Jose Mourinho tells Chelsea Stars that they should have been SOLD last summer
Jose Mourinho has told his players he should have sold some of them in the summer.
And the Chelsea boss is now facing a battle to keep his stars onside after pointing the finger of blame at them publicly too, claiming they “betrayed” him in Monday’s defeat at Leicester.
Mourinho is staying in his role - for now - despite his reigning Premier League champions' season plummeting to a new low.
The
Leicester loss, their ninth in 16 league games, left them just a point
above the RELEGATION zone and Mourinho under huge pressure.
The
52-year-old believes a top four finish this season - and Champions
League qualification - is already beyond his side with 22 matches still
to play, a confession that has caused alarm among the Blues board, along
with Chelsea’s dreadful domestic form.
A lack of available top-level alternatives has helped keep
Mourinho in the job when his future has been discussed by the top brass.
Last week’s win over Porto, which sealed as place in the last-16 of the Champions League, also bought him more time.
But
while he retains enough support among the hierarchy to keep his job for
now, Mourinho is in danger of losing it among his players.
A
number of them have under-performed badly this season and look shadows
of the players who inspired the west London club to the title last year.
And
Mourinho has told his squad he feels he was too soft in the summer and
should have moved some of them on before their form started to dip.
He is understood to have been prepared to shoulder the blame
earlier in the season as he assessed his side’s struggles. But, as the
campaign and Chelsea’s woes have continued, he has now concluded his
players are at fault.
Their ability to produce results and performances in some games but not show up for others have strengthened his belief.
Mourinho
has called out individual players at various points during the season
but his frustration with his squad as a whole boiled over when he
slammed them publicly and at length after the Leicester defeat.
He said:
“One of my best qualities is that I can read the game and identify the
strengths of the opponent and tell my players what they are. So it it is
a big frustration to accept the goals [Leicester scored] because my
work was betrayed, if that is the right word.
“In the situations I identify, we concede the first and second goal. The mistakes were there.
“One
possibility is that I did an amazing job last season and brought the
players to a level that is not their level and now they can’t maintain
it.”
Mourinho’s treatment of controversial striker Diego Costa is believed to be another source of friction.
Some
members of Chelsea’s squad are believed to feel Spain international
striker Costa gets away with things others wouldn’t be allowed to.
The 27-year-old admitted he returned for pre-season overweight, but went unpunished.
He also had a public bust-up with Mourinho during last month’s Champions League clash with Maccabi Tel-Aviv.
Sub standard: Costa's bib-throwing, and other misdemeanors, have gone unpunished
Costa was also the last of Chelsea’s out-of-form stars to be
dropped, despite being arguably one of their least effective players
this season.
And when he was benched against Tottenham, Costa produced another public show of dissent, chucking his substitute's bib in Mourinho’s direction when he didn’t get on - an action that also went unpunished.
Mourinho has admitted this season that he has treated Costa differently and given him leeway with “little things”.
Eden Hazard is expected to be available for Saturday’s game with fellow strugglers Sunderland after going off with a bruised hip on Monday.
To the frustration of Mourinho, the reigning players' and writers' footballer of the year told his manager he couldn’t continue once he suffered the injury.
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