Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Atletico Madrid v Chelsea: Jose Mourinho puts on a special sulk to mark his return to Madrid for Champions League semi-final

 

Sam Wallace
Tuesday 22 April 2014 18:43 BST
Comments
Jose Mourinho returned to Madrid today ahead of Chelsea’s Champions League semi-final first leg against Atletico on Tuesday
Jose Mourinho returned to Madrid today ahead of Chelsea’s Champions League semi-final first leg against Atletico on Tuesday (Getty Images)

Jose Mourinho returned to Madrid today ahead of Chelsea’s Champions League semi-final first leg against Atletico on Tuesday in the midst of an extraordinary sulk and claiming that his side could still keep their composure after Saturday’s meltdown in defeat to Sunderland.

Over the course of an extremely recalcitrant press conference performance at the Vicente Calderon stadium, the former Real Madrid manager said that his players “always behave in relation to the situation”, although he refused to discuss any of the details of a dreadful weekend for his side.

He would not talk about the dismissal of his assistant Rui Faria, the elbow by Ramires on Sebastian Larsson that went unpunished or any expansion on his comments on Saturday about the referee Mike Dean and his boss Mike Riley, the head of the referees’ organisation. Mourinho even refused to acquiesce to requests from local reporters that he respond to questions in Spanish, instead answering in English each time.

Mourinho is without Samuel Eto’o, his first choice striker, who has not travelled to Spain, having suffered what the club said was a “small knee irritation”. Fernando Torres is back at his boyhood club and is a candidate to start the game, although Mourinho could choose to play Andre Schurrle as his striker as he did in the first leg against Paris Saint Germain in the previous round.

Ashley Cole is hopeful of a return to the team at left-back with Cesar Azpilicueta moving to the right side. Branislav Ivanovic is suspended for the game.

The Chelsea manager would not discuss the Uefa ruling that permits the on-loan Belgian goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois to play against his parent club over the two legs. Doing little to conceal his feelings about the decision he said: “I think that [with] Uefa decisions it’s better not to comment, you just accept. If you don’t accept, don’t make any comments. Uefa decide and I think managers don’t comment.”

The Atletico manager Diego Simeone said that there was no issue for Courtois facing the club that signed him from Genk three years ago. Simeone said: “He [Courtois] is full of enthusiasm and knows this is a very important moment for the career of any footballer, but also for our club. There is a third-party situation and he will try to give the best for everyone, the fans, the directors and his teammates.”

Asked whether he felt that the 21-year-old, in his second season on loan at Atletico, had been the subject of psychological pressure from Chelsea, Simeone was adamant that if that was the case it had no effect. “It’s not an issue that worries us. We have no worry about this situation. No comment.”

Raul Garcia, the Atletico, midfielder was the most outspoken about the prospect of facing the Chelsea manager. He said: “Mourinho doesn’t scare us obviously. It’s only a game of football. We know we have an opponent in front of us and they will do all they can to go through. But if we are anything ourselves, we are a very competitive team with huge ambition that want to win. We have no fear but we do respect them.”

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in