José Mourinho’s Harry and Hurry Battle Plan Could Unstitch Manchester City

José Mourinho and Pep Guardiola meet at Old Trafford on Sunday at exactly the right time in the season. Both teams are in a sweet spot of form and well-matched. Photograph: Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images
José Mourinho and Pep Guardiola meet at Old Trafford on Sunday at exactly the right time in the season. Both teams are in a sweet spot of form and well-matched. Photograph: Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images
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José Mourinho’s Harry and Hurry Battle Plan Could Unstitch Manchester City

José Mourinho and Pep Guardiola meet at Old Trafford on Sunday at exactly the right time in the season. Both teams are in a sweet spot of form and well-matched. Photograph: Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images
José Mourinho and Pep Guardiola meet at Old Trafford on Sunday at exactly the right time in the season. Both teams are in a sweet spot of form and well-matched. Photograph: Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images

It may go right, it may go wrong. But this is the one – this is the one we’ve waited for. And not before time either. A year and a half into the most dizzily trailed clash of managerial personalities since the brown-suited white heat of Don Revie versus Brian Clough, Sunday’s Manchester derby may finally dish up a contest to justify the extended trails.

When Pep Guardiola arrived in Manchester two summers ago the level of expectation was understandable. In a league already obsessed with the José Mourinho toxic personality cult and hooked on the idea of the football manager as guru, sage and all-round rainmaker, the histrionic oppositions of Pep-José were always likely to dominate the background noise.

And so it came to pass. Each meeting of City and United since has been billed, to varying degrees of disappointed hysteria, as a sweeping personality clash: Edmund versus Edgar, roundhead versus cavalier, angry bald aesthete versus angry grey pragmatist.

The reality has been a little different. Both managers spent much of their first shared season crunching around in neutral, re-gearing their inherited teams and keeping half an eye on the cloud of dust half a mile up the highway with a Chelsea flag in the back window. The final meeting of last season, the 0-0 draw at Old Trafford in April, was a footballing whiteout, the last knockings of a low-key battle for fourth place.

And now we have this, two teams at exactly the right stage in their season, both entering a fascinating sweet spot of form, minor stumbles and well-matched strengths and weaknesses. It is of course always vital to issue a disclaimer when cranking up the volume on one of these big ticket Premier League occasions (caution: may contain migrainous tactical caginess).

This time things may turn out a little different, a Manchester derby between teams whose styles and trajectories are perfectly poised. The best thing about the Pep-José dynamic has always been its basis in a genuine tactical opposition, polarised visions of how football can work, rather than just the more familiar territory of a pair of middle-aged men who do not like each other.

Both managers set out their team to control the space on the pitch but in different ways. Mourinho looks to eradicate space in certain key areas, to control and minimise the variables, strangling an opponent’s possibilities first of all, before trying to win the match on his own team’s strongest details. Guardiola looks to do exactly what Mourinho is bent on trying to stop, to create space in unusual areas, to build overloads, find the seams in the defense and ease the stitching apart.

With this in mind it has been tempting to assume Sunday afternoon will bring an entrenched contrast of styles. Paul Pogba has been United’s forward conduit, the man to drive this team up the pitch. Without him United’s options look more limited, raising expectations of something along the lines of the famous 2010 meeting between Mourinho’s Inter and Guardiola’s Barcelona, an archetype of drilled attack versus drilled defense.

Inter played with 10 men for an hour after the dismissal of Thiago Motta at the Camp Nou. At times they simply kicked the ball away, willingly conceding possession in order to hare back into their defensive shape. Inter did not have a shot all game, lost 1-0 and knocked Barça out of the Champions League. The suspicion remains this is still the most cherished single occasion of Mourinho’s career.

And so on to Sunday. Dig in. Pack for winter. Get ready for a fight. You can bring your dinner – you’ll need it and all. Except, look a little closer and it may not work out exactly like that. There are further shades to these two teams, not least in the way both have come into this match. Much has been made of City’s slowing down in the last few league victories, their style clogged by ultra-defensive opponents, adjusting to the idea of having to pass and move their way through 90 minutes of glue and resistance.

In many ways, though, this has been perfect training for a classic Mourinho matchup, like sparring with a southpaw before an awkward-looking title bout. Mourinho’s defensive mastery works best against teams who come romping in unprepared. As such Guardiola will be ready, with patience and commitment to the gameplan ingrained in his players.

For this reason, along with a few others, United may just attack a little more than some have predicted. If a precedent for Mourinho’s approach is needed it is more likely to be along the lines of the first part of that 2010 Inter-Barça arm-wrestle, the home leg in Milan where Inter surprised their opponents with aggression and physicality high up the pitch.

Barcelona were jaded after a journey to Milan made by coach because of the Icelandic volcano eruptions. But that day Inter executed their two-stage plan perfectly, pressing high and forcing errors, then falling back and breaking with verve. Mourinho had his players man-mark Lionel Messi and swarm over Xavi in possession, as he may well try to do with Kevin De Bruyne and, should he play, David Silva.

There is a slight echo of this in United’s last two games, the away wins at Watford and Arsenal. In both games United did the same, pressing with aggression early on, to devastating effect. In both games they scored defining early goals from forced defensive errors. And for once, facing a Guardiola possession-machine, Mourinho will surely be just as interested by City’s weaknesses as by their strengths.

Without John Stones, City’s defense may be vulnerable to these tactics. Rather than focusing solely on how Ander Herrera and Nemanja Matic will cope with Silva and De Bruyne it is probably just as important to consider how Nicolás Otamendi and his partner will cope with being harried and hurried in possession. Or how City’s midfield will cope with United’s speed on the break, where Anthony Martial has been sensational at times in recent weeks.

City’s style and form demand they remain favorites to win. They are a team capable of handing out a chasing to anyone, with an attack who will keep pushing on and pushing wide. But Mourinho is also likely to press his full-backs on to Raheem Sterling and Leroy Sané, forcing them back but not too far back. How these two excellent but still callow inside-forwards cope in roles key to Guardiola’s style will be important.

As will, perhaps unexpectedly, the question of how City’s defense cope with United’s attack. All jinxing effect aside, and with full knowledge football loves nothing more than a party pooped and expectation subverted, this really does promise to be an intriguing moment in the Premier League season.

(The Guardian)



Pope Francis Was a Card-Carrying Football Fan and Promoter of Values in Sports

Francis met his fellow Argentine Maradona twice as pope. (AFP via Getty Images)
Francis met his fellow Argentine Maradona twice as pope. (AFP via Getty Images)
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Pope Francis Was a Card-Carrying Football Fan and Promoter of Values in Sports

Francis met his fellow Argentine Maradona twice as pope. (AFP via Getty Images)
Francis met his fellow Argentine Maradona twice as pope. (AFP via Getty Images)

From meetings with Diego Maradona to the passion for his beloved Buenos Aires club, San Lorenzo, Pope Francis was an avid football fan. And a promoter of sports in general.

Francis died Monday at 88 and the football and sports world immediately paid homage.

All sports events scheduled for Monday in Italy were postponed to mourn Francis, including four top-flight football matches. A minute of silence will be observed before all sports events this week, the Italian Olympic Committee said.

“Italian football joins in the mourning of millions of people following the death of Pope Francis. He was a great example of Christian caring and dignity in the face of suffering and he was always attentive to the sports world and particularly football, of which he was a fan,” said Italian football federation president Gabriele Gravina. “He will always remain in the hearts of the faithful and lovers of football.”

Francis’ passion for football became known almost immediately after he was elected pope in 2013 when San Lorenzo tweeted a photo of him holding up the club’s crest. He was even a card-carrying member of the club, with San Lorenzo ID No. 88,235.

San Lorenzo is nicknamed “the Saints.”

In Italy, there were also suggestions that Francis supported Juventus since his family came from the Piedmont region where the Turin club is based. Francis' father, Mario Bergoglio, was a basketball player.

San Lorenzo, one of the oldest teams in the Argentine Football Association, performed well after Francis was elected as the 266th pope in March 2013. The team won a national title in 2013 and then claimed the South American Copa Libertadores for the first time a year later. Club officials traveled twice to the Vatican carrying trophies to thank Francis for his support.

A planned new San Lorenzo stadium is to be named for Francis.

During a meeting with the Argentina and Italy national teams shortly after he was elected, Francis noted the influence of athletes, especially on youth, and told the players to remember that “for better or worse” they are role models. “Dear players, you are very popular. People follow you, and not just on the field but also off it,” he said. “That’s a social responsibility.”

Francis met his fellow Argentine Maradona twice as pope. There was a special audience in connection with a charity football match in 2014 when Maradona presented the pontiff with a football jersey, emblazoned with the name “Francisco” — Spanish for Francis — and Maradona’s No. 10.

“I think we all now realize he’s a (star),” Maradona said after another meeting in 2015. “I’m Francis’ top fan.”

When Maradona died in 2020, Francis remembered the football great in his prayers.

Francis often hailed sports as a way to promote solidarity and inclusion, especially for young people.

During a global conference on faith and sport in 2016, Francis implored leaders to do a better job of keeping corruption off the playing field and said sports must be protected from manipulations and commercial abuse.

“Francis was a special pope, able to illuminate in his time like only the greatest can,” Gianluigi Buffon, the former captain of Italy’s national football team who met the pope on multiple occasions, said on Instagram. “He showed us the way with great courage and moved our souls. I will carry his example forever in my heart.”