Mourinho Says He and Ancelotti Still Have a Lot More to Give

Roma's coach Jose Mourinho greets his supporters at the end of the Italian Serie A match AS Roma vs Venezia FC at Olimpico stadium in Rome, Italy, 14 May 2022. (EPA)
Roma's coach Jose Mourinho greets his supporters at the end of the Italian Serie A match AS Roma vs Venezia FC at Olimpico stadium in Rome, Italy, 14 May 2022. (EPA)
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Mourinho Says He and Ancelotti Still Have a Lot More to Give

Roma's coach Jose Mourinho greets his supporters at the end of the Italian Serie A match AS Roma vs Venezia FC at Olimpico stadium in Rome, Italy, 14 May 2022. (EPA)
Roma's coach Jose Mourinho greets his supporters at the end of the Italian Serie A match AS Roma vs Venezia FC at Olimpico stadium in Rome, Italy, 14 May 2022. (EPA)

José Mourinho sees no reason to stop now after reaching another European final while approaching his 60th birthday.

The 59-year-old Mourinho was asked Wednesday if critics had been too quick to write him and 62-year-old Carlo Ancelotti off too quickly.

Mourinho’s Roma will meet Feyenoord in the Europa Conference League final next week. Three days later, Ancelotti’s Real Madrid team will play Liverpool in the Champions League final.

Both coaches had mixed results in their previous jobs in England at Tottenham (Mourinho) and Everton (Ancelotti).

"The problem with Carlo was that when you coach Everton you definitely won’t win the Champions League. My problem is that people looked at it as me taking on jobs to win but it wasn’t about winning," Mourinho said. "When you have a history of repeated success, people can say those things - it doesn’t bother me."

Next Wednesday’s match in Tirana, Albania, will mark the fifth European final of Mourinho’s career. He has won all four that he’s coached in so far, over a span of nearly two decades: the 2003 UEFA Cup and 2004 Champions League finals with Porto; the 2010 Champions League final with Inter Milan; and the 2017 Europa League final with Manchester United.

Still, younger coaches like Pep Guardiola and Jürgen Klopp have attracted more attention than Mourinho in recent years.

"I don’t think about it as ‘the new generation,’ or ‘a different generation,’" Mourinho said. "Quality has no age. The same thing applies to players. There are players who are great at 20 and players who are great at 40.

"When you don’t have the passion anymore that’s when you’re done. When you don’t feel a bit of pressure before these games that means you’re done," Mourinho added. "I know it for myself and I know Carletto (Ancelotti) fairly well. When you’ve got the passion and the quality, it’s up to us to say when we’re done. We’re the ones who will decide when to quit. But I think you’ll have to wait a while. Because it won’t be soon."



‘Flooding Rains’ Threaten to Dampen Paris Olympics Opening Ceremony

Paris 2024 Olympics - Opening Ceremony - Paris, France - July 26, 2024. Spectators are seen behind the Eiffel Tower ahead of the opening ceremony of the Paris 2024 Olympics. (Reuters)
Paris 2024 Olympics - Opening Ceremony - Paris, France - July 26, 2024. Spectators are seen behind the Eiffel Tower ahead of the opening ceremony of the Paris 2024 Olympics. (Reuters)
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‘Flooding Rains’ Threaten to Dampen Paris Olympics Opening Ceremony

Paris 2024 Olympics - Opening Ceremony - Paris, France - July 26, 2024. Spectators are seen behind the Eiffel Tower ahead of the opening ceremony of the Paris 2024 Olympics. (Reuters)
Paris 2024 Olympics - Opening Ceremony - Paris, France - July 26, 2024. Spectators are seen behind the Eiffel Tower ahead of the opening ceremony of the Paris 2024 Olympics. (Reuters)

The Paris Olympics look likely to get off to a soggy start.

Meteo-France, the French weather service, is predicting “flooding rains” Friday evening when the opening ceremony is set to unroll along the Seine River. But the show is set to go on as planned, starting at 1:30 p.m. EDT/7:30 p.m. CEST and should last more than three hours.

Already in the late afternoon, skies were gray with intermittent drizzle. There was a silver lining, though, with temperatures expected to stay relatively warm throughout the evening.

Instead of a traditional march into a stadium, about 6,800 athletes will parade on more than 90 boats on the Seine River for 6 kilometers (3.7 miles). Though 10,700 athletes are expected to compete at these Olympics, hundreds of soccer players are based outside Paris, surfers are in Tahiti and many have yet to arrive for their events in the second week, organizers said Thursday.

Hundreds of thousands of people, including 320,000 paying and invited ticket-holders, are expected to line the Seine’s banks as athletes are paraded along the river on boats.