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)



Over 75% of Fans Do Not Support VAR in Premier League, Says FSA Survey

Football - Premier League - Aston Villa v West Ham United - Villa Park, Birmingham, Britain - March 22, 2026 Referee Paul Tierney checks the VAR before overturning an Aston Villa penalty. (Action Images via Reuters)
Football - Premier League - Aston Villa v West Ham United - Villa Park, Birmingham, Britain - March 22, 2026 Referee Paul Tierney checks the VAR before overturning an Aston Villa penalty. (Action Images via Reuters)
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Over 75% of Fans Do Not Support VAR in Premier League, Says FSA Survey

Football - Premier League - Aston Villa v West Ham United - Villa Park, Birmingham, Britain - March 22, 2026 Referee Paul Tierney checks the VAR before overturning an Aston Villa penalty. (Action Images via Reuters)
Football - Premier League - Aston Villa v West Ham United - Villa Park, Birmingham, Britain - March 22, 2026 Referee Paul Tierney checks the VAR before overturning an Aston Villa penalty. (Action Images via Reuters)

More than ‌75% of Premier League fans do not support the continued use of Video Assistant Referees (VAR), a Football Supporters’ Association (FSA) survey showed.

The survey was conducted online between February 26 and March 23 and saw almost 8,000 fans of top-flight clubs participate, the FSA said.

The ‌results showed ‌that 75.7% did not ‌support ⁠the use of ⁠VAR in football, with 91.7% saying VAR had removed the spontaneous joy of goal celebrations.

“These findings back up the FSA’s previous survey in 2021, where fans ⁠expressed misgivings about the introduction ‌of VAR," ‌FSA’s Premier League network manager Thomas Concannon ‌said.

“We have shared the survey ‌results with the Premier League and PGMO (Professional Game Match Officials Limited), and look forward to discussing its findings ‌with them.”

Reuters has requested comment from the Premier League.

Premier League ⁠teams ⁠voted in favor of keeping VAR in June 2024 despite a considerable amount of criticism about the technology-aided officiating system.

"While VAR produces more accurate decision making, it was agreed that improvements should be made for the benefit of the game and supporters," the league said in a statement at the time.


King Kimi, Max Misery, Bearman Smash: Japan GP Talking Points

Red Bull Racing driver Max Verstappen of Netherlands in action during the Formula 1 Japanese Grand Prix at the Suzuka International Racing Course racetrack in Suzuka, Japan, 29 March 2026. (EPA)
Red Bull Racing driver Max Verstappen of Netherlands in action during the Formula 1 Japanese Grand Prix at the Suzuka International Racing Course racetrack in Suzuka, Japan, 29 March 2026. (EPA)
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King Kimi, Max Misery, Bearman Smash: Japan GP Talking Points

Red Bull Racing driver Max Verstappen of Netherlands in action during the Formula 1 Japanese Grand Prix at the Suzuka International Racing Course racetrack in Suzuka, Japan, 29 March 2026. (EPA)
Red Bull Racing driver Max Verstappen of Netherlands in action during the Formula 1 Japanese Grand Prix at the Suzuka International Racing Course racetrack in Suzuka, Japan, 29 March 2026. (EPA)

Kimi Antonelli won the Japanese Grand Prix from pole ahead of McLaren's Oscar Piastri as Max Verstappen endured another miserable outing in his Red Bull.

AFP Sport looks at three talking points from the third race weekend on the 2026 Formula One calendar:

- Mercedes protect teen hero -

Antonelli is in only his second season, but already Mercedes are playing down expectations of the 19-year-old -- now the youngest title race leader in Formula One history.

"We need to protect him now from people talking about world championships," said Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff after the race.

Antonelli admitted he had a stroke of fortune with a safety car that enabled him to dive in for fresh tires and emerge in the lead after his rivals had already pitted.

It was the second race in a row where a slow getaway saw him relegated from pole position and having to play catch-up.

"I had a terrible start. I need to check what happened. Then I was lucky with the safety car to be in the lead but then the pace was incredible," said Antonelli

"Luckily, I've got three weeks, so now I can practice some clutch drops just to get a better feel with it.

"It's been a weak point and I need to improve because you can easily win or lose races."

- Verstappen quit threat -

Red Bull's four-time world champion Verstappen openly questioned his future in Formula One after finishing eighth and lashing out again about the new cars and regulations.

"It's really anti-driving," he told the BBC.

"Then at one point, yeah, it's just not what I want to do."

Verstappen had won at Suzuka in each of the previous four years but was way off the pace and even waved goodbye to one car that overtook him, knowing that he did not have any capability to strike back.

The Dutchman said Formula One bosses "know what to do" to address his concerns and added: "You don't need to feel sorry for me, I'll be fine."

- Bearman sparks safety call -

Oliver Bearman escaped serious injury in a horror crash which prompted drivers to call for changes in the regulations.

The 20-year-old's Haas was closing rapidly at high speed on Franco Colapinto and smashed into the barriers after swerving to avoid the Argentine's Alpine.

Drivers and teams complained it had been an accident waiting to happen because of Formula One's new regulations that mean cars can be travelling at drastically different speeds on the track at the same time.

"These kind of closing speeds and these kind of accidents were always going to happen, and I'm not very happy with what we've had up until now," Grand Prix Drivers' Association chief Carlos Sainz told Sky Sports F1.

"Hopefully we come up with a better solution that doesn't create these massive closing speeds and a safer way of going racing," added the Williams driver.

Bearman said: "I think we've, as a group, warned the FIA what can happen, and this has been a really unfortunate result."


Premier League Fans Feel the Pinch from Ticket Price Hikes

Manchester United fans, many wearing black as a protest, display a banner in the crowd against seat prices and the current ownership of Manchester United ahead of the English Premier League football match between Manchester United and Arsenal at Old Trafford in Manchester, northwest England, on March 9, 2025. (AFP)
Manchester United fans, many wearing black as a protest, display a banner in the crowd against seat prices and the current ownership of Manchester United ahead of the English Premier League football match between Manchester United and Arsenal at Old Trafford in Manchester, northwest England, on March 9, 2025. (AFP)
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Premier League Fans Feel the Pinch from Ticket Price Hikes

Manchester United fans, many wearing black as a protest, display a banner in the crowd against seat prices and the current ownership of Manchester United ahead of the English Premier League football match between Manchester United and Arsenal at Old Trafford in Manchester, northwest England, on March 9, 2025. (AFP)
Manchester United fans, many wearing black as a protest, display a banner in the crowd against seat prices and the current ownership of Manchester United ahead of the English Premier League football match between Manchester United and Arsenal at Old Trafford in Manchester, northwest England, on March 9, 2025. (AFP)

The Premier League's global appeal is built on packed stadiums and electric atmospheres but as the arms race for talent intensifies, fans are feeling the pinch.

A recent UEFA report found English football's "Big Six" -- Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United and Tottenham -- earned nearly 20 percent more from selling tickets for home matches in the 2024/25 season than 12 months before.

Revenue from bumper broadcasting deals and commercial sponsorship still provides the vast majority of income for Premier League teams.

But as the growth in TV money has slowed, clubs have focused on increasing matchday revenue, with many investing in stadium renovations and expansions, promising improved facilities and better experiences.

Fans pay the price, particularly local supporters, as clubs target tourists from far and wide who are willing to pay a premium.

In wealthy west London, Fulham boast a rooftop pool and top-grade catering in the hospitality section, but season tickets are among the most expensive in the league, priced at up to £3,000 ($4,000).

"The Riverside stand is a great asset, glad it's at our football club, but it's expensive for your average match-going fan," Simon Duke of the Fulham Supporters' Trust told AFP.

"In having this fantastic asset, thank you owners, but can you please use that to keep football affordable in the other three sides of the ground?"

- Tourist market -

Liverpool sparked outrage last week by announcing that prices will rise in line with inflation for the next three seasons.

Fans group Spirit of Shankly said the club "choose to disregard those who make LFC what it is".

Major expansions of Anfield have increased capacity to 61,000, but there are just 34,000 season tickets available.

That allows the Premier League champions to sell nearly 50 percent of tickets on a match-by-match basis, often targeting day trippers willing to spend more on merchandise, food and drink.

"You look at the yield per fan, per match," said football finance expert Kieran Maguire.

"You're going to get more from a person that's coming for an experience as opposed to some grumpy old bloke who's been doing it for 50 years because the alternative is having to go to IKEA on a Saturday afternoon."

Hospitality packages can cost several thousand pounds per game, with the most expensive option for Manchester City's upcoming clash with Arsenal available for £5,500.

A report by campaign group Fair Game highlighted the long-term risk clubs are taking.

"Some clubs are looking at their stadium and seeing each seat as an individual opportunity to raise money," said CEO Niall Couper.

"If the club wants to be there for the long haul, and to be financially sustainable, then actually keeping ticket prices at an affordable level and allowing access to your local community is a safer way to go."

- 'National religion' -

Supporters, young and old, have also been squeezed by a loss of concessions.

Manchester United are increasing season ticket prices by five percent for the third consecutive year and halving a senior citizens' discount for some fans.

Supporters of United and Liverpool, England's two most successful clubs, joined forces to back the "Stop Exploiting Loyalty" campaign at a match at Anfield last year.

Despite the unrest, Premier League clubs boasted average attendances of just over 40,000 last season, with stadiums nearly 99 percent full.

However, cracks have appeared in recent months.

Tottenham, struggling at the bottom of the table, have failed to sell out their 63,000-capacity stadium on Champions League nights.

"Too many empty seats and too many supporters, particularly young supporters, priced out of attending. Thin the crowd and you thin the noise," the Tottenham Supporters' Trust said in a statement.

But the enduring popularity of football in England during a cost-of-living crisis is testament to its unique place in the national consciousness.

"When I'm making those budgetary decisions -- do we go on holiday this year? Are we going out for more meals? And am I going to renew my season ticket? Season tickets will take priority," said Maguire.