Chelsea FC
Moderators: Charuga, Tomahawk11
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Pretposljednji Mohikanac
- Posts: 545
- Joined: 24/10/2006 15:50
#152
lampard wrote:mene je makelele za guzicu fato
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Kukuruz_Barbe-q
- Posts: 1041
- Joined: 09/01/2005 22:25
#154
Opet cete se fatatne samo jednom nego vise puta Very Happy Very Happy Very Happy
sutra deranje na terenu,stize arsenal
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ZMAAJICA
- Posts: 59
- Joined: 06/11/2006 17:46
#157
Na tvoju inicijativu evo nekoliko navijackih pjesama:Kukuruz_Barbe-q wrote:Cuo sam da vam je klupska himna YMCA![]()
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Super Chelsea
And it's super Chelsea
Super Chelsea F.C
We're by far the greatest team...
the world has ever seen
Blue is the Colour
Chorus
Blue is the colour, football is the game
We're all together, and winning is our aim
So cheer us on through the sun and rain
'cause Chelsea, Chelsea is our name
Verse 1
Here at the Bridge whether rain or fine
We can shine all the time
Home or away, come and see us play
You're welcome any dayChorus
Blue is the colour, football is the game
We're all together, and winning is our aim
So cheer us on through the sun and rain
'cause Chelsea, Chelsea is our name
Verse 2
Come to the Shed and we'll welcome you
Wear your blue and see us through
Sing loud and clear until the game is done
Sing Chelsea everyone.
Over Land and Sea
We all follow the Chelsea
Over land and sea - And Leicester!
We all follow the Chelsea
onnnntooo vi-ic-toreee
Ima jos pjesmica za Super Frankija, Josea, Terryja... Ova 'Blue is the colour' je zvanicna.
Zadovoljan?
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ZMAAJICA
- Posts: 59
- Joined: 06/11/2006 17:46
#159
Evo tri dijela razgovora sa Joseom. Ovo je najopsirniji intervju koji je ikad dao. Jaaaaako je dug, ali ko ima zivaca neka procita, zanimljiv je:
Fri, 8th Dec 2006
Ahead of Sunday's major London derby match, Jose Mourinho has been speaking about the capital's top two clubs - including the two star players that moved between us in August, Arsene Wenger, and how outside eyes compare our styles of football.
The words were spoken as part of an interview the Chelsea manager gave to mark his new role as a patron of children's cancer charity CLIC Sargent.
You are used to having control in the dressing room. How did you find it when Gallas said he would do his own thing? Had you had that before?
The Gallas situation was not an issue between the player and the manager.
It was between the player and the club. If Gallas wants to be an honest man, Gallas will say that I supported him all the way since we met on the first day.
I was very supportive of him and he gave me a lot in return. He gave me high level performance during two years, not just to me but to the team, ready to play in any position and never complaining.
People can say what they say but he was never complaining about the position he was playing and he knows I rate him as one of the best defenders in the world.
I did my best to try and keep him at the club so if he wants to be honest, he has to say that from the first day until the contract problems, which were out of my hands, the relationship was very, very good and I had in my hands one of the best players.
What happened after that was a consequence of problems. I don't speak about what happened specifically about refusing to play or own goals because I feel I shouldn't.
But if he wants to be honest, he has to say that personally, the relationship between me and him had zero problems.
Full-backs with the way you play are absolutely key now because they give you the width. So was the real attraction getting Ashley Cole?
Yes. You cannot play 4-4-2 like we play without full-backs going forward, especially on the left-side.
On the right-side, we have a lot of players who during the dynamic can reach this kind of positions. On the left-side, I am not waiting for Lampard or Ballack to give us that width.
So it is crucial and at the same time Ashley is defending very, very, very well.
I used to see him as an attacking full-back. He comes here and is transforming a little bit in both ways as full-back.
He knows we defend with only one midfield player in front of the two central defenders, so he knows the importance of defending well the inside space.
He is defending that very well. His mentality is absolutely brilliant. We have established a special relationship between me, him and now Wayne Bridge.
That is why Bridgey accepts to make a new contract. Because he knows we trust him, need him and want him to play, and we give him chances to play. Now we have both and both are happy.
Is there a right-back version of Ashley Cole out there?
I tried with Boulahrouz and now I think he is just a defensive right-back. He's perfect to play right-back if we play with wingers, so he has somebody in front of him to help the conduction of the game.
He did a great game for example against Barcelona at home, just in the defensive role.
He is not a right-back to play in the system we are playing more in this moment.
After that it is between Paulo and Geremi.
Geremi with the ball is better. He is very cool with the ball, he uses the ball very, very well - crosses, passes, keeping possession. Very stable mentally.
He is a right-back with formation as a midfield player so he enjoys to have the ball.
He is doing well for us. I changed him against Manchester United not because he was not playing well but because of tactics.
But do you still need another right-back?
Not really. I have a very good one playing for Portsmouth - Jonno [Glen Johnson].
He's not playing now because he's had treatment with us. But we send him back to Portsmouth because now he is ready to play.
He tells me the work is good, that Harry Redknapp is a good coach. He tells me Tony Adams also is giving him help to improve him defensively. The natural consequence of that is next season, Jonno is with us.
What do you think of Arsene Wenger as a manager and as a person?
For me he is a fantastic manager. I don't think we are the best friends.
Not even friends. We are colleagues. And I have 200 per cent respect for the work he's done over the years. He's a fantastic manager, one of the best.
Have you ever had a real conversations with him for a length of time?
We had a couple when we met in Geneva for a coaches' forum. No more than that.
In this job it is difficult unless you work in the same country or the same city for years and years and you get used to meeting each other. It is very difficult to be close friends with another manager.
Is it possible to be close friends with other managers you are fighting with every week?
It is difficult.
Ferguson likes you?
And I like him.
Did Chelsea have an interest in Theo Walcott?
Chelsea has a structure responsible for detection and following of young talent and with a big talent like Walcott, for sure the people we have under Frank Arnesen's control knew the boy. Not with me, I never had a look for him.
You keep winning the titles but is there any part of you that envies the reputation that Manchester United or Arsenal have for their more expansive football? Wingers etc.
We had wingers last season and were told we were not an attacking team.
This season we don't have them, so you cannot say that.
But they have a reputation for more pretty football.
I think they sell well their product.
Would you not accept they play more attractive football than Chelsea does and that you are a very good power team?
I don't agree. We are a team adapted to the reality, which is why Arsenal cannot beat Bolton at Bolton and why Chelsea under me have played three matches and got three victories at Bolton with zero goals conceded.
For my concept of football, the best football is the football adapted to the circumstances.
You cannot play against Bolton at Bolton the same way you play at home against Watford.
My feeling is that some teams and some managers play every game with the same philosophy, with the same game principles and with the same game strategy.
Sometimes they beat someone 6-0 and sometimes they lose a game they shouldn't lose.
One of the strengths in football teams is to adapt to different realities which is what I am trying to do with Chelsea in England and Chelsea in Europe.
Chelsea cannot play in Europe the same way it plays in England.
Your strategy has always seemed to be a risk-free one. Good organisation and not being caught on the counter-attack.
It depends. If you play at Old Trafford and change a right-back for a left-winger, it is a crazy change and not a conservative change.
It's not a left-winger for a left-back or a left-winger for a midfield player. And all the changes subsequent to this change are not conservative.
We've played some matches at home with three defenders, we've finished some games with five players in attack. So Chelsea is an attacking team but adapted to the reality.
Against Bolton if you don't defend as we did in the last 15 minutes, you have no chance.
How can you stop ten throw-ins, ten free-kicks, ten corners? Bring people back, fighting, changing small players for tall players and fighting with them every second for every ball. So you have to adapt to the reality of the game.
There was a time three years ago when Arsenal were unbeaten and everyone thought that was the most eye-catching football you may ever see. Would you like to build a team that pretty?
Pretty when they were champions without defeat, yes. Not pretty when they finish fourth, not pretty when they had to win their last game to qualify for the Champions League.
Pretty when they played amazing and were champions. That is pretty.
So the key is winning?
Winning and playing well. Playing beautiful.
Fri, 8th Dec 2006
Ahead of Sunday's major London derby match, Jose Mourinho has been speaking about the capital's top two clubs - including the two star players that moved between us in August, Arsene Wenger, and how outside eyes compare our styles of football.
The words were spoken as part of an interview the Chelsea manager gave to mark his new role as a patron of children's cancer charity CLIC Sargent.
You are used to having control in the dressing room. How did you find it when Gallas said he would do his own thing? Had you had that before?
The Gallas situation was not an issue between the player and the manager.
It was between the player and the club. If Gallas wants to be an honest man, Gallas will say that I supported him all the way since we met on the first day.
I was very supportive of him and he gave me a lot in return. He gave me high level performance during two years, not just to me but to the team, ready to play in any position and never complaining.
People can say what they say but he was never complaining about the position he was playing and he knows I rate him as one of the best defenders in the world.
I did my best to try and keep him at the club so if he wants to be honest, he has to say that from the first day until the contract problems, which were out of my hands, the relationship was very, very good and I had in my hands one of the best players.
What happened after that was a consequence of problems. I don't speak about what happened specifically about refusing to play or own goals because I feel I shouldn't.
But if he wants to be honest, he has to say that personally, the relationship between me and him had zero problems.
Full-backs with the way you play are absolutely key now because they give you the width. So was the real attraction getting Ashley Cole?
Yes. You cannot play 4-4-2 like we play without full-backs going forward, especially on the left-side.
On the right-side, we have a lot of players who during the dynamic can reach this kind of positions. On the left-side, I am not waiting for Lampard or Ballack to give us that width.
So it is crucial and at the same time Ashley is defending very, very, very well.
I used to see him as an attacking full-back. He comes here and is transforming a little bit in both ways as full-back.
He knows we defend with only one midfield player in front of the two central defenders, so he knows the importance of defending well the inside space.
He is defending that very well. His mentality is absolutely brilliant. We have established a special relationship between me, him and now Wayne Bridge.
That is why Bridgey accepts to make a new contract. Because he knows we trust him, need him and want him to play, and we give him chances to play. Now we have both and both are happy.
Is there a right-back version of Ashley Cole out there?
I tried with Boulahrouz and now I think he is just a defensive right-back. He's perfect to play right-back if we play with wingers, so he has somebody in front of him to help the conduction of the game.
He did a great game for example against Barcelona at home, just in the defensive role.
He is not a right-back to play in the system we are playing more in this moment.
After that it is between Paulo and Geremi.
Geremi with the ball is better. He is very cool with the ball, he uses the ball very, very well - crosses, passes, keeping possession. Very stable mentally.
He is a right-back with formation as a midfield player so he enjoys to have the ball.
He is doing well for us. I changed him against Manchester United not because he was not playing well but because of tactics.
But do you still need another right-back?
Not really. I have a very good one playing for Portsmouth - Jonno [Glen Johnson].
He's not playing now because he's had treatment with us. But we send him back to Portsmouth because now he is ready to play.
He tells me the work is good, that Harry Redknapp is a good coach. He tells me Tony Adams also is giving him help to improve him defensively. The natural consequence of that is next season, Jonno is with us.
What do you think of Arsene Wenger as a manager and as a person?
For me he is a fantastic manager. I don't think we are the best friends.
Not even friends. We are colleagues. And I have 200 per cent respect for the work he's done over the years. He's a fantastic manager, one of the best.
Have you ever had a real conversations with him for a length of time?
We had a couple when we met in Geneva for a coaches' forum. No more than that.
In this job it is difficult unless you work in the same country or the same city for years and years and you get used to meeting each other. It is very difficult to be close friends with another manager.
Is it possible to be close friends with other managers you are fighting with every week?
It is difficult.
Ferguson likes you?
And I like him.
Did Chelsea have an interest in Theo Walcott?
Chelsea has a structure responsible for detection and following of young talent and with a big talent like Walcott, for sure the people we have under Frank Arnesen's control knew the boy. Not with me, I never had a look for him.
You keep winning the titles but is there any part of you that envies the reputation that Manchester United or Arsenal have for their more expansive football? Wingers etc.
We had wingers last season and were told we were not an attacking team.
This season we don't have them, so you cannot say that.
But they have a reputation for more pretty football.
I think they sell well their product.
Would you not accept they play more attractive football than Chelsea does and that you are a very good power team?
I don't agree. We are a team adapted to the reality, which is why Arsenal cannot beat Bolton at Bolton and why Chelsea under me have played three matches and got three victories at Bolton with zero goals conceded.
For my concept of football, the best football is the football adapted to the circumstances.
You cannot play against Bolton at Bolton the same way you play at home against Watford.
My feeling is that some teams and some managers play every game with the same philosophy, with the same game principles and with the same game strategy.
Sometimes they beat someone 6-0 and sometimes they lose a game they shouldn't lose.
One of the strengths in football teams is to adapt to different realities which is what I am trying to do with Chelsea in England and Chelsea in Europe.
Chelsea cannot play in Europe the same way it plays in England.
Your strategy has always seemed to be a risk-free one. Good organisation and not being caught on the counter-attack.
It depends. If you play at Old Trafford and change a right-back for a left-winger, it is a crazy change and not a conservative change.
It's not a left-winger for a left-back or a left-winger for a midfield player. And all the changes subsequent to this change are not conservative.
We've played some matches at home with three defenders, we've finished some games with five players in attack. So Chelsea is an attacking team but adapted to the reality.
Against Bolton if you don't defend as we did in the last 15 minutes, you have no chance.
How can you stop ten throw-ins, ten free-kicks, ten corners? Bring people back, fighting, changing small players for tall players and fighting with them every second for every ball. So you have to adapt to the reality of the game.
There was a time three years ago when Arsenal were unbeaten and everyone thought that was the most eye-catching football you may ever see. Would you like to build a team that pretty?
Pretty when they were champions without defeat, yes. Not pretty when they finish fourth, not pretty when they had to win their last game to qualify for the Champions League.
Pretty when they played amazing and were champions. That is pretty.
So the key is winning?
Winning and playing well. Playing beautiful.
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ZMAAJICA
- Posts: 59
- Joined: 06/11/2006 17:46
#160
Fri, 8th Dec 2006
To mark the occasion of becoming a patron of the UK's leading children's cancer charity, CLIC Sargent, José Mourinho has given his most wide-ranging interview to date.
He looks closely at himself, his motivation and his methods and at the current Chelsea team with a wider glance at the game of football in England.
During this first part of the interview, Mourinho names the eight Chelsea players who on current form, he considers 'untouchable' in the team. He also opens the door for Andriy Shevchenko to join that group, explaining how they are working hard to together and how the striker will be given time to reach his peak.
Do you agree Shevchenko has not adapted very well yet?
I agree. But I also agree that the most difficult job in football is to be a striker. That's for sure.
It's much easier for a defender to adapt than a striker. The way football is played in Italy and England is completely different. We have in Thierry Henry the best example of that.
I was not here but I know he's the best goalscorer in the last years in this country, an amazing player, but he scored one goal in 12 Premiership matches when he first changed Juventus for Arsenal.
But he was very young and Shevchenko is a big star player.
But Thierry was already very, very good. We need to give him time. I am giving him time. The good thing is that he is not happy with the way he is performing.
If I am not happy and he is happy then we have a problem. He wouldn't work hard to go in my direction.
He's working very hard. After every game we now have feedback meetings where I can explain to him what I think we have to change.
And between the Manchester United game and the Bolton game, we worked together one-and-a-half hours, speaking about his game, and I could see easily the difference between the two games. He is going in the right direction.
The club has dismissed the idea but is there any pressure from Mr. Abramovich to play him?
Are you speaking seriously?
You would walk if told to pick a player?
For sure!
But Mr. Abramovich was keen to have him.
We were both keen to have him.
Is there not unspoken pressure knowing that the owner likes this guy and he is almost his fellow countryman?
He [Abramovich] is a very intelligent person. Maybe you don't know him as well as I do. But if you just look at the way he made himself, he must be a super-intelligent person.
I know him personally. I can say that he is very intelligent. The way he understands football now is different from two years ago. He learns very, very quick and he is very smart and he would never do this.
I don't understand. If he does this, it's because he doesn't trust the manager. If he doesn't trust the manager, he has enough money to sack me, to give me my compensation, to send me home and to bring another one in.
So the points is, is he happy with me? Yes. He respects me and my options. The day he doesn't respect me, just give me the cheque and send me home.
Do you think he [Abramovich] strives for more attractive games? Do you ever talk about that?
No.
Does he strive for European trophies?
We are in the same line. There was a change between Chelsea last season and Chelsea this season. It is clear that this Chelsea is more dominant.
I am not saying we are scoring a lot of goals, or more than in the past. But this Chelsea is more dominant.
Before when we were playing with Duff, Robben and only one striker, and building from our defence, we were very solid, very compact, defending behind the midfield line, winning the ball with quick transition.
We would pass forward to Duff and Robben who were very quick, very direct on the counter-attack. We'd score one goal, defend again, go again in transition and score the second one - and it was much more about this.
In this moment, we are the team of more possession. Against Bolton in the first-half, we had the ball all the time. Against Man United second-half, we had the ball all the time.
In Barcelona matches, they are normally the team with most possession in European football, but against us it wasn't 70-30 like it normally is.
Do you not aspire to having what players like Messi and Ronaldinho give to Barcelona?
That happens individually, in a certain context. Did you see the game where Ronaldinho made the bicycle-kick goal? So you saw the penalty that Gudjohnsen got too when it was 0-0?
That penalty doesn't happen in England. It's a different context. What I think is Chelsea players try to play good all the time. Sometimes it is possible. Sometimes it is not possible.
Could you incorporate Ronaldinho into your team?
If I answer that question I am in big trouble. If I say no, you tell me I am stupid because you don't want this player.
If I say `yes', Ronaldinho and his brother, they rub their hands together and go to negotiate a new contract with Barcelona. So it is the kind of answer I can't give!
When they see Robben and Cole on the bench, people are disappointed because they like to see them play. Do you understand that?
I always say this. Players pick the team, not me. If Joe Cole had an amazing game against Werder Bremen, do you think I don't play him against Man United the next game? I play him for sure.
Do you think if Robben comes on in the second-half against Manchester United and is man of the match, do you think I don't play him next game for sure. He was injured next game but even if wasn't, I wouldn't have played him.
I play the best players at the time. Makelele is untouchable because the way he plays. Essien is untouchable because the way he plays. Frank Lampard is untouchable because the way he plays. Not because I love them. But because the way they play.
Michael Ballack is untouchable because the way he plays. You can say he does not play well in Bremen, I understand that. You can say the first half in Man United he is not playing well. For me he is playing well. So these players are untouchable.
John Terry is untouchable, Ricardo Carvalho, Ashley Cole, Drogba, they are untouchable.
The right back is not untouchable. That is why I try this and this and this and that. I think this one in this moment is the best.
Sheva is not untouchable because of the way he is playing. That is why I play Joe Cole against Bremen. And I play Robben there, I play Kalou there. In this moment, we have eight untouchable players because the way they play.
It is about the way they perform. I've told the players that. Don't knock on my door. Don't knock on my office.
Don't speak with me about why I play or why I don't play. Don't send your friends to speak with the press and to say this or that. Don't do that. Show me!
I promise you I play the best players. So I think it is easy to have a selection when it is about how they behave on the pitch.
So has anyone dared knock on the door?
No.
There is a suggestion in this country that English players aren't coming through, no wealth of youngsters. Should we fear for the England team?
There is a lot of talent.
But at 18?
You have to try to understand why. I don't go so much to see that level, I have no time to try to find why. But I can understand some of the reasons.
I can see for example, that the reserve team competition should finish. It is nothing. This country has to think about a different way to give competition to young players.
The competition is not good enough. If I am a father and my boy is 18, I don't want him to play in the reserve team competition because the quality is not good enough, the motivation is not good enough, the pitches are not good enough. There is no motivation for the kids.
At the moment we have our best kids playing at Queens Park Rangers. We sent Jimmy Smith and Michael Mancienne to Queens Park Rangers because it is better to have them playing in the Coca Cola Championship than playing in the reserves on Monday.
I think this country should look to other countries, to France, to Spain.
Do you know where Real Madrid reserves play? In the Spanish equivalent of the Coca Cola League. There is a different way to look to these competitions.
At the age of 16, do you know how many times Porto kids have played against Benfica? The answer is 20. They play when they were 9, 10, 11, 12, in the national league.
They are used to atmospheres with big matches. You go to our kids of 16 and you know how many times they play Liverpool or Man United? Some of them never.
They go to the FA Youth Cup and if they lose, they are finished for the season. So the competitive shape at young levels is something you should look at.
Would you like Chelsea B to play in the Coca Cola championship like Real Madrid?
I would love to see it. I can tell you for sure that if that happened, players like Diarra, Mikel, Kalou, when they are not selected that weekend for the first team, they have a competition to play in a different level.
People would worry that it would be Chelsea in first place and Chelsea is second place.
But they cannot be promoted. Real Madrid B cannot be promoted. So Chelsea B could not be champions or be promoted.
They don't even play in the cup, to stop the possibility of Real Madrid A against Real Madrid B. But they have a higher competition to play.
Are you surprised the England national team hasn't achieved more?
They will do. They have to. They have quality, they have players.
The Chelsea players have won titles with me, and Liverpool boys and Man United boys, they have all won trophies.
And you had the generation before of Neville, Scholes and Beckham, at the top of the game, winning everything with Man United.
And they couldn't succeed with England with other managers before Sven so this is not a thing of Sven.
But why?
I can't go so deep. I don't know. Naturally they have to succeed and hopefully it is when these players are involved because they have a lot of talent and all them have Champions League experience.
They are at Man United, Liverpool, Chelsea, not Arsenal because they don't have English players, but all these players are at big clubs .
Would they win World Cup with you?
I have no idea.
You have ruled out the idea of managing England.
The England team is for English.
To mark the occasion of becoming a patron of the UK's leading children's cancer charity, CLIC Sargent, José Mourinho has given his most wide-ranging interview to date.
He looks closely at himself, his motivation and his methods and at the current Chelsea team with a wider glance at the game of football in England.
During this first part of the interview, Mourinho names the eight Chelsea players who on current form, he considers 'untouchable' in the team. He also opens the door for Andriy Shevchenko to join that group, explaining how they are working hard to together and how the striker will be given time to reach his peak.
Do you agree Shevchenko has not adapted very well yet?
I agree. But I also agree that the most difficult job in football is to be a striker. That's for sure.
It's much easier for a defender to adapt than a striker. The way football is played in Italy and England is completely different. We have in Thierry Henry the best example of that.
I was not here but I know he's the best goalscorer in the last years in this country, an amazing player, but he scored one goal in 12 Premiership matches when he first changed Juventus for Arsenal.
But he was very young and Shevchenko is a big star player.
But Thierry was already very, very good. We need to give him time. I am giving him time. The good thing is that he is not happy with the way he is performing.
If I am not happy and he is happy then we have a problem. He wouldn't work hard to go in my direction.
He's working very hard. After every game we now have feedback meetings where I can explain to him what I think we have to change.
And between the Manchester United game and the Bolton game, we worked together one-and-a-half hours, speaking about his game, and I could see easily the difference between the two games. He is going in the right direction.
The club has dismissed the idea but is there any pressure from Mr. Abramovich to play him?
Are you speaking seriously?
You would walk if told to pick a player?
For sure!
But Mr. Abramovich was keen to have him.
We were both keen to have him.
Is there not unspoken pressure knowing that the owner likes this guy and he is almost his fellow countryman?
He [Abramovich] is a very intelligent person. Maybe you don't know him as well as I do. But if you just look at the way he made himself, he must be a super-intelligent person.
I know him personally. I can say that he is very intelligent. The way he understands football now is different from two years ago. He learns very, very quick and he is very smart and he would never do this.
I don't understand. If he does this, it's because he doesn't trust the manager. If he doesn't trust the manager, he has enough money to sack me, to give me my compensation, to send me home and to bring another one in.
So the points is, is he happy with me? Yes. He respects me and my options. The day he doesn't respect me, just give me the cheque and send me home.
Do you think he [Abramovich] strives for more attractive games? Do you ever talk about that?
No.
Does he strive for European trophies?
We are in the same line. There was a change between Chelsea last season and Chelsea this season. It is clear that this Chelsea is more dominant.
I am not saying we are scoring a lot of goals, or more than in the past. But this Chelsea is more dominant.
Before when we were playing with Duff, Robben and only one striker, and building from our defence, we were very solid, very compact, defending behind the midfield line, winning the ball with quick transition.
We would pass forward to Duff and Robben who were very quick, very direct on the counter-attack. We'd score one goal, defend again, go again in transition and score the second one - and it was much more about this.
In this moment, we are the team of more possession. Against Bolton in the first-half, we had the ball all the time. Against Man United second-half, we had the ball all the time.
In Barcelona matches, they are normally the team with most possession in European football, but against us it wasn't 70-30 like it normally is.
Do you not aspire to having what players like Messi and Ronaldinho give to Barcelona?
That happens individually, in a certain context. Did you see the game where Ronaldinho made the bicycle-kick goal? So you saw the penalty that Gudjohnsen got too when it was 0-0?
That penalty doesn't happen in England. It's a different context. What I think is Chelsea players try to play good all the time. Sometimes it is possible. Sometimes it is not possible.
Could you incorporate Ronaldinho into your team?
If I answer that question I am in big trouble. If I say no, you tell me I am stupid because you don't want this player.
If I say `yes', Ronaldinho and his brother, they rub their hands together and go to negotiate a new contract with Barcelona. So it is the kind of answer I can't give!
When they see Robben and Cole on the bench, people are disappointed because they like to see them play. Do you understand that?
I always say this. Players pick the team, not me. If Joe Cole had an amazing game against Werder Bremen, do you think I don't play him against Man United the next game? I play him for sure.
Do you think if Robben comes on in the second-half against Manchester United and is man of the match, do you think I don't play him next game for sure. He was injured next game but even if wasn't, I wouldn't have played him.
I play the best players at the time. Makelele is untouchable because the way he plays. Essien is untouchable because the way he plays. Frank Lampard is untouchable because the way he plays. Not because I love them. But because the way they play.
Michael Ballack is untouchable because the way he plays. You can say he does not play well in Bremen, I understand that. You can say the first half in Man United he is not playing well. For me he is playing well. So these players are untouchable.
John Terry is untouchable, Ricardo Carvalho, Ashley Cole, Drogba, they are untouchable.
The right back is not untouchable. That is why I try this and this and this and that. I think this one in this moment is the best.
Sheva is not untouchable because of the way he is playing. That is why I play Joe Cole against Bremen. And I play Robben there, I play Kalou there. In this moment, we have eight untouchable players because the way they play.
It is about the way they perform. I've told the players that. Don't knock on my door. Don't knock on my office.
Don't speak with me about why I play or why I don't play. Don't send your friends to speak with the press and to say this or that. Don't do that. Show me!
I promise you I play the best players. So I think it is easy to have a selection when it is about how they behave on the pitch.
So has anyone dared knock on the door?
No.
There is a suggestion in this country that English players aren't coming through, no wealth of youngsters. Should we fear for the England team?
There is a lot of talent.
But at 18?
You have to try to understand why. I don't go so much to see that level, I have no time to try to find why. But I can understand some of the reasons.
I can see for example, that the reserve team competition should finish. It is nothing. This country has to think about a different way to give competition to young players.
The competition is not good enough. If I am a father and my boy is 18, I don't want him to play in the reserve team competition because the quality is not good enough, the motivation is not good enough, the pitches are not good enough. There is no motivation for the kids.
At the moment we have our best kids playing at Queens Park Rangers. We sent Jimmy Smith and Michael Mancienne to Queens Park Rangers because it is better to have them playing in the Coca Cola Championship than playing in the reserves on Monday.
I think this country should look to other countries, to France, to Spain.
Do you know where Real Madrid reserves play? In the Spanish equivalent of the Coca Cola League. There is a different way to look to these competitions.
At the age of 16, do you know how many times Porto kids have played against Benfica? The answer is 20. They play when they were 9, 10, 11, 12, in the national league.
They are used to atmospheres with big matches. You go to our kids of 16 and you know how many times they play Liverpool or Man United? Some of them never.
They go to the FA Youth Cup and if they lose, they are finished for the season. So the competitive shape at young levels is something you should look at.
Would you like Chelsea B to play in the Coca Cola championship like Real Madrid?
I would love to see it. I can tell you for sure that if that happened, players like Diarra, Mikel, Kalou, when they are not selected that weekend for the first team, they have a competition to play in a different level.
People would worry that it would be Chelsea in first place and Chelsea is second place.
But they cannot be promoted. Real Madrid B cannot be promoted. So Chelsea B could not be champions or be promoted.
They don't even play in the cup, to stop the possibility of Real Madrid A against Real Madrid B. But they have a higher competition to play.
Are you surprised the England national team hasn't achieved more?
They will do. They have to. They have quality, they have players.
The Chelsea players have won titles with me, and Liverpool boys and Man United boys, they have all won trophies.
And you had the generation before of Neville, Scholes and Beckham, at the top of the game, winning everything with Man United.
And they couldn't succeed with England with other managers before Sven so this is not a thing of Sven.
But why?
I can't go so deep. I don't know. Naturally they have to succeed and hopefully it is when these players are involved because they have a lot of talent and all them have Champions League experience.
They are at Man United, Liverpool, Chelsea, not Arsenal because they don't have English players, but all these players are at big clubs .
Would they win World Cup with you?
I have no idea.
You have ruled out the idea of managing England.
The England team is for English.
-
ZMAAJICA
- Posts: 59
- Joined: 06/11/2006 17:46
#161
Fri, 8th Dec 2006
In the second part of his interview, given to celebrate his new status as a patron of children's cancer charity CLIC Sargent, Jose Mourinho looks inward - at what drove him to become a leading manager, how being at the top affects him and what the future may hold.
It is interesting the comparison between you and some of the top managers in that you weren't particularly successful as a player.
In relation that. The top ones in England, we are almost in the same level.
Is it your failure to achieve your ambitions as a player that drives managers like you?
I keep saying the same. I was not a top player, but I could have been better than I was. And I was not better than I was because I didn't need football at the time.
When I was 18, my birthday gift was a car. At 18 I was going to university every day not in public buses or underground trains but in my own car.
If I wanted money to go out with my girlfriend - my wife was my girlfriend already - I had money to go. If I want money to go on a weekend holiday, I had money to go on a weekend holiday.
Because my father was a football man and we had money, we had a good life. So I was not the kind of person who was hungry to succeed to change my life.
I told this to my Portuguese friend yesterday when he asked me the same thing, what do I do with my money now.
I do nothing. I do nothing special. He asked me 'don't you want a big car? Don't you want a big thing? Don't you want something special you dream about?'
I dream of nothing. The only thing I dream about is to succeed as a football manager when I started and I follow that dream. That is important in your life. You dream of something and you follow it.
Where did you get hunger from for management?
Management was in a different stage of my career. Because as a player I was not stupid. I could understand I would never reach the top. I'm saying I could have been better than I was but I'm not saying I could be top.
So being an average player was not strong enough motivation for me. As a manager, I was feeling that I can do it. When I was an assistant and I was feeling the qualities I need to be a manager myself, I was feeling I can do it.
Year after year I was feeling I was preparing for that.
Can you see yourself doing it for a long time because you seem intense. Don't you feel you could almost burn yourself out in the next five or ten years?
No, no, no. Football doesn't make me old. There is no relation between football and white hairs or losing weight. No relation.
I enjoy football very much. What I need is sometimes one day off. For me that is perfect.
You thrive on the stress?
I don't say I like the stress. I like my life. I like matches. I like big matches.
The only thing I don't like is that hour before the game where you have nothing to do.
There is one hour when the players are having massage, they are changing, they are studying the size of their studs. They are doing these things to prepare the game where I do nothing.
It seems you don't actually find football stressful?
I don't.
Do you not get nervous, even before a big game like Barcelona in the Champions League?
No. I'm not nervous. I concentrate. I try to make decisions in advance. When I get the team sheet I try to understand who the opponents have on the bench.
What they are going to do if they are winning. What they are going to do if they are losing and they try to change the result. I try to anticipate the situation the maximum I can.
I try to read my players' body language and attitude to try to see if they are ready for it. If they are calm. If they are extra motivated. If they need a word, which kind of word. But I don't get nervous.
I keep saying the same, after the game is when I go home and cannot sleep. The night after the game I just cannot sleep. I don't know. I don't know. I cannot sleep.
You would think you would get stressed because you are at a club where you are expected to win everything. It is a different kind of stress to relegation but it is a lot of stress at a club where, because of the wealth, you are expected to win everything. That's stress isn't it?
That is something I cannot change. We are what we are, and maybe we are guilty of what we are. Maybe if we don't win the Premiership in the first two seasons, maybe people analyse us in a different way.
Maybe people think, okay, this is a winning process. It takes time. They are in their second year. They are in the third year. Nobody won the Premiership in their first year.
They have a lot of good players but they need time to work. They have money to spend but they need time to work.
So maybe we are guilty of that, because it was just arrive and win. So now we don't have another solution. You win, or if you don't win, people will say you fail.
The League Managers' Association is often talking about medical problems managers have. There is a large percentage of heart problems suffered by managers. Is that a concern? You see Sam Allardyce get wired up and it goes off the scale during a match.
You cannot say never. Imagine the next game and I have a heart problem. So we are speaking that I am very cool and the game doesn't kill me but you never know. You never know the day of tomorrow.
I just feel that during the game I am so focused and enjoying so much the good things of the game, the negative things of the game, trying to change things, that I don't feel it.
Maybe one day a referee kills me! Maybe one day a referee kills me with a bad decision (he laughs), I don't know. It's the only thing that really makes me mad.
There is an expectation that when you do leave Chelsea, and it was fuelled by some of the things you said at the end of last season about thinking could you stay, that you will leave in a big explosion - as that's the type of character you are? Can you understand why people think that?
This is the first time I am in a club for the third year. Never before. To be fair, I just started my career not many years ago. I was at Benfica a couple of months, Leiria a couple of months. In Porto two-and-a-half years. This is the first time I am in my third year.
But the culture here is different. The project is different. I left Porto because I want more for my career. I don't know at this moment where I can find more than I have in Chelsea.
The challenge is huge. The pressure, if you can say that, is huge. The responsibility is huge. The Premiership, for me, is the best league in the world.
You can discuss the quality of the game. You can say I prefer the Spanish game. Or I prefer the Italian game. But when you try to analyse the competition as a whole, the number of spectators, every stadium full, the level of competitiveness - four teams fighting for the Premiership. Other teams coming up. The Premiership is the best league.
But there are bigger clubs? Milan, Madrid?
There can be bigger clubs. There can be bigger institutions with a century of rich history. I think yes they are the clubs with the history. The clubs with the status.
That's why people are not fair sometimes when we are in the same competition and people speak about how much money Chelsea is spending and they don't put on the other side of the balance the institutional power of these clubs.
I play at home against Real Madrid, I have 40,000 people at home. I go to Madrid, I have 100,000.
Chelsea is a club without one single European Cup or Champions League. You go to Madrid and they are the club of the century. They have the history. We have the other things.
Why did you talk about leaving at the end of last season?
Last season I was a bit fed up with certain things. I'm not saying sometimes I'm not. But you go to another country, you go to another club and you will find different problems.
There is not the perfect club, the perfect country, the perfect competition, the perfect manager. I also have some bad qualities for sure.
I think the Chelsea project is very demanding but at the same it is attractive.
What are your bad qualities as a manager?
My bad qualities are that I don't care about my image and because I don't care about my image, I don't care about the consequences of what I say and the consequences of what I do.
In the world of football, to have some percentage of being a hypocrite is a great quality. And I don't have one single percentage of being a hypocrite and I think that is a very bad quality in the football world.
So you would be a better manager if you were a hypocrite?
Yes I think so because I would care about my image and I would do things to protect my image, I would do things to work my image.
I would control my speech in certain ways. I wouldn't say what I think all the time because when you say what you think, sometimes you get into trouble.
Instead of being a manager that a lot of people loves and a lot of people hate, I would be a manager that everybody loves.
Are you difficult to work with? Do you think sometimes Roman Abramovich and Peter Kenyon find you an absolute pain to work with?
No, I don't think so. Only they can answer that but I don't think so.
You like the dramatic gesture. Is there something of the actor in you like when you throw your medals? Like after you won the Champions League and you ripped your medal off.
When I won the Champions League, yes I ripped it off but when I won the Uefa Cup, I was crying.
When we score against Barcelona, I dived on my knees. We scored against Manchester United, I did nothing. It depends on the moment, it depends what I have inside, it depends on the emotions.
Are you quite emotional?
Yes I am.
As a person or a manager?
Both.
Do you ever use it deliberately. Are you calculated?
Not really.
The idea from the outside is that you are very calculated. You will do anything to win. You are Machiavellian and you work out what you are going to say before a particular match.
No.
You always say the match begins in the press conference and that is Machiavellian because you are using the press conference to either send a message to the opposition, the team or the referee.
I think that's normal. If you don't do it it's because you are in the wrong way. The press conference before or after the game is about the game and you can pass on some messages. That's obvious.
You can influence the game from that press conference?
I don't say influence the game directly. But, for example, when I say before the game against Man United that we go there to win but if we go home with the same difference in points then it's positive, I am saying to my players we have two results to play for.
And I remind the Man United players they have a big chance to open the gap but they have only one result to play for.
So when the game finished I think they know the result is not good for them and we know the result is good for us.
You like to remind them of that message?
Yes I like to do that, and they try to do the same. It depends who is on the other side of the communication whether you can influence or not.
If the Levski Sofia coach says he is going to Stamford Bridge and he has a feeling he is going to beat Chelsea 5-0, his influence on me is zero. So it depends who is on the other side.
For sure from what I know of the person, my influence from what I say on Sir Alex [Ferguson] is zero.
But you tried?
Not to him, more generally. To take pressure off my players and also so my fans know what we have in our minds so at the end of the game they can celebrate a draw because they know we are thinking medium-term and that's a good result for us.
Communication is with everybody.
But you have an influence on [Rafael] Benitez because he always gets uptight at the mention of your name.
No, no, no. With Benitez, what I know is matches between us and them are always very close, except we beat them 4-1 one time.
Everything else is always 0-0, 1-0, 1-1. Sometimes we beat them, sometimes they beat us. We are used to beating them in the Premiership. They are used to beating us in a knockout situation.
I respect him a lot as a manager and I think he respects me too. We had problems, we solve problems. Maybe we will have problems again in the future. If we have we will solve them again because we respect each other.
You have 20 years left in football?
I have? Not so much.
Before you end, would you like to win La Liga, Serie A and manage Portugal before time is done?
First of all, I would like to win my fifth consecutive title. I have four and that is the aim.
I have won the Champions League. The next aim is to win my second Champions League. I have won the Uefa Cup. I don't want to win the second Uefa Cup (he laughs).
Carling Cup, I would like to win the second. FA Cup, I would like to win the first - at Wembley.
But winning in all the different countries would make you stand out?
Alex Ferguson only won English leagues and he is special so it is about the decisions in your life.
I keep saying that Serie A is something that motivates me. But what motivates me more is being in the best league in the world. And the best league at this moment is here.
Why do you say Serie A and not Spain?
I was in Spain four years as an assistant so I know the league, the competition, the mentality.
So Italy is the unknown?
Yes. You can never say no. Maybe I go to Spain one day.
In this moment, if Chelsea doesn't sack me because Abramovich wants to make the line-up (he laughs), if they don't sack me, at this moment I don't think about change.
In the second part of his interview, given to celebrate his new status as a patron of children's cancer charity CLIC Sargent, Jose Mourinho looks inward - at what drove him to become a leading manager, how being at the top affects him and what the future may hold.
It is interesting the comparison between you and some of the top managers in that you weren't particularly successful as a player.
In relation that. The top ones in England, we are almost in the same level.
Is it your failure to achieve your ambitions as a player that drives managers like you?
I keep saying the same. I was not a top player, but I could have been better than I was. And I was not better than I was because I didn't need football at the time.
When I was 18, my birthday gift was a car. At 18 I was going to university every day not in public buses or underground trains but in my own car.
If I wanted money to go out with my girlfriend - my wife was my girlfriend already - I had money to go. If I want money to go on a weekend holiday, I had money to go on a weekend holiday.
Because my father was a football man and we had money, we had a good life. So I was not the kind of person who was hungry to succeed to change my life.
I told this to my Portuguese friend yesterday when he asked me the same thing, what do I do with my money now.
I do nothing. I do nothing special. He asked me 'don't you want a big car? Don't you want a big thing? Don't you want something special you dream about?'
I dream of nothing. The only thing I dream about is to succeed as a football manager when I started and I follow that dream. That is important in your life. You dream of something and you follow it.
Where did you get hunger from for management?
Management was in a different stage of my career. Because as a player I was not stupid. I could understand I would never reach the top. I'm saying I could have been better than I was but I'm not saying I could be top.
So being an average player was not strong enough motivation for me. As a manager, I was feeling that I can do it. When I was an assistant and I was feeling the qualities I need to be a manager myself, I was feeling I can do it.
Year after year I was feeling I was preparing for that.
Can you see yourself doing it for a long time because you seem intense. Don't you feel you could almost burn yourself out in the next five or ten years?
No, no, no. Football doesn't make me old. There is no relation between football and white hairs or losing weight. No relation.
I enjoy football very much. What I need is sometimes one day off. For me that is perfect.
You thrive on the stress?
I don't say I like the stress. I like my life. I like matches. I like big matches.
The only thing I don't like is that hour before the game where you have nothing to do.
There is one hour when the players are having massage, they are changing, they are studying the size of their studs. They are doing these things to prepare the game where I do nothing.
It seems you don't actually find football stressful?
I don't.
Do you not get nervous, even before a big game like Barcelona in the Champions League?
No. I'm not nervous. I concentrate. I try to make decisions in advance. When I get the team sheet I try to understand who the opponents have on the bench.
What they are going to do if they are winning. What they are going to do if they are losing and they try to change the result. I try to anticipate the situation the maximum I can.
I try to read my players' body language and attitude to try to see if they are ready for it. If they are calm. If they are extra motivated. If they need a word, which kind of word. But I don't get nervous.
I keep saying the same, after the game is when I go home and cannot sleep. The night after the game I just cannot sleep. I don't know. I don't know. I cannot sleep.
You would think you would get stressed because you are at a club where you are expected to win everything. It is a different kind of stress to relegation but it is a lot of stress at a club where, because of the wealth, you are expected to win everything. That's stress isn't it?
That is something I cannot change. We are what we are, and maybe we are guilty of what we are. Maybe if we don't win the Premiership in the first two seasons, maybe people analyse us in a different way.
Maybe people think, okay, this is a winning process. It takes time. They are in their second year. They are in the third year. Nobody won the Premiership in their first year.
They have a lot of good players but they need time to work. They have money to spend but they need time to work.
So maybe we are guilty of that, because it was just arrive and win. So now we don't have another solution. You win, or if you don't win, people will say you fail.
The League Managers' Association is often talking about medical problems managers have. There is a large percentage of heart problems suffered by managers. Is that a concern? You see Sam Allardyce get wired up and it goes off the scale during a match.
You cannot say never. Imagine the next game and I have a heart problem. So we are speaking that I am very cool and the game doesn't kill me but you never know. You never know the day of tomorrow.
I just feel that during the game I am so focused and enjoying so much the good things of the game, the negative things of the game, trying to change things, that I don't feel it.
Maybe one day a referee kills me! Maybe one day a referee kills me with a bad decision (he laughs), I don't know. It's the only thing that really makes me mad.
There is an expectation that when you do leave Chelsea, and it was fuelled by some of the things you said at the end of last season about thinking could you stay, that you will leave in a big explosion - as that's the type of character you are? Can you understand why people think that?
This is the first time I am in a club for the third year. Never before. To be fair, I just started my career not many years ago. I was at Benfica a couple of months, Leiria a couple of months. In Porto two-and-a-half years. This is the first time I am in my third year.
But the culture here is different. The project is different. I left Porto because I want more for my career. I don't know at this moment where I can find more than I have in Chelsea.
The challenge is huge. The pressure, if you can say that, is huge. The responsibility is huge. The Premiership, for me, is the best league in the world.
You can discuss the quality of the game. You can say I prefer the Spanish game. Or I prefer the Italian game. But when you try to analyse the competition as a whole, the number of spectators, every stadium full, the level of competitiveness - four teams fighting for the Premiership. Other teams coming up. The Premiership is the best league.
But there are bigger clubs? Milan, Madrid?
There can be bigger clubs. There can be bigger institutions with a century of rich history. I think yes they are the clubs with the history. The clubs with the status.
That's why people are not fair sometimes when we are in the same competition and people speak about how much money Chelsea is spending and they don't put on the other side of the balance the institutional power of these clubs.
I play at home against Real Madrid, I have 40,000 people at home. I go to Madrid, I have 100,000.
Chelsea is a club without one single European Cup or Champions League. You go to Madrid and they are the club of the century. They have the history. We have the other things.
Why did you talk about leaving at the end of last season?
Last season I was a bit fed up with certain things. I'm not saying sometimes I'm not. But you go to another country, you go to another club and you will find different problems.
There is not the perfect club, the perfect country, the perfect competition, the perfect manager. I also have some bad qualities for sure.
I think the Chelsea project is very demanding but at the same it is attractive.
What are your bad qualities as a manager?
My bad qualities are that I don't care about my image and because I don't care about my image, I don't care about the consequences of what I say and the consequences of what I do.
In the world of football, to have some percentage of being a hypocrite is a great quality. And I don't have one single percentage of being a hypocrite and I think that is a very bad quality in the football world.
So you would be a better manager if you were a hypocrite?
Yes I think so because I would care about my image and I would do things to protect my image, I would do things to work my image.
I would control my speech in certain ways. I wouldn't say what I think all the time because when you say what you think, sometimes you get into trouble.
Instead of being a manager that a lot of people loves and a lot of people hate, I would be a manager that everybody loves.
Are you difficult to work with? Do you think sometimes Roman Abramovich and Peter Kenyon find you an absolute pain to work with?
No, I don't think so. Only they can answer that but I don't think so.
You like the dramatic gesture. Is there something of the actor in you like when you throw your medals? Like after you won the Champions League and you ripped your medal off.
When I won the Champions League, yes I ripped it off but when I won the Uefa Cup, I was crying.
When we score against Barcelona, I dived on my knees. We scored against Manchester United, I did nothing. It depends on the moment, it depends what I have inside, it depends on the emotions.
Are you quite emotional?
Yes I am.
As a person or a manager?
Both.
Do you ever use it deliberately. Are you calculated?
Not really.
The idea from the outside is that you are very calculated. You will do anything to win. You are Machiavellian and you work out what you are going to say before a particular match.
No.
You always say the match begins in the press conference and that is Machiavellian because you are using the press conference to either send a message to the opposition, the team or the referee.
I think that's normal. If you don't do it it's because you are in the wrong way. The press conference before or after the game is about the game and you can pass on some messages. That's obvious.
You can influence the game from that press conference?
I don't say influence the game directly. But, for example, when I say before the game against Man United that we go there to win but if we go home with the same difference in points then it's positive, I am saying to my players we have two results to play for.
And I remind the Man United players they have a big chance to open the gap but they have only one result to play for.
So when the game finished I think they know the result is not good for them and we know the result is good for us.
You like to remind them of that message?
Yes I like to do that, and they try to do the same. It depends who is on the other side of the communication whether you can influence or not.
If the Levski Sofia coach says he is going to Stamford Bridge and he has a feeling he is going to beat Chelsea 5-0, his influence on me is zero. So it depends who is on the other side.
For sure from what I know of the person, my influence from what I say on Sir Alex [Ferguson] is zero.
But you tried?
Not to him, more generally. To take pressure off my players and also so my fans know what we have in our minds so at the end of the game they can celebrate a draw because they know we are thinking medium-term and that's a good result for us.
Communication is with everybody.
But you have an influence on [Rafael] Benitez because he always gets uptight at the mention of your name.
No, no, no. With Benitez, what I know is matches between us and them are always very close, except we beat them 4-1 one time.
Everything else is always 0-0, 1-0, 1-1. Sometimes we beat them, sometimes they beat us. We are used to beating them in the Premiership. They are used to beating us in a knockout situation.
I respect him a lot as a manager and I think he respects me too. We had problems, we solve problems. Maybe we will have problems again in the future. If we have we will solve them again because we respect each other.
You have 20 years left in football?
I have? Not so much.
Before you end, would you like to win La Liga, Serie A and manage Portugal before time is done?
First of all, I would like to win my fifth consecutive title. I have four and that is the aim.
I have won the Champions League. The next aim is to win my second Champions League. I have won the Uefa Cup. I don't want to win the second Uefa Cup (he laughs).
Carling Cup, I would like to win the second. FA Cup, I would like to win the first - at Wembley.
But winning in all the different countries would make you stand out?
Alex Ferguson only won English leagues and he is special so it is about the decisions in your life.
I keep saying that Serie A is something that motivates me. But what motivates me more is being in the best league in the world. And the best league at this moment is here.
Why do you say Serie A and not Spain?
I was in Spain four years as an assistant so I know the league, the competition, the mentality.
So Italy is the unknown?
Yes. You can never say no. Maybe I go to Spain one day.
In this moment, if Chelsea doesn't sack me because Abramovich wants to make the line-up (he laughs), if they don't sack me, at this moment I don't think about change.
-
lampard
- Posts: 477
- Joined: 13/04/2006 22:20
#163
dripac wrote:Places li. Ma nije bitno, bice bolje, al u curku.lampard wrote:Pretposljednji Mohikanac wrote:![]()
bil mu to dao majke ti
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ne samo jednom nego vise puta![]()
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sutra deranje na terenu,stize arsenal
nego sta neg ce biti bolje,ha ja bolan to se podrazumjeva,arsenal presretan sto je bod izvuko,presmijesno
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ZMAAJICA
- Posts: 59
- Joined: 06/11/2006 17:46
#164
Bas je blesavo sto ljudi misle da je ovo kraj za Chelsea, -5 se lahko istopi, uostalom kao sto 'Special One' kaze ManUSA u aprilu dolazi na nas, a svi znamo kako gosti prolaze na nasem terenu...
Sinoc losa tekma, zivci su mi otisli, pratila sam na bbc-iju uzivo komentare, Sheva i Drogba super saraduju, Robben dobar.
Eh, sad dobra vijest: Cech se oporavlja, poceo je trcati, plivati, igrati tenis i pomalo trenirati sa loptom. Sredinom januara pocece trenirati na golu.
Losa vijest: J. Cole slomio stopalo; prava steta.
PS: Gospodin Arsen Wenger a.k.a. 'voajer' kaznjen je od strane FA zbog napada na protivnickog menadzera. Kazna iznosi 10.000 funti.
Sinoc losa tekma, zivci su mi otisli, pratila sam na bbc-iju uzivo komentare, Sheva i Drogba super saraduju, Robben dobar.
Eh, sad dobra vijest: Cech se oporavlja, poceo je trcati, plivati, igrati tenis i pomalo trenirati sa loptom. Sredinom januara pocece trenirati na golu.
Losa vijest: J. Cole slomio stopalo; prava steta.
PS: Gospodin Arsen Wenger a.k.a. 'voajer' kaznjen je od strane FA zbog napada na protivnickog menadzera. Kazna iznosi 10.000 funti.
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lampard
- Posts: 477
- Joined: 13/04/2006 22:20
#165
ZMAAJICA wrote:Bas je blesavo sto ljudi misle da je ovo kraj za Chelsea, -5 se lahko istopi, uostalom kao sto 'Special One' kaze ManUSA u aprilu dolazi na nas, a svi znamo kako gosti prolaze na nasem terenu...
![]()
Sinoc losa tekma, zivci su mi otisli, pratila sam na bbc-iju uzivo komentare, Sheva i Drogba super saraduju, Robben dobar.
Eh, sad dobra vijest: Cech se oporavlja, poceo je trcati, plivati, igrati tenis i pomalo trenirati sa loptom. Sredinom januara pocece trenirati na golu.
![]()
Losa vijest: J. Cole slomio stopalo; prava steta.
![]()
PS: Gospodin Arsen Wenger a.k.a. 'voajer' kaznjen je od strane FA zbog napada na protivnickog menadzera. Kazna iznosi 10.000 funti.
uvijek me oraspolozi
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Kukuruz_Barbe-q
- Posts: 1041
- Joined: 09/01/2005 22:25
#168
Ako mancini predje u chelsea, vjerovatno nece moci uspostaviti disciplinu medju zvjezdama.Po meni los trener.
- max_power
- Posts: 901
- Joined: 14/10/2005 04:41
- Location: planeta Mars
- Contact:
#170
Pa nije Mancini bas tako los trener, eno sa Interom obara rekorde (sutra ako pobjede Messinu imaju 9 pobjeda zaredom)
Zamislite kakvu bi ekipu mogao imati Inter iduce sezone: igraci koji su sada tu (minus Adriano) + Messi i Mourinho.
Suska se i da bi se Ronaldo mogao vratiti ali ja licno mislim da ce Moratti pokusati dovesti C. Ronalda iz Manchestera
Zamislite kakvu bi ekipu mogao imati Inter iduce sezone: igraci koji su sada tu (minus Adriano) + Messi i Mourinho.
Suska se i da bi se Ronaldo mogao vratiti ali ja licno mislim da ce Moratti pokusati dovesti C. Ronalda iz Manchestera
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ZMAAJICA
- Posts: 59
- Joined: 06/11/2006 17:46
#171
Cini mi se da je nedjelja bila fantasticna za sve Chelsea navijace:
poraz Barce
pobjeda nad Evertonom
i poraz ManUSA-a
Ja sam uzivala! Komicno je kako Manchester nije mogao podnijeti pritisak, kako su postali panicni...
Skoro sam napisala '-5 se lahko istopi', a sad cu reci '-2 se istopi jos lakse'! Evo sta kaze Mastermind JM:
'In great moments, teams play great football, score great goals, the first chance you get you score and when you go on the pitch, everything is shining and flowers and blue skies. Some other moments, things are not going well.
'We are not in a great moment but we are not losing many points. We have injuries, we are not lucky, we hit the post a minimum of two times every game, decisions are not for us and some players are not in the best of their form.
'But I can compare a little bit with this stage last season. Man United were having problems and for us it was perfect. What was the distance? 12, 13, 14 points,'
'So when Chelsea went to a bad moment, we were too far ahead.
'If in our difficult moment we can keep four, five or six points behind, we will be there in the second-half of the season.'
'If you can play great music, play great music. If you cannot, play at least some music - and that is what we are doing at the moment.'
i jos malo o taktici:
'We change to 4-3-3 and after when they score we change to three in the back, and then two in the back, and after when we score the last goal ten at the back!'
Nadamo se da da ce JT biti uskoro spreman, Khalid je promasaj.
Lampard je onim golom postao najefikasniji vezni u Chelsea sa 77 golova.
PS. Gospodinu Arsenu Wengeru izgleda da se svidjelo placati kazne. Nakon posljednje utakmice FA je ponovo pokrenula istragu protiv njega...
... i da, Everton trazi od Josea da povuce svoju izjavu o simuliranju Andy Johnsona. Sta mislite hoce li se Jose povuci?

poraz Barce
pobjeda nad Evertonom
i poraz ManUSA-a
Ja sam uzivala! Komicno je kako Manchester nije mogao podnijeti pritisak, kako su postali panicni...
Skoro sam napisala '-5 se lahko istopi', a sad cu reci '-2 se istopi jos lakse'! Evo sta kaze Mastermind JM:
'In great moments, teams play great football, score great goals, the first chance you get you score and when you go on the pitch, everything is shining and flowers and blue skies. Some other moments, things are not going well.
'We are not in a great moment but we are not losing many points. We have injuries, we are not lucky, we hit the post a minimum of two times every game, decisions are not for us and some players are not in the best of their form.
'But I can compare a little bit with this stage last season. Man United were having problems and for us it was perfect. What was the distance? 12, 13, 14 points,'
'So when Chelsea went to a bad moment, we were too far ahead.
'If in our difficult moment we can keep four, five or six points behind, we will be there in the second-half of the season.'
'If you can play great music, play great music. If you cannot, play at least some music - and that is what we are doing at the moment.'
i jos malo o taktici:
'We change to 4-3-3 and after when they score we change to three in the back, and then two in the back, and after when we score the last goal ten at the back!'
Nadamo se da da ce JT biti uskoro spreman, Khalid je promasaj.
Lampard je onim golom postao najefikasniji vezni u Chelsea sa 77 golova.
PS. Gospodinu Arsenu Wengeru izgleda da se svidjelo placati kazne. Nakon posljednje utakmice FA je ponovo pokrenula istragu protiv njega...
... i da, Everton trazi od Josea da povuce svoju izjavu o simuliranju Andy Johnsona. Sta mislite hoce li se Jose povuci?
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ZMAAJICA
- Posts: 59
- Joined: 06/11/2006 17:46
#173
Jose Mourinho priznao gresku!
Vjerovali ili ne, on to moze!
"First I would like to say I have the utmost respect for Everton Football Club, David Moyes and their players. That's why I love to play them, and especially at Goodison Park where the atmosphere is magnificent.
Secondly, after the match I was clear and said Andy Johnson is a great player and I never used aggressive words, like some managers did against my players in previous seasons, or like some others recently said about him and Ronaldo. I never used the word cheat.
After seeing it again on the video, Mr Halsey did wonderful work and both decisions for penalties were correct. Did Andy Johnson try to avoid a collision with my goalkeeper? It seems now the answer to that is yes so Everton, his manager and he deserve my apologies."
PS: Chelsea-jevi igraci su ovih dana isli u posjetu djeci oboljeloj od raka u londnske bolnice.

Vjerovali ili ne, on to moze!
"First I would like to say I have the utmost respect for Everton Football Club, David Moyes and their players. That's why I love to play them, and especially at Goodison Park where the atmosphere is magnificent.
Secondly, after the match I was clear and said Andy Johnson is a great player and I never used aggressive words, like some managers did against my players in previous seasons, or like some others recently said about him and Ronaldo. I never used the word cheat.
After seeing it again on the video, Mr Halsey did wonderful work and both decisions for penalties were correct. Did Andy Johnson try to avoid a collision with my goalkeeper? It seems now the answer to that is yes so Everton, his manager and he deserve my apologies."
PS: Chelsea-jevi igraci su ovih dana isli u posjetu djeci oboljeloj od raka u londnske bolnice.
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REDS-Anfild
- Posts: 47
- Joined: 14/12/2006 19:31
- Location: sarajevo
- Contact:
#174 LIVERPOOL FC je najjaci
Samo za pocetak LIVERPOOL FC je najjaci! 
