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http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,277-1381449,00.html November 30, 2004 Mourinho resolves to make his point with silverware By Tom Dart Chelsea have to deliver, manager who rejected Newcastle and Liverpool says “WE ARE now in a time of rotation,” Jose Mourinho said yesterday. He was talking about his selection policy, but the Chelsea manager could as easily have been referring to the power shift at the top of the table, with everything swivelling in the West London club’s favour: Arsenal sinking, Chelsea ascendant. Tonight at Craven Cottage, in the quarter-finals of the Carling Cup, Chelsea have a chance to showcase the strength in depth and relentless consistency that make them increasingly likely to win the title. When Manchester United take part in this competition their team list reads like a repository of might-bes and probably-never-will-bes. Arsenal rely on creative but callow youth. Only Chelsea’s second string is truly first-class: Scott Parker (England international), Wayne Bridge (the second-best English left back in the country), Alexei Smertin (the captain of Russia), Mateja Kezman (prolific for PSV Eindhoven) and Carlo Cudicini (last season’s first-choice goalkeeper and still one of the best). The financial generosity of Roman Abramovich, the owner, is Mourinho’s good fortune, but the Portuguese has shown he can revel in the trappings of wealth while avoiding its traps. A little more than two weeks ago, Chelsea went to Craven Cottage and won 4-1. In the Barclays Premiership they are organised, spirited and hungry; the attitude and aptitude of his reserves tonight will show just how deep an imprint Mourinho has made on his squad. Mourinho’s official biography, serialised in The Times, reveals that his skills attracted the attention of English clubs even before FC Porto’s European Cup victory. He was wooed by Liverpool in the spring but demurred. Four years ago Sir Bobby Robson asked him to join the staff at Newcastle United with a pledge that within two years he would be head coach. Mourinho declined: Robson should have known him better, he suggests. A man who, when in charge of Uniao Leiria, had enough chutzpah to order the club’s hierarchy to leave a training session because they were a distraction, would hardly want to work as a subordinate. By describing himself as a tinkerer, Claudio Ranieri, his predecessor, conjured the image of an amateur mechanic fiddling blithely under the bonnet. Mourinho’s biography demonstrates that he operates with the precision of a surgeon. Before the European Cup final he gave his Porto players individually tailored DVDs of their opponents. “You can have the top stars . . . you can have the best stadium, you can have the best facilities, the most beautiful project in terms of marketing . . . but if you don’t win, all the work these people are doing is forgotten. You have to win and especially, as I have, you have to win a trophy for the first time,” Mourinho said yesterday. He has to win because Abramovich’s investment insists on it; he has to win because his own ego demands it. So far, so excellent: through to the next phase of the European Cup at a canter, five points clear of Arsenal in the league, only six goals conceded. Critics carped earlier in the season that Chelsea were not attack-minded enough. After scoring four goals in each of their past three away Premiership games, only Arsenal have a better goalscoring record. As Arsene Wenger’s team struggle to comprehend the fitful nature of their genius, Chelsea marry exuberance with efficiency. Arsenal have not won the League Cup since 1993; Manchester United’s only triumph in the competition came a year earlier. It would underline the opulence of Chelsea’s resources if they were to succeed in the Carling Cup while maintaining a push for Premiership, European Cup and FA Cup glory. Arsenal and United face off against each other tomorrow in a malign embrace that, if it follows the pattern of previous encounters, will be sizzling, scabrous and mutually destructive, even though their stars are certain not to take the stage. If Chelsea beat Fulham tonight, the man with vaulting ambition etched into his being can enjoy the show from Old Trafford and continue to design his team’s giant leap forward. -- Love will tear us apart -- ※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc) ◆ From: 218.168.33.207
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