Chelsea coach, Jose Mourinho is not happy with the Football Association in England.
* Mourinho
The
Portuguese, who likes to be addressed as the special one, believes
there is no need to change the regulations governing coaches’ technical
areas in the wake of Alan Pardew’s clash with Hull’s David Meyler.
Newcastle manager Pardew is facing punishment after admitting an FA charge of head-butting the Hull midfielder.
Pardew’s
actions were condemned by the League Managers’ Association chief
executive Richard Bevan who revealed the design of touchline technical
areas is currently under review.
But Chelsea manager Mourinho, who
was charged after a touchline clash with Barcelona assistant coach Tito
Vilanova when he was in charge of Real Madrid, insists the current
arrangement works well.
“I don’t think change is needed. I never had a problem to share a short space with other managers,” Mourinho said on Friday.
“In many stadiums, it looks like there’s only one dug-out for everybody and that’s not a problem.
“The manager should have that freedom to come out and speak with the players, to walk in the technical areas.
“The
problem is human nature, and the human nature is open to mistakes. I
made mistakes in technical areas, too. I paid for those mistakes. I was
suspended for those mistakes. Every one of us can make mistakes.”
Mourinho
refused to condemn Pardew’s behaviour and insisted the Newcastle
manager is not the hot-headed character some describe him as.
“In the specific case of Alan, it was a mistake we’re not used to seeing,” he said.
“He’s
going to pay for it. In my case, when I had situations in the dug-outs,
the biggest punishment is not the money or the matches you’re outside,
but ‘you’ recognising yourself that you made a mistake.
“That’s
the worst punishment, feeling you made a mistake. So it’s fair for
people like me, saying what they really feel, say he’s a great guy, a
good friend, and that’s more important than the mistake.”
READ MORE: http://news.naij.com/61224.html
READ MORE: http://news.naij.com/61224.html
No comments:
Post a Comment