson's respect and friendship. He welcomed Mourinho's translations and the two became close, discussing tactics and coaching.6 Robson was sacked by Sporting but Portuguese rivals FC Porto appointed him as their head coach and Mourinho continued to coach and interpret for players at the new post.8 After two years at Porto the duo moved again, switching to Barcelona in 1996, and Mourinho continued to show his linguistic dexterity and drive, learning Catalan for the new challenge.9 Mourinho and his family moved to Catalonia and he gradually became a prominent figure of Barcelona's staff, translating at press conferences, planning practice sessions and helping players through tactical advice and analyses of the opposition. Robson and Mourinho's styles complimented each other: the Englishman favoured an attacking style while Mourinho covered defensive options and the Portuguese's love of planning and training combined with Robson's direct man-management. The pair's mix of styles was fruitful and Barcelona finished the season with the European Cup Winners’ Cup. Robson moved club the following season but this time Mourinho did not follow as Barcelona were keen to retain him as assistant manager.8 Despite the move, the two remained good friends and Mourinho later reflected on the effect Robson had had upon him:

"One of the most important things I learnt from Bobby Robson is that when you win, you shouldn’t assume you are the team, and when you lose, you shouldn’t think you are rubbish."8

He began working with Robson's successor, Louis van Gaal, and he learnt much from the Dutchman's conscientious style. Both assistant and head coach combined their studious approach to the game and Barcelona won La Liga twice in van Gaal's first two years as coach.8 Van Gaal saw that his number two had the promise to be more than a skilled assistant and he gave Mourinho an opportunity to develop his own independent coaching style, entrusting him with the coaching duties of FC Barcelona B.9

Coaching career

Benfica and União de Leiria

The chance to become a top-tier manager arrived in September 2000 when Mourinho moved up from his role as assistant coach at Lisbon side Benfica to replace head coach Jupp Heynckes after the fourth week of the Portuguese Liga.9 The Benfica hierarchy wanted to appoint Manuel Jesualdo Ferreira as the new assistant coach but Mourinho refused, picking Carlos Mozer, a retired Benfica defender, as his right hand man instead.10 Mourinho was highly critical of Ferreira, who he had first encountered as his teacher at ISEF, and later lambasted the veteran coach, stating: "This could be the story of a donkey who worked for 30 years but never became a horse."11

Mourinho and Mozer proved a popular combination, enjoying a 3–0 win against fierce rivals Sporting in December.1213 However, their reign appeared to be at risk after Benfica's election turned against club president João Vale e Azevedo, and the newly-elected Manuel Vilarinho said that he would instate ex-Benfica player Toni as his new coach.9 Although Vilarinho had no intention of firing him immediately, Mourinho used the victory over Sporting as an opportunity to test the president's loyalty and he asked for a contract extension.12 Vilarinho refused the demand and Mourinho resigned from his position immediately, leaving the club on 5 December 2000 after just nine league games in charge.14 Upon later reflection, Vilarinho rued his poor judgement and expressed his frustration at losing Mourinho:

"[Put me] back then [and] I would do exactly the opposite: I would extend his contract. Only later I realised that one's personality and pride cannot be put before the interest of the institution we serve."12

Mourinho quickly found a new managerial post in January 2001 with União de Leiria, whom he took to their highest-ever league finish of fifth place.15 Mourinho's successes at UD Leiria did not go unrecognised and he caught the attention of larger Portuguese clubs.9

F.C. Porto

He was then hand-picked in January 2002 by Porto (FCP) to replace Octávio Machado. Mourinho guided the team to third place that year after a strong 15-game run (WDL 11-2-2) and gave the promise of "making FCP champions next year".

He quickly identified several key players whom he saw as the backbone of what he believed would be a perfect FCP team: Baía, Ricardo Carvalho, Costinha, Deco, Dmitri Alenichev and Postiga. He recalled captain Jorge Costa after a six-month loan to Charlton Athletic. The signings from other clubs included Nuno Valente and Derlei from Leiria, Paulo Ferreira from Vitória Setúbal, Pedro Emanuel from Boavista FC, and Edgaras Jankauskas and Maniche who had been out of contract at Benfica.

During the pre-season, Mourinho put on the club website detailed reports on the team training. The reports were filled with formal vocabulary, as, for instance, he referred to a 20 km jog as an extended aerobic exercise. While they attracted some scorn for the pretentiousness, others praised the innovation and the application of a more scientific approach to the training methods practised in Portugal. One of the key aspects in Mourinho-era FCP was the pressuring play, which started at the offensive line, dubbed "pressão alta" ("high pressure"). The physical and combative abilities of defenders and midfielders such as Derlei, Maniche and Deco allowed FCP to apply pressure from the offensive lines, forcing the opponents either to concede the ball or try longer, uncertain passes.

In 2003, Mourinho won his first Portuguese Liga with a 27-5-2 WDL record, 11 points clear of Benfica, the team he quit two years earlier. The total of 86 points out of the possible maximum of 102 was a Portuguese record since the rule of three points per win was introduced, beating the previous record of 85 points set by FCP in their 1996–97 season. Mourinho also won the Portuguese Cup (against former club Leiria) and the UEFA Cup final against Celtic in Seville, both in May 2003.

The following season witnessed further successes beginning by winning the one match SuperCup Cândido de Oliveira, beating Leiria 1–0; however the UEFA Super Cup was lost 1–0 to AC Milan, Andrei Shevchenko scoring the solitary goal. FCP scooped their 20th Super Liga title. The club pulled off a perfect home record, an eight-point advantage, and an unbeaten run that only ended against Gil Vicente FC. They secured the title five weeks before the end of the season, while heavily involved in the Champions League at the same time. FCP lost the Portuguese Cup final to Benfica in May 2004, but two weeks later Mourinho won the ultimate prize: the Champions League, with a 3–0 win over Monaco in the Arena AufSchalke in Gelsenkirchen, Germany. The club had eliminated Manchester United, Olympique Lyonnais and Deportivo de La Coruña and saw only one defeat against Real Madrid in the group round.

Whilst still at FCP, Mourinho was linked with several top European clubs, including Liverpool, Real Madrid and Chelsea. Mourinho publicly stated his preference for the Liverpool job over the Chelsea one. He said: "Liverpool are a team that interests everyone and Chelsea does not interest me so much because it is a new project with lots of money invested in it. I think it is a project which, if the club fail to win everything, then Abramovich could retire and take the money out of the club. It's an uncertain project. It is interesting for a coach to have the money to hire quality players but you never know if a project like this will bring success."16

Chelsea

Mourinho moved to Chelsea in June 2004, becoming one of the highest paid managers in football with a salary of £4.2 million a year, subsequently raised in 2005 to £5.2 million.17 In a press conference upon joining the English side, Mourinho said, "Please don't call me arrogant, but I'm European champion and I think I'm a special one", which resulted in the media dubbing him "The Special One".18

Mourinho recruited his backroom staff from Porto, consisting of assistant manager Baltemar Brito, fitness coach Rui Faria, chief scout Andre Villas Boas and goalkeeping coach Silvino Louro. He retained the services of Steve Clarke, a long-serving former player at Chelsea, who had also performed an assistant managerial-type role under previous managers at the club. In terms of spending, Mourinho carried on where his predecessor Claudio Ranieri left off, as, bankrolled by Roman Abramovich, he spent in excess of £70&nbsp:m in transfer fees on players such as Tiago Mendes (£10million) from Benfica, Didier Drogba (£24million) from Olympique Marseille, Mateja Kezman (£5.4million) from PSV Eindhoven and FC Porto pair Ricardo Carvalho (£19.8million) and Paulo Ferreira (£13.3million).

Under Mourinho, Chelsea built on the potential developed in the previous season. By early December, they were sat top of the Premier League table and had reached the knock-out stages of the Champions League. He scooped his first trophy, winning the League Cup, after beating Liverpool 3–2 (AET) in Cardiff. Towards the end of the match, Mourinho was escorted from the touchline for allegedly inciting Liverpool fans following Chelsea's equaliser.

The club added more silverware as they secured their first top-flight domestic title in 50 years, setting a string of English football records in the process. However, he failed to achieve back-to-back Champions League successes when Chelsea were knocked out of the competition by a controversial goal in the semi-finals by eventual winners Liverpool.19

Chelsea enjoyed a good start to the next season, defeating Arsenal 2–1 in the FA Community Shield. After topping the Premier League for most of the 2005–06 season, Chelsea beat rivals Manchester United 3–0 to win their second consecutive Premiership title and Mourinho's fourth domestic title in a row. After the presentation of his championship medal, Mourinho threw his medal and blazer into the crowd. He was awarded a second medal within minutes which he also threw into the crowd.

The 2006–07 season saw growing media speculation that Mourinho would leave the club at the season's conclusion, due to alleged poor relations with owner Roman Abramovich and a power struggle with sporting director Frank Arnesen and Abramovich advisor Piet de Visser. Mourinho later cleared doubts regarding his future at Stamford Bridge, stating that there would only be two ways for him to leave Chelsea: if Chelsea were not to offer him a new contract in June 2010, and if Chelsea were to sack him.20 He then launched an ambitious campaign for all four trophies available with the aim of becoming the first club in English football to complete the quadruple.

Despite the unrest, Chelsea under Mourinho won the League Cup again by defeating Arsenal in the final at the Millennium Stadium. However the dream of the quadruple was brought to an end on 1 May 2007 when Liverpool eliminated Chelsea from the UEFA Champions League on penalties at Anfield, following a 1–1 aggregate draw. Days later Mourinho missed out on the Premier League title to Manchester United, by drawing 1–1 with Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium on 6 May 2007, meaning this was his first season to not yield a league title in five years. Mourinho defeat Manchester United 1–0 in the 2007 FA Cup Final, to capture Chelsea's fourth FA Cup and the manager's first, in the first final to be played at the new Wembley. Thus Mourinho had won every domestic trophy available to a Premier League manager. However there was to be further friction between himself and Abramovich when Avram Grant was appointed as Director of Football despite objections from Mourinho. Grant's position was further enhanced by being given a seat on the board.

The first game of the next season saw Chelsea set a new English record for unbeaten league matches at home. The club's 64 game consecutive run beat the record held previously by Liverpool for an unbeaten run between 1978 and 1981.21 However, despite this feat, Chelsea's start to the 2007–08 season was not as successful as previous starts. The team lost at Aston Villa and followed this with a goalless draw at home to Blackburn Rovers. Their opening game in the UEFA Champions League saw them only manage a 1–1 home draw against the Norwegian team Rosenborg in front of an almost half-empty stadium.

He unexpectedly left Chelsea on 20 September 2007 'by mutual consent' although there was a bust up with chairman Roman Abramovich after the Chelsea board held an emergency meeting and decided it was time to part with their manager. Mourinho left as the most successful manager in Chelsea's history having won six trophies for the club in three years. He was also undefeated in all home league games.

Inter

On 2 June 2008 Mourinho was appointed the successor of Roberto Mancini at Inter on a three-year contract.2223 He held his first press conference as Inter boss in Milan on 3 June 2008, speaking solely in Italian, which he admitted he had learnt "in three weeks".24

Mourinho chose Giuseppe Baresi, a former Inter player and ex-head coach of their youth academy, as his assistant. He will also work alongside Rui Farias (Masseur, Physiotherapist, Fitness Coach), Silvino Louro (Goalkeeper Coach) and André Boas (Technical Assistant), who were part of his backroom set-up at Chelsea and Porto.25

In his first interview Mourinho stated that he only intended to make two or three major signings during the summer transfer window 26. On 15 July 2008 Brazilian winger Alessandro Faiolhe Amantino, known as 'Mancini', became Mourinho's first major signing at the club, costing a fee in the region of 12.5 million.27 On 28 July 2008 Ghanaian midfielder Sulley Ali Muntari was Inter's second major signing of the summer, costing in the region of 14 million.28 On September 1 2008, the final day of the summer transfer window, Mourinho made his final signing in the acquisition of Portuguese winger Ricardo Quaresma for a reported cash/player exchange fee of 18 million plus young Portuguese midfielder Pelé.29

On 24 August 2008 Mourinho won his first title with Inter beating A.S. Roma 6–5 on penalties (2–2 AET) to win the Italian Supercup.30

Managerial statistics

Team Nat From To Record
G W D L Win % Draw % Lose %
S.L. Benfica Flag of Portugal 20 September 2000 5 December 2000 11 6 3 2 54.55 27.27 18.18
U.D. Leiria Flag of Portugal July 2001 20 January 2002 31 17 10 4 54.84 32.26 12.9
F.C. Porto Flag of Portugal 23 January 2002 26 May 2004 123 87 21 15 70.73 17.07 12.2
Chelsea Flag of England 2 June 2004 20 September 2007 185 131 36 18 70.81 19.46 9.73
Inter Flag of Italy 2 June 2008 Present 18 11 6 1 61.11 33.33 5.56
Total 368 252 76 40 68.48 20.65 10.87

Mourinho is currently on a run of 104 home league matches unbeaten (38 with Porto, 60 with Chelsea and 6 with Inter). His last and only home league defeat came when Porto were defeated 3–2 by Beira-Mar on 23 February 2002.2131

Managerial honours

Porto

Chelsea

Inter

Individual honours

Controversy

Mourinho has often been seen as a controversial figure in football. His time at Chelsea, in particular, fuelled this viewpoint as he frequently made outspoken comments that saw him face punishment from the footballing authorities.32

On 6 October 2004, Adrian Mutu accused Mourinho of trying to prevent him from playing in a World Cup qualifier. Mourinho was informed by the Chelsea medical team that the player was unfit, following a knee injury, but Mutu disagreed and insisted he was fit to play.3334 The fitness disagreement soon became irrelevant as Mutu tested positive for cocaine in a routine drugs test and he was sacked on 29 October 2004.35

Following a Champions League tie between Chelsea and FC Barcelona in March 2005, Mourinho accused Anders Frisk and Barcelona coach Frank Rijkaard of breaking FIFA rules by having a meeting at half–time. Mourinho insisted that this biased the referee and caused him to send off Chelsea striker Didier Drogba in the second half.36 Frisk admitted that Rijkaard had tried to speak to him but insisted that he had sent him away.37 The situation intensified when Frisk began to receive death threats from angered fans, causing the referee to pre-maturely retire.38 The UEFA referee's chief, Volker Roth, labelled Mourinho an "enemy of football",39 although UEFA distanced themselves from the comment.40 After an investigation of the incident, Mourinho was given a two-match touchline ban for his behaviour and both Chelsea and the manager were fined by UEFA, though the body confirmed that it did not hold Mourinho personally responsible for Frisk's retirement.4142

On 2 June 2005, Mourinho was fined £200,000 for his part in the meeting with Arsenal full-back Ashley Cole in January 2005 in breach of the Premier League rules. His fine was later reduced to £75,000 after a hearing in August.43 Later that year, he labelled Arsenal manager Arsène Wenger "a voyeur" after being irked at what he saw as the latter's apparent obsession with Chelsea. Wenger was furious with the remark and considered taking legal action against Mourinho.44 However, the animosity died down and the two managers made peace after Mourinho admitted that he regretted making the comment.45

After a league match with Everton on 17 December 2006, Mourinho branded Andrew Johnson "untrustworthy" following a challenge with Chelsea keeper Hilário. Everton issued a statement threatening legal action and calling on Mourinho to apologise,46 which he later did.47

Personal life

Mourinho with his children, Matilde and José Jr.

Mourinho met his wife, Tami, when they were both teenagers in Setúbal, Portugal, and the couple married in 1989.4849 Their first child, a daughter called Matilde, was born in 1996 and they had their first son, José Jr., four years later. Mourinho, whilst dedicated to football, describes his family as the centre of his life and has noted that the "most important thing is my family and being a good father".4950 He was selected as the New Statesman Man of the Year 2005 and was described as a man devoted to both his family and his work.51 Mourinho has also been a part of social initiatives and charity work, helping with a youth project bringing Israeli and Palestinian children together through football and donating his "lucky" jacket to Tsunami Relief, earning £22,000 for the charity.5253

Widely known for his strong personality, refined dress sense,54 and quirky comments at press conferences,55 Mourinho has experienced fame outside of football circles, featuring in European advertisement campaigns for Samsung, American Express and Adidas, amongst others.56 An unofficial biography of Mourinho, titled O Vencedor - De Setúbal a Stamford Bridge (The Winner - from Setúbal to Stamford Bridge), was a best seller in Portugal. However, Mourinho did not authorise the biography and attempted, unsuccessfully, to prevent the book from being published.57

Mourinho was part of an unusual event in May 2007 when he was arrested for preventing animal welfare officials from putting his dog in to quarantine.58 The dog had not been sufficiently inoculated but the situation was resolved after it was returned to Portugal and Mourinho received a police caution.59

See also

References

  1. ^ "José Mourinho Profile". IMDB. Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  2. ^ This list does not include job as coach-interpreter at Sporting CP, F.C. Porto and FC Barcelona, and deputy coach at FC Barcelona.
  3. ^ a b c Cowley, Jason (2005-12-19). "NS Man of the year - Jose Mourinho". New Statesman. Retrieved on 2008-09-10.
  4. ^ a b c "Sitting pretty". The Observer (2004-08-01). Retrieved on 2008-09-10.
  5. ^ a b Smith, Paul (2004-09-12). "Football: Destined to be a great from the age of 10". Sunday Mirror. Retrieved on 2008-09-15.
  6. ^ a b c "Jose Mourinho: The Jose way". The Independent (2005-02-27). Retrieved on 2008-09-15.
  7. ^ "Jose Mourinho: 'Ronaldo has been by far the best player in the Premiership. But he must win a trophy'". The Independent (2008-04-26). Retrieved on 2008-09-15.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Hawkley, Ian (2004-05-09). "The big feature: Jose Mourinho". The Times. Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  9. ^ a b c d e Ley, John (2007-09-20). "Mourinho's Chelsea love affair finally ends". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  10. ^ "Mozer fired as InterClube coach". BBC Sport (2008-05-01). Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  11. ^ Sinnott, John (2007-09-18). "Low down on Porto". BBC Sport. Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  12. ^ a b c "'If something got in his way - which is winning - he would leave'". The Guardian (2007-01-17). Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  13. ^ "Benfica Lisbon 3 - 0 Sporting CP Lisbon". Soccerway (2000-12-03). Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  14. ^ "John Terry calls crisis meeting at Chelsea in wake of Mourhino's shock departure". The Daily Mail (2007-09-21). Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  15. ^ Swains, Howard. "Profile: Jose Mourinho". The Times. Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  16. ^ Wallace, Sam (2004-04-22). "Mourinho would prefer Liverpool". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  17. ^ Burt, Jason (2005-04-05). "Victory for Mourinho as Chelsea back down and offer record deal". The Independent. Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  18. ^ "What Mourinho said". BBC Sport (2004-06-02). Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  19. ^ Harris, Nick (2005-05-05). "Football: Know the score Motion expert says Garcia's shot did cross". The Independent. Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  20. ^ "Jose:Respect for fans; Respect for Carling Cup". Chelsea FC (2007-02-24). Retrieved on 2007-02-24.
  21. ^ a b "Mourinho thrilled to break record". BBC Sport (2007-08-12). Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  22. ^ "Josè Mourinho joins Inter". Inter. Retrieved on 2008-06-02.
  23. ^ "Inter confirm Mourinho". Sky Sports. Retrieved on 2008-06-02.
  24. ^ "E' subito Mourinho-show. "Né speciale, né pirla"" (in Italian). La Gazzetta dello Sport (2008-06-03). Retrieved on 2008-06-03.
  25. ^ "Mourinho takes over as Inter boss". BBC Sport. Retrieved on 2008-06-02.
  26. ^ "Jose Mourihno Charms the Italians after joining Inter". The Daily Telegraph (2008-07-02). Retrieved on 2008-08-15.
  27. ^ "Mourinho makes Mancini first major signing". Reuters (2008-07-16). Retrieved on 2008-10-21.
  28. ^ "Inter rule out Lampard after Muntari signs". The Independent (2008-07-28). Retrieved on 2008-10-21.
  29. ^ Carminati, Nadia (2008-09-01). "Inter agree Quaresma fee". Sky Sports. Retrieved on 2008-10-21.
  30. ^ "Inter Milan wins Italian Super Cup". International Herald Tribune (2008-08-24). Retrieved on 2008-10-21.
  31. ^ "Football fortresses: Jose Mourinho makes it 100 not out" (2008-09-27). Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  32. ^ "Controversial Mourinho exits Chelsea the only way he knows how". Agence France-Presse (2007-09-17). Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  33. ^ "Mutu hits out at Mourinho". BBC Sport (2004-10-06). Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  34. ^ "Mutu future in doubt at Chelsea". BBC Sport (2004-10-16). Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  35. ^ "Mutu lodges appeal over damages". BBC Sport (2008-09-05). Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  36. ^ "Mourinho accuses Barca's Rijkaard". BBC Sport (2005-02-27). Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  37. ^ "Uefa: Rijkaard did approach Frisk". The Guardian (2005-04-07). Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  38. ^ "Anders Frisk hangs up his whistle". FIFA (2005-03-14). Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  39. ^ "Mourinho accused as Frisk quits". BBC Sport (2005-03-14). Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  40. ^ "Uefa Steer Clear of Roth Remarks". Sporting Life (2005-03-17). Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  41. ^ "Chelsea fined, Mourinho banned over Frisk affair". Sydney Morning Herald (2005-04-01). Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  42. ^ "Mourinho cleared of forcing Frisk out". Sporting Life (2005-03-17). Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  43. ^ "Mourinho & Cole lose fine appeals". BBC Sport (2005-08-10). Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  44. ^ Rej, Arindem. "Wenger - I can't afford to sue Mourinho for voyeur remark". The Guardian. Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  45. ^ "Mourinho regrets 'voyeur' comment". BBC Sport (2005-12-23). Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  46. ^ "Everton want Mourinho retraction". BBC Sport (2006-12-18). Retrieved on 2006-12-18.
  47. ^ "Mourinho makes apology to Johnson". BBC Sport (2006-12-20). Retrieved on 2006-12-20.
  48. ^ Campbell, Denis (2004-05-30). "Luxury Coach". The Observer. Retrieved on 2008-09-10.
  49. ^ a b Wilson, Dave (2005-11-13). "Jose Mourinho: I'm a DIY Disgrace I cant even change a lightbulb". Sunday Mirror. Retrieved on 2008-09-10.
  50. ^ "Sitting pretty". The Observer (2004-08-01). Retrieved on 2008-09-10.
  51. ^ Cowley, Jason (2005-12-19). "NS Man of the year - Jose Mourinho". New Statesman. Retrieved on 2008-09-10.
  52. ^ Davies, Gareth A (2005-03-27). "Mourinho gives peace a chance". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved on 2008-09-10.
  53. ^ "Mourinho's jacket boosts charity". BBC Sport (2005-05-20). Retrieved on 2008-09-10.
  54. ^ Liddle, Rod (2007-09-23). "Jose Mourinho: Portuguese man of phwooar". The Sunday Times. Retrieved on 2008-09-10.
  55. ^ "Jose Mourinho: He's back (and already it's personal)". The Independent (2008-08-30). Retrieved on 2008-09-10.
  56. ^ Conrad, Peter (2006-02-19). "The great dictator". The Observer. Retrieved on 2008-09-10.
  57. ^ Turbervill, Huw (2004-12-12). "Mourinho's bitter taste of defeat". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved on 2008-09-10.
  58. ^ "Mourinho 'arrested after dog row'". BBC Sport (2007-05-16). Retrieved on 2008-09-10.
  59. ^ Walker, Peter (2007-05-18). "Mourinho's dog heads to Portugal". The Guardian. Retrieved on 2008-09-10.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Wikiquote
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: