Jose Mourinho insists his time at the top isn’t over and is looking for “empathy” at next club

1 / 3
It will come as a shock to no one that Mourinho thinks he can still cut it as a top-class coach. (AFP)
2 / 3
3 / 3
Updated 26 February 2019
Follow

Jose Mourinho insists his time at the top isn’t over and is looking for “empathy” at next club

  • "Special One" happy to manage at a club without lots of trophies so long as it has ambition.
  • “Some guys don’t win any trophies for 18 years. I didn’t win any trophy for 18 months.”

LONDON: Jose Mourinho is willing to manage a club that is not used to success so long as it has “ambition.”

The man known as the “Special One” was sacked by Manchester United in December and has kept a low profile since — bar slipping on the ice at a Russian ice hockey match and a few TV appearances. But in his first big interview since he was issued with his marching orders from Old Trafford Mourinho insisted his time at the top and winning trophies was far from over. 

“I want high-level football and ambitions at the highest level,” the Portuguese told The Telegraph. 

“(I would) look at a club that is not ready to be a trophy-hunter immediately but with the ambition to be a trophy-hunter.”

“If it is a club without ambition I wouldn’t go.” 

Mourinho has rarely slipped up at a club in the way he did at Manchester United and during this Russian ice hockey match last month. (AFP) 

After he proved himself to be a footballing alchemist at Porto — leading the Portuguese club to Champions league glory in 2004 — Mourinho has only managed big clubs, with deep pockets and a willingness to spend. From Chelsea he went to Inter Milan, Real Madrid, back to Stamford Bridge before his time at Manchester United. The perception of the “Special One” is that he will and can now only manage at clubs with big-name players and an ability to splash the cash. But Mourinho insisted of greater importance to him is the culture within any club he joins. 

I don’t want an internal conflict,” said Mourinho, who has down the years earned a reputation for confronting senior players at clubs he has managed.

“I want internal empathy. And then your conflict is on Sunday on the pitch when you play against somebody who wants to steal your three points.

“That’s the moment of the conflict.”

Mourinho, who enjoyed a good first season with United, landing the Europa League and League Cup before things turned sour when he won nothing last year, says structural empathy is obligatory for him.

“I don’t know if it is a bad translation from Portuguese to English but focus on these two words, ‘structure’ and ‘empathy’,” said Mourinho.

“I want to work with structural empathy. A club is a structure, a complex structure where the manager is an important part of that structure but he is not the structure.

“I want to work with people that I love.

“People I want to work with, that I am happy to work with, with whom I share the same ideas.

“It was what I had at Inter. There are clubs like this. Normally, that is a very important part of a successful club.”

The sight of Mourinho leaving a club under a cloud is nothing new. He was twice sacked from Chelsea and parted company with Real having fallen out with the players and out of favor with the club president Florentino Perez. But he enjoyed success in all three stints at the Bernabeu and Stamford Bridge. Something that, despite winning the League Cup and Europa Cup, few would say about his time in the Old Trafford dugout. 

Asked whether he would learn from his Manchester United failure, Mourinho said: “People used to say that you learn more with defeat.

“Maybe there is some truth in it. I feel my natural habitat is winning. This is the first time when I didn’t win any trophy for 18 months.

“Some guys don’t win any trophies for 18 years. I didn’t win any trophy for 18 months.

“Now I have time for thinking, reflection, trying to understand everything and trying to be more ready for the next one that is coming,” said Mourinho.

“I know it is coming. It hasn’t come yet because what has come along, I didn’t want.”

 


 


Real Sociedad edge rivals Athletic to reach Copa del Rey final

Updated 05 March 2026
Follow

Real Sociedad edge rivals Athletic to reach Copa del Rey final

  • Real Sociedad have now not lost in their last 10 derby clashes at home against Athletic, whom they beat in the 2020 final, and rarely looked like letting their advantage slip

SAN SEBASTIAN, Spain: Mikel Oyarzabal slotted home a late penalty to fire Real Sociedad into the Copa del Rey final with a 1-0 win over Basque rivals Athletic Bilbao on Wednesday, securing a 2-0 aggregate semifinal triumph.
American coach Pellegrino Matarazzo has turned La Real’s fortunes around since arriving in December and his side will face Atletico Madrid in the Seville final on April 18, after they ousted Barcelona.
Already holding a 1-0 lead from the first leg at Athletic’s San Mames, Real Sociedad produced a sturdy display at the Reale Arena to knock out the 24-time winners.
“Very proud of what the boys have done, over the past two months, it’s pretty amazing,” said Matarazzo.
“Our first match was on the fourth of January... and we just reached the cup final.
“The football we’re playing is effective and we want to continue... we’re in the final and we want to win it.”
Real Sociedad have now not lost in their last 10 derby clashes at home against Athletic, whom they beat in the 2020 final, and rarely looked like letting their advantage slip.
“I think having the one goal advantage helped, we managed the tempo well,” Real Sociedad defender Jon Martin told Movistar.
“We didn’t want a lot to happen, and we did well.”
La Real had the better of a tense first half, with Carlos Soler coming closest. The midfielder’s free-kick, flying toward the top corner, was tipped over by Athletic goalkeeper Alex Padilla.
Matarazzo’s team had more of the ball and forced the visitors back, albeit without carving out many more openings.
Athletic defender Aitor Paredes made a last-ditch block to keep former Valencia midfielder Soler at bay, and Goncalo Guedes drilled into the side-netting.
Ernesto Valverde’s side improved in the second half and began to threaten La Real, again without finding a clear sight of goal.
Alejandro Berenguer fizzed a shot wide after Inaki Williams fed him on the edge of the box.
Los Leones were missing dangerous Spanish winger Nico Williams, who is sidelined indefinitely with a groin problem.

Oyarzabal seals it

The match was decided from the penalty spot when Athletic’s Inigo Ruiz de Galarreta grabbed a fistful of Yangel Herrera’s shirt as he tried to jump in the box.
After a VAR review the referee awarded a spot-kick and Spain striker Oyarzabal coolly sent Padilla the wrong way in the 87th minute.
Mikel Vesga might have levelled on the night for Athletic in stoppage time as they pushed forward with urgency but Real Sociedad stopper Unai Marrero saved well with his leg to help book his team’s flight to Andalusia.
“It was a hard-fought game, a Basque derby,” said Valverde.
“We had a clear chance at the end, we could have got back into the game but it wasn’t to be.”
Icelandic striker Orri Oskarsson could have extended La Real’s lead at the death but nodded against the post, although it did not matter in the end.
“It feels terrible, it’s a shame, we wanted to reach that final in Seville, I don’t even know what to say,” Athletic striker Williams told Movistar.
“(For the penalty) there’s that kind of grabbing in every box, every corner, and it’s very difficult (to take).”