5 MAJOR ISSUES MANCHESTER UNITED BOSS MOURINHO MUST SOLVE TO REGAIN CONTROL OF UNITED'S DESTINY AS WELL AS HIS OWN
The Portuguese needs
to regain control of United's destiny as well as his own, and there are a
number of areas he must address After yet another chaotic week full of
recrimination and disaffection, Manchester
United desperately need to get back to winning ways
against West Ham United at
London Stadium on Saturday.
With his relationship
with Paul Pogba making new headlines over the past seven days, Jose Mourinho’s
long list of issues to resolve at Old Trafford seemingly gets longer by the
day.
The Portuguese’s
future is being questioned as he looks to find a way out of the current
malaise, which sees United having been dumped out of the Carabao Cup by Derby
and takes them to east London with an eight-point gap to the top of the
table to set about closing.
PAUL POGBA
The clash of egos between Mourinho and
Pogba has now become the single most concerning issue for Manchester United
fans, with the rift beginning to get so bad there is the serious potential for
divisive factions to appear in the first-team squad setup.
With the first cracks having
begun to appear in the 2-0 loss at Tottenham in January, the Pogba-Mourinho
narrative has practically dominated the landscape for a full eight months now,
and if the manager is to regain control and authority around the training
ground then he has to find a resolution to the impasse.
His falling-out with Iker
Casillas proved to be too big an issue to bury at Real Madrid, and if the 55-year-old does not
learn from that lesson and solve his current problems with Pogba then there is
every chance that this affair will be the beginning of the end of his United
spell.
“Manchester United is bigger
than anyone and I have to defend that,” he said of his decision to take the
vice-captaincy from Pogba on Friday. “I think Paul said that in one of his
appearances in the famous mixed zone and he is exactly correct. It is a good
relationship, of player and manager.”
For the sake of Manchester
United and his own future, he must ensure that his relationship with Pogba
really is workable.
ALEXIS SANCHEZ
It must not go unnoticed in the midst of
the Pogba feud that Alexis Sanchez has so far failed to deliver the promised
performances since arriving at the club in the January transfer window.
While the Pogba situation,
Mourinho’s difficulties with the board, question marks over Anthony Martial and
other such issues have left the club sitting on the verge of one problem or
another throughout the Chilean’s United career so far, it is fair to have
expected much more from him.
“He will bring his ambition,
drive and personality, qualities that make a Manchester United player and a
player that makes the team stronger and the supporters proud of their club
dimension and prestige,” Mourinho said of Sanchez when he was signed.
However, the 29-year-old’s
style of play has seemed stunted by United’s approach and he has yet to find a
way to positively affect the game.
It is now up to the manager
to find a way to get the best out of Sanchez, otherwise the board will want to
know what exactly they are getting for their near-£400,000 weekly investment.
RESULTS
Ultimately, results are almost
always the deciding factor in any manager’s career, but Mourinho appears
to need them right now to provide justification of his methods.
Having had difficulties with
players such as Pogba, Luke Shaw, Henrikh Mkhitaryan and Anthony Martial during
his United spell, it has been his record for delivering trophies which has
always been held up as the single most outstanding reason to keep Mourinho in a
job, and with the latest potential civil war comes another spell during which
consistency of results must be achieved.
If January arrives with
Mourinho struggling to maintain order in his squad and with results going
against him, then executive vice-chair Ed Woodward and the board are likely to
think more than twice about providing him funds to strengthen the ranks.
Alternatively, a run of
positive results between now and then would give him a much
healthier bargaining position when it comes to deciding on the makeup of
his squad beyond January.
Without a great run of form,
Mourinho loses his position of power.
ERIC BAILLY & THE CENTRE OF
DEFENCE
Speaking of power in the market,
Mourinho was somewhat denuded by Woodward’s briefing to press in August which
revealed that the board had refused to spend further money on centre-back
targets in the summer as none of them were deemed any better than the existing
alternatives.
Mourinho started the season
with Eric Bailly and Victor Lindelof as his first-choice pairing but that
lasted all of two games, and the sight of Ander Herrera lining up in a back
three against Tottenham felt like little more than an attempt to publicly undermine
Woodward.
With Chris Smalling and
Lindelof now the preferred duo but both benefitting from the extra protection
when Marouane Fellaini plays, the manager still hasn’t come up with a permanent
resolution and must do so quickly if their defensive record is to improve and
further confidence is to be injection into the squad.
There have been rumours that
a fall-out with Bailly is to blame for the Ivorian’s lack of game-time of late,
but regardless of the exact reason it is imperative that Mourinho begins to get
the best out of the defenders at his disposal.
CONTROLLING THE MESSAGE
Jose Mourinho has always been known as
somebody who relishes the tussle away from the pitch just as much as the battle
on it.
“When I go to the press
conference before a game, in my mind the game has already started,” Mourinho
once said of his approach to media duties while head coach of Porto.
“When I go to a press
conference after a game, the game hasn’t finished yet. Or if the game has
finished, the next one has already started.”
But over time, his media tactics have
lost traction thanks in part to the growth of social media. Whereas during his
time at Porto, his first Chelsea spell and at Inter he was able to
largely control the message which was emanating from the club, there is little
he can do to stop opposing feelings and opinions spilling into the public
domain in 2018.
It is a thankless task for a club like
Manchester United to be able to keep everything in-house these days, as proven
so far this season with Pogba’s numerous barbed quotes. Mourinho needs to find
a way to regain some control in the public domain, and that looks far from
likely when even Woodward has been briefing against him of late.
If Mourinho can once again become the
one dictating the message, then he might have a chance of replicating his
successes of old. But without that control, he becomes a very different
prospect.









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