Pandemic Football Suits José Mourinho, a Man at Home in Sinister Circumstances

In Mourinho and Harry Kane Tottenham possess the kind of ruthlessness that makes them many people’s tips for a surprise title tilt. Photograph: Neil Hall/AFP/Getty Images
In Mourinho and Harry Kane Tottenham possess the kind of ruthlessness that makes them many people’s tips for a surprise title tilt. Photograph: Neil Hall/AFP/Getty Images
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Pandemic Football Suits José Mourinho, a Man at Home in Sinister Circumstances

In Mourinho and Harry Kane Tottenham possess the kind of ruthlessness that makes them many people’s tips for a surprise title tilt. Photograph: Neil Hall/AFP/Getty Images
In Mourinho and Harry Kane Tottenham possess the kind of ruthlessness that makes them many people’s tips for a surprise title tilt. Photograph: Neil Hall/AFP/Getty Images

As a coach who prides himself on being at the cutting edge of new trends and ideas within the game, José Mourinho joined Instagram in February 2020. We soon learned that this would not be an account dedicated to the classic Instagram tropes of good vibes, fabulous sunsets, body-positivity, and paleo-breakfasts. Instead, in among the adverts for watches and credit cards, Mourinho’s main source of content appears to be his own face, captured in various states of cheerlessness. On the team bus, looking grumpy after a defeat. On a sofa, glumly eating crisps out of a plastic tub. Forcing his staff, including a stony-faced Ledley King, to watch Formula One on a Sunday afternoon.

Even the more sincere posts carry an unnerving import. Last month, for example, Mourinho wrote on behalf of the World Food Programme, pointing out that “842 million people in the world do not eat enough to be healthy”. Curiously, though, the post was accompanied by photographs of Mourinho himself eating, as if demonstrating how it should be done. Three Premier Leagues, two Champions Leagues, one bowl of food: respect, man, respect.

Of course, like everyone else on the platform, Instagram Mourinho is simply a finely-curated character: two parts self-branding to one part smirking self-awareness. In this sense, social media is simply an extension of Mourinho’s footballing persona: one that wickedly skirts the boundaries of the real and the artificial, the text, and the subtext. “My dog died, and I’m fucked,” he announces in last season’s All or Nothing documentary, to general bewilderment. You can see his players trying to work out what’s actually going on here. Is this for real? Is this a test? Was there even a dog in the first place? Was it shot trying to escape?

This is in many ways the hubris and nemesis of Mourinho: the sense of goalposts constantly being shifted, of games within games, of mirages and projections. All of which is a roundabout way of saying that Tottenham are currently second in the Premier League, and it feels wrong to write them off, and wrong to take them seriously. In large part this is down to Mourinho himself, a coach who for all the mockery and career obituaries appears fleetingly, unexpectedly, defiantly – to be swimming back towards relevance.

Why might this be? Partly, of course, this is a function of real and tangible phenomena: the flourishing of Harry Kane and Son Heung-min, the joint-tightest defense in the Premier League, the calm efficiency of Pierre-Emile Højbjerg in midfield, sound summer recruitment, the early momentum built up by cup runs. Above all, it is Kane who feels like the key component here: the team’s center of gravity, capable of weighing the whole thing down or making it work, and currently approaching his crafty, creative best.

Partly, however, it is a function of tone, and this is where Mourinho has truly thrived. Modern coaching, exemplified not just by your Klopps and your Guardiolas but by your Potters and your Hasenhüttls, worships the process: clear ideals, a finely-miniaturized system, a tolerance of individual error. Pandemic football, meanwhile, makes a mockery of the process. Disdains your fanciful pressing machine. Besmirches your pristine plans with empty stadiums, soft tissue injuries, and two games a week from now until 2024.

In this new and fearful landscape, it may just be possible for a team to scrape together 80 points and scowl its way to the title. And frankly, why shouldn’t it be Tottenham? They have a deep squad, six high-class forwards, and relatively few injuries. They have a simple and unfussy game based on shape, percentages, and rapid counterattacks. Perhaps this is the best way to negotiate the Covid era: football chiseled and honed and sanded down to a fine point.

Above all they have Mourinho, who quite apart from convincing Daniel Levy to open his checkbook during a pandemic feels uniquely suited to these straitened and sinister circumstances. Jürgen Klopp looks tired. Pep Guardiola looks tired. Ole Gunnar Solskjær looks glassy-eyed and a little ill, like a man addicted to cod liver oil. Mourinho, on the other hand, was born tired; indeed has made a virtue of his tiredness. This is a man, remember, who spent literally his entire Manchester United reign eating via room service. This season has already served up 15 games in two months. And so he simply pops up his hood, furrows his brow, and steels himself for another day of trampling on dreams.

Diego Torres’s biography of Mourinho famously outlined his manifesto of reactive football, defined by apparent blasphemies like “the game is won by the team committing fewer errors” and “whoever has the ball has fear”. Yet read it back now and what strikes you is not how outdated it seems, but how relevant to the current climate. In a time of fear, when everyone is vulnerable, when everyone is making mistakes, Mourinho will be the last man standing, grinding you down and plundering the spoils: the looter in a world of broken windows. And ultimately, it feels churlish to dissent too strongly to any of this.

Football has never simply been an exercise in maxim and dogma, but a game of wits and adaptation. And if for the last few years English football has belonged to the ideologues and the perfectionists, perhaps its next chapter will belong to the dissemblers and the pragmatists: a game of fake crowd noise and concentration lapses and £14.95 pay-per-view fixtures. Perhaps, improbably, this is Mourinho’s true calling: a soiled man for a soiled game.

(The Guardian)



Verstappen’s Japan GP Win Streak Under Threat as Mercedes Dominate

 Red Bull Racing's Dutch driver Max Verstappen drives during the Formula One Chinese Grand Prix at the Shanghai International Circuit in Shanghai on March 15, 2026. (AFP)
Red Bull Racing's Dutch driver Max Verstappen drives during the Formula One Chinese Grand Prix at the Shanghai International Circuit in Shanghai on March 15, 2026. (AFP)
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Verstappen’s Japan GP Win Streak Under Threat as Mercedes Dominate

 Red Bull Racing's Dutch driver Max Verstappen drives during the Formula One Chinese Grand Prix at the Shanghai International Circuit in Shanghai on March 15, 2026. (AFP)
Red Bull Racing's Dutch driver Max Verstappen drives during the Formula One Chinese Grand Prix at the Shanghai International Circuit in Shanghai on March 15, 2026. (AFP)

Max Verstappen says that the Japanese Grand Prix is one of his favorite races, but his chances of a fifth straight victory at the weekend look vanishingly slim as his Red Bull struggles with Formula One's sweeping new regulations.

Mercedes drivers George Russell and Kimi Antonelli will carry their early dominance into Suzuka with Ferrari's Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton their nearest challengers.

Red Bull and Verstappen are scrambling to recover from a disastrous start to the Formula One season, as are McLaren whose drivers -- world champion Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri -- both failed to start in China with separate technical problems.

Verstappen, the four-time world champion, finished sixth in the opening grand prix in Australia after crashing in qualifying.

He then limped home ninth and out of the points in the Shanghai sprint before retiring from the main race.

Verstappen has raged against the 2026 regulations and new car designs, branding them "anti-racing" and likening them to the Mario Kart video game with their electrical boost and overtake modes.

The Dutchman sought a change of scenery by competing at a four-hour race in Germany last weekend, but even that did not lift his gloom as he was disqualified after winning.

Verstappen has been unbeaten in Japan for the past four years and he clinched his second world title there in 2022.

His problems in China, where he was ordered to retire on lap 46 of the grand prix because of a cooling issue, suggest his Suzuka dominance could end on Sunday.

"Getting on top of our problems is not easy," Verstappen said in Shanghai.

"It would help if we would just have a normal start -- I've been every time dropping to last."

- Antonelli breakthrough -

Verstappen's struggles are in stark contrast to the flying start enjoyed by Mercedes, who secured one-two finishes at both grands prix so far.

Championship leader Russell triumphed in Australia and 19-year-old Antonelli picked up the first win of his fledgling career in China.

Russell took the chequered flag in the Shanghai sprint and Mercedes will target a Suzuka triumph for the first time since Valtteri Bottas won in 2019.

Antonelli, who became the youngest pole-sitter in Formula One history in Shanghai and the second-youngest race winner after Verstappen, was given a hero's welcome when he returned to his native Bologna in Italy.

The win had "removed a bit of weight from my shoulders", said Antonellii.

"It's the kind of result which gives you strength and more awareness of what you can do."

McLaren have endured a nightmare start to the campaign under the new regulations which require battery management and energy harvesting with a 50-50 split between conventional and electrical power.

Defending champion Norris, who complained his car "sucks", is 36 points behind Russell while Piastri is yet to take part in a grand prix this season after he crashed on his way to the grid in Melbourne.

"We just have to take it on the chin, learn what the problem was and make sure it never happens again," Norris said in Shanghai.

"All of us want to go racing and score points."

The teams will have time to regroup after Suzuka, as there will be a five-week gap until the Miami GP as the Bahrain and Saudi Arabia races were cancelled because of the war in the Middle East.


France and Brazil Weigh Up World Cup Prospects in Glamour Friendly

16 March 2026, Brazil, Rio de Janeiro: Brazil's national soccer team head coach Carlo Ancelotti speaks during a press conference to announce the squad for the international friendlies against France and Croatia in preparation for the upcoming World Cup. (dpa)
16 March 2026, Brazil, Rio de Janeiro: Brazil's national soccer team head coach Carlo Ancelotti speaks during a press conference to announce the squad for the international friendlies against France and Croatia in preparation for the upcoming World Cup. (dpa)
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France and Brazil Weigh Up World Cup Prospects in Glamour Friendly

16 March 2026, Brazil, Rio de Janeiro: Brazil's national soccer team head coach Carlo Ancelotti speaks during a press conference to announce the squad for the international friendlies against France and Croatia in preparation for the upcoming World Cup. (dpa)
16 March 2026, Brazil, Rio de Janeiro: Brazil's national soccer team head coach Carlo Ancelotti speaks during a press conference to announce the squad for the international friendlies against France and Croatia in preparation for the upcoming World Cup. (dpa)

Brazil and France will be among the leading contenders for World Cup glory later this year and the two heavyweight nations continue their preparations for the tournament by facing off in a glamour friendly in the United States this week.

With less than three months until the big kick-off, the countries ranked fifth and third respectively in the world rankings are in the US familiarizing themselves with what lies in store in June and July and they go head to head on Thursday at the Gillette Stadium near Boston.

The home of NFL side New England Patriots is the venue for the first meeting of these teams in exactly 11 years, since Brazil came from behind to win 3-1 in a friendly at the Stade de France in March 2015 with goals from Oscar, Neymar and Luiz Gustavo.

Brazil labored their way through South American World Cup qualifying with six defeats in 18 games as they finished fifth -- now they are hoping the appointment of Carlo Ancelotti as coach will give them a genuine chance of winning a record-extending sixth World Cup, and first since 2002.

After this match they will head to Orlando, Florida, for a friendly on March 31 against Croatia, the team who ousted them from the 2022 World Cup in the quarter-finals.

Neymar is now 34 and has not played for his country since October 2023, but his absence from the squad has still been one of the main talking points coming into these matches.

"It is a physical issue, not technical. With the ball he is great, but he needs to improve physically," Ancelotti said after being asked about the absence of the former Barcelona and Paris Saint-Germain superstar, now at Santos.

"Because in my eyes and those of my staff, he is not at 100 percent. So he needs to keep working to get back to 100 percent."

In the meantime Brazil's main man is Real Madrid forward Vinicius Junior, while others likely to have key roles at the World Cup such as goalkeeper Alisson Becker, center-back Gabriel Magalhaes and midfielder Bruno Guimaraes are missing here.

Among those who do feature is Rayan, the uncapped 19-year-old who earned his place after impressing in the Premier League for Bournemouth since arriving from Vasco da Gama in January.

- Mbappe raring to go -

The main focus for France, as ever, is Kylian Mbappe, and the national team captain was eager to feature on this trip after overcoming a knee injury to return for Real Madrid just last week.

There had been mounting fears in France that the 27-year-old's fitness could become a real issue but he said missing the World Cup or the end of the club season was never a concern.

"It is behind me. I was following a protocol and I wanted to start playing again gradually. I hope to be able to play during this international break and to start being decisive again," he said on Monday, just before the squad headed to the US.

France, who have seen Arsenal defender William Saliba withdraw due to injury and called up Maxence Lacroix of Crystal Palace in his place, are staying in the same Boston hotel where they will be based during the World Cup.

The tournament will be coach Didier Deschamps' swansong after 14 years at the helm, with Zinedine Zidane fully expected to succeed him.

"I know his name," French Football Federation president Philippe Diallo told daily Le Figaro this week when asked about his search for the successor to Deschamps.

He refuses to explicitly say Zidane will take over, but it is hard to imagine Diallo means anyone else.

The last competitive meeting of the teams came at the 2006 World Cup, when France beat Brazil 1-0 in the quarter-finals, thanks to a Thierry Henry goal and a masterful performance by Zidane.

If both win their groups at the upcoming World Cup as expected, then they would not be able to meet each other until the final.

Getting that far is the aim for these sides, and Thursday's game will be a good gauge of where both stand as the competition approaches.


Asian Champions Al-Ahli Face Prospect of JDT Quarterfinal Clash

Jeddah will host the centralized competition despite the ongoing conflict ⁠in the Middle ⁠East. (SPA)
Jeddah will host the centralized competition despite the ongoing conflict ⁠in the Middle ⁠East. (SPA)
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Asian Champions Al-Ahli Face Prospect of JDT Quarterfinal Clash

Jeddah will host the centralized competition despite the ongoing conflict ⁠in the Middle ⁠East. (SPA)
Jeddah will host the centralized competition despite the ongoing conflict ⁠in the Middle ⁠East. (SPA)

Defending champions Al-Ahli will take on Malaysia's Johor Darul Ta'zim in next month's quarterfinals of the Asian Champions League Elite in Jeddah should the Saudi Pro League side defeat Qatar's Al-Duhail in their rearranged single-leg last 16 clash.

The Saudi city will host the centralized competition despite the ongoing conflict ⁠in the Middle ⁠East, which has already forced the four Round of 16 fixtures for clubs in west Asia to be postponed from early March until April 13 ⁠and 14, Reuters reported.

Four-time winners Al-Hilal or Qatar's Al-Sadd will take on Japanese outfit Vissel Kobe, while Thai champions Buriram United will face either Tractor FC from Iran or Shabab Al-Ahli of the United Arab Emirates.

Machida Zelvia, also from Japan, will play the winner of the ⁠last ⁠16 clash between two-time champions Al-Ittihad from Saudi Arabia and the UAE's Al-Wahda.

The quarterfinals are due to be played from April 16 to 18 with the semifinals on April 20 and 21. The final will be held at the King Abdullah Sports City Stadium on April 25.