
Jose Mourinho insists Manchester United
will get back on track at Watford in the Premier League on Sunday after
successive defeats ruined a promising start to his reign.
United won the Community Shield and
reeled off three consecutive Premier League wins to raise hopes
Mourinho’s influence had quickly revitalised a team that stumbled to a
fifth-place finish under Louis van Gaal last season.
But the size of the rebuilding job
facing Mourinho has been laid bare over the last week as his arch rival
Pep Guardiola led Manchester City to a 2-1 win over United at Old
Trafford before Feyenoord clinched a shock 1-0 victory in the Europa
League on Thursday.
United were well below their best
against Feyenoord and another loss at Vicarage Road this weekend would
leave Mourinho with some awkward questions to answer for the first time
since he took charge.
The United manager conceded the mood in
the squad was no longer quite so buoyant, but he is confident his
players will put their recent struggles behind them this weekend.
“I think the game on Sunday will be an independent game. It is a new event,” Mourinho said.
“It starts minute zero at 0-0 so I think it has nothing to do with the previous two matches.
“But obviously when you lose matches the mood, the feeling, is not the same. That’s normal.
“But I think we are experienced players
and the players are very good guys and I know they want to win and work,
so that’s what we have to do.”
With the critics sharpening their
knives, Mourinho insists losing to a strong City side and suffering a
narrow loss with a much-changed team against Feyenoord is no reason for
panic among the United faithful.
“To be honest, I think we didn’t play
phenomenal matches in these two defeats, but in both I think it is a
punishment for the team because we deserved more than the results we
got,” said Mourinho, who should recall Wayne Rooney and Zlatan
Ibrahimovic after the forwards were left out of the starting line-up
against Feyenoord.
“When we won the Community Shield and the three Premier League matches, I was not on the moon.
“I was not saying that we are a phenomenal team and we are going to destroy every opponent.
“I always said it was a very good start
but I was never on the moon. I know that the situation is not click your
fingers and everybody is perfect.”
– Provocateur –Even so, he could do with an influential performance from France midfielder Paul Pogba against Watford after the world record signing’s latest underwhelming performance in midweek.
“I don’t like to individualise too much.
I think he was like the team. In the first half they were in control
but were playing half pace,” Mourinho said.
“The second half was when they increased intensity and that was when they conceded the goal.”
After locking horns with Guardiola last
weekend, Mourinho comes up against another manager he has antagonised in
the past in Watford’s Walter Mazzarri.
Mazzarri coached Sampdoria and Napoli
during Mourinho’s reign at Inter Milan and the Italian got hot under the
collar when the Portuguese provocateur said of him that “a donkey can
work hard but will never become a thoroughbred”.
At the time, Mazzarri dismissed him for
talking “rubbish, so much rubbish”, but now he says he doesn’t hold a
grudge and plans to offer Mourinho a post-match drink on Sunday.
“I have a very good relationship with
Mourinho. Sometimes the press look at what happens in Italy; the same
with Antonio Conte and Mourinho,” Mazzarri said.
“It’s normal when you fight for top
positions that it happens but I have a very good relationship; a strong
relationship with him.
“There is professional respect. Of course I’ll invite him for a drink. No problem.”
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