Jose Mourinho will be faced with a litany of
problems once the polarising Portuguese manager finally starts his Manchester United reign later this week.
Mourinho could be confirmed as United’s new boss
as early as Wednesday after his agent Jorge Mendes met the club’s executive
vice-chairman Ed Woodward for talks in London on Tuesday.
The former Chelsea boss is reported to have
been offered a three-year deal worth £15 million ($21 million, 19 million euros)
per season and would be given a transfer war-chest of around £200 million to
revive the troubled Premier League club following Louis van Gaal’s sacking on
Monday.
Mourinho has long dreamed of managing United,
but the fulfilment of that ambition will come with strings attached. The
53-year-old’s arrival at Old Trafford will be greeted with relief by large
sections of the United fanbase and squad in the aftermath of two turbulent
years under the drab management of arch pragmatist van Gaal.
However, Ronald De Boer, who played under van
Gaal at Ajax before joining him at Barcelona where Mourinho was working as an
assistant, says Mourinho can be just as conservative and acerbic as van Gaal.
“People run away with the impression of Mourinho and it’s the same with van
Gaal. You hate him or you love him,” De Boer said.
“There will always be players who are not
playing who will dislike him. “Mourinho is like Van Gaal, a workaholic.
Sometimes it’s not pretty but he knows how to grind out wins. That’s what you get.”
Before he even has time to settle into his new office at United’s Carrington
training ground, Mourinho must solve the thorny problem of Ryan Giggs’ status.
Mourinho is expected to bring long-time
assistant Rui Faria and goalkeeping coach Silvino Louro with him, meaning van
Gaal’s assistant coaches Albert Stuivenberg and Frans Hoek are likely to be
dismissed. – Risky move – That would leave Giggs as the last member of van
Gaal’s staff and his future is now uncertain after he was reportedly offered a
less senior coaching position by Mourinho.
United legend Giggs has spent 29 years with the
club and was a popular caretaker manager following David Moyes’ dismissal in
2014. The Welshman is believed to be disappointed he wasn’t offered the chance
to succeed van Gaal and is said to have flown to Dubai to consider his options
before giving Mourinho an answer.
Getting rid of a United icon at the start of
his reign would be a risky move for Mourinho, but it is far from his only
problem. After being sacked by Chelsea in December following a series of rifts
with senior players, Mourinho, who has won three Premier League titles and two
Champions Leagues, will find a United dressing room at a low ebb after van
Gaal’s constant criticism.
While Van Gaal earned admiration for promoting
youngsters such as Marcus Rashford, Cameron Borthwick-Jackson, TimothyFosu-Mensah and Jesse Lingard, the Dutchman is regarded as having failed to
control a group of volatile personalities.
Netherlands winger Memphis Depay, a £25 million
pre-season signing, is said to be in danger of squandering his talent due to a
dubious attitude, while veteran German midfielder Bastian Schweinsteiger is
reported to have been given special treatment by van Gaal after a series of
injuries. Mourinho must decide on the future of England midfielder Michael
Carrick, who is out of contract shortly but retains a strong voice in the squad.
Spanish winger Juan Mata could also be on his
way out after being sold to United within six months of Mourinho arriving at
Chelsea for his second spell at the club. Once Mourinho decides who will be
leaving, he can turn his attention to the signings required to revitalise an
unbalanced squad that finished fifth in the Premier League and crashed out of
the Champions League at the group stage.
Yet, without the lure of Champions League
action next season, Mourinho might find it hard to land his top targets —
especially with the Pep Guardiola revolution getting underway across town at
Manchester City.
City and Barcelona are believed to be ready to
compete with United for the signature of Everton’s England defender John
Stones, who Mourinho was unable to sign while at Chelsea last year.
As if that wasn’t enough to be getting on with,
Mourinho also has to deal with the distraction of his upcoming court appearance
over claims he discriminated against Chelsea’s former club doctor Eva Carneiro.
Mourinho called Carneiro “impulsive and naive”
after she ran on to the pitch to treat Eden Hazard during Chelsea’s match
against Swansea last year and she was later dropped from first-team involvement.
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