Mourinho won’t be in Stoke, vows to be ‘responsible’
Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho will miss the trip to Stoke City on
Saturday but has still promised to take “responsibility” for the Premier
League champions when they are at the Britannia Stadium on Saturday.
The Portuguese was punished for his behaviour towards officials at
half-time of Chelsea’s 2-1 defeat by West Ham, but has already adapted
by giving his staff detailed plans for the Stoke game.
Asked why he would not appeal against the ban, Mourinho again implied
on Friday that he is suffering from double standards, and said that
being given a stadium ban for language — as opposed to aggressive behavior — sets a precedent for more such punishments.
“Because the match is tomorrow and because I know the result of that
appeal already, and I decided to give up,” Mourinho told a news
conference at Chelsea’s training ground in Cobham, southwest of London.
“It’s stupid to fight a fight that you know you’ll already lose,” he
added, having come under intense pressure this season with Chelsea now a
lowly 15th in the 20-team Premier League.
“I travel with them, yes. I travel with them and will be with them
until the moment somebody stops me, which is, I think, when I am in the
limit of the compound of the stadium,” Mourinho explained.
“We know when I have to stop. I have to get out (of the coach) before. I don’t know (where I watch the game).
“I have no plans. Maybe I sit in the street corner with my iPad. I don’t know.”
– ‘Incredible scenarios’ –
His staff do know how to handle the game, he insisted, due to his planning.
“I will be in charge. Every responsibility is my responsibility,”
Mourinho said. “My staff are completely free of that extra pressure.
That doesn’t belong to their jobs. It’s my responsibility.
“If after 10 minutes we are playing with seven men, it’s something I
didn’t prepare my assistants for. They’d have to decide themselves.
“You’re right: the game is unpredictable, we don’t know the direction
in many aspects, but we try to reduce. That we did. The most incredible
scenarios you can imagine (we have envisaged).
“Let’s go to extremes: at half-time winning or losing 4-0,” he
explained. “In between this, you have 1,000 options: be dominating and
controlling the game; being dominated and not controlling the game;
having problems with this or that area; injuries or red cards of the
goalkeeper, the right-back, the centre-back, the striker, the winger.
“We went through all these different scenarios. They are prepared.
Also, what is important is for them to feel protected by the fact that
it’s my responsibility.
“It’s just for the players to play, and for the assistants to be with them and supportive with them.”
He added: “I know the situation where I am in relation to the
football power in this country, and I have to adapt. I have to adapt to
it.”
Mourinho also believes the decision opens up more potential stadium bans for other managers.
“If I go to the dimension of the punishment, I think it opens a range
of situations and options that I can imagine, in the future, we are
going to have lots of managers with stadium bans because a stadium ban
should relate to something really, really serious in terms of
aggression, words I don’t want to lose.
“This stadium ban is connected to words, to complaints. So, I
imagine, in this moment it’s open, in the future, for the stadium ban to
happen much more times unless, and maybe unless, we have our
association or other associations around Europe that question in a very
serious and legal way about the rights of the managers and the dimension
of the stadium ban.”
Mourinho meanwhile confirmed that Branislav Ivanovic is available
again after a hamstring injury, but that Radamel Falcao is out with a
muscular problem.
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