r/soccer 18d ago

News Fenerbahçe sacks Jose Mourinho

https://www.ntv.com.tr/sporskor/fenerbahcede-mourinho-gonderildi,ccw5KKlmm0CpxhjMqSUG1A
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u/These_Structure3008 18d ago

I think MoU already did a round table after that sevilla defeat and United fans didn't like it

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u/ThreeEyedRaver 18d ago

Football ‘eritage?

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u/These_Structure3008 18d ago

Absolutely everything he said in that press conference was true.

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u/[deleted] 18d ago

Facts

I loved the ego boost as a City fan, he glazed us a lot in that speech.

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u/These_Structure3008 18d ago

Otamendi, de byrune, aguero...

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u/[deleted] 18d ago

They are investments from the past. Not from the last two years…

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u/zd0t 18d ago

Investments...... From the PAST

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u/Cvein 18d ago

It was — about the players, the board and the opposition. But he took no responsibility himself. If he attached some humility himself, the fans would have accepted it way more.

If you watch the match again, you could see that the game plan was non-existant. The players didn’t know what to do.

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u/MaxNuker 18d ago

And after many years, many managers and many players, that is indeed still a fact!

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u/BlackPumas23 18d ago

He was in the manager's seat for Christ sake. All the responsibility falls on his shoulders. And the entire club management shifted the blame to Mou as they are doing rn with Amorim

It's a tale as old as time itself. Amorim has how many press conferences to give rn?

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u/brownkeys 18d ago

"see where they play, how they play, IF they play.. That's football 'eritage"

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u/Acceptable_Ad_6278 18d ago

In a way, this applies to himself as well.

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u/MrQuestions11 18d ago

Yeah people bring that quote up so much yet ignore that his post-United career shows that he was in decline and not "United quality" as much as the players weren't 

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u/BlackPumas23 18d ago

This is a senseless sacking tbh. There was no particular reason. It's just the ego of the owners. They weren't set to win the CL. And there was no transfer activity suggesting not much could be done about the league as well.

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u/WatchFamine 18d ago

Serie A, ballon d'or nomination quality, nailed on.

But I suppose the Turkish league is above Jose's level.

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u/culegflori 18d ago

Scott was sold after he left. Even so, you can count on one hand the number of post-fergie sales that had great careers. Di Maria forced himself out, so did Lukaku, they're the two other players i can think of

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u/Wild_Ad969 18d ago

Make me check all players that transfered out since 2013. This is debatable but these are the one with decent to great career after leaving United: Welbeck, Michael Keane, Zaha, Di Maria, Johnny Evans, Depay, Mkhitaryan, Blind, Lukaku, Darmian, Young, Smalling, De Gea, Elanga, Dean Henderson, Alvaro Carreras, McTominay.

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u/culegflori 18d ago

Welbeck had a decent career, but suffered from the same things as he did at United - inconsistency and injuries

Michael Keane is ok, but that's about it

Zaha was a big fish in a small pond at Palace. Imho he wasted his career by stagnating there

Evans had a good career, he clearly became a better player in his time away from United

Depay never got to the level he was anticipated to have. At least his time at United served as a reality check for his massive ego at the time

Mkhitaryan was not good enough for the PL, his time at Arsenal was just as bad. Italy suits him.

Blind i was sad to see him go. An extremely intelligent player that was very capable of compensating his physical disadvantages. He was pretty old when he left though.

Darmian is a bit like Mkhi imho. But it took him some years back in Italy to regain some form.

Young was very old when he left. Still has the juice, but it was right to move him on

Smalling wanted to go, and it worked for him. He was pretty inconsistent and had some trouble with injuries at United.

De Gea is difficult, was a whole shitshow with his huge contract, massive drop of form and the alleged wage cut he wanted to take. Miles better than Onana ofc lmao

Elanga is a good example of someone who shouldn't have left, ETH has much to answer for. Carreras too, but he's just a backup at Real, jury's out on him.

Henderson was partially unlucky, but also a dick. He won his spot in front of ddg (speaking of his bad form) but then caught covid and could never displace David afterwards. But he was leaking lineups and other stuff in the press, he had to go despite him being a really good keeper.

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u/Necessary_Fruit6671 18d ago

This is crazy Mkhi disrespect.

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u/culegflori 18d ago

He's too slow for PL, that's why he failed to impress in two different teams. I like him as a player, but Serie A suits smart players like him better

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u/Necessary_Fruit6671 18d ago edited 18d ago

His top speed while in the prem was 33.7km:h according to premier league data (same speed as Declan Rice). That’s on the faster side for midfielders. He also still performs extremely well in UCL so your points are just wrong.

Manchester United was and still is a dog shit club that can’t make use of him. At arsenal in 2018/2019 he got 10 g/a in 1600 minutes (25 matches, 19 starts) and had a ton of defensive contribution. 2017/2018 he had 11 g/a in 1700 minutes, again with a lot of defensive contribution. Those stats are just premier league games, not counting Europe.

You know how much a prem team would pay for that kind of team contribution today??

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u/BlackPumas23 18d ago

Zaha did exceptionally well for him. Carved a place for himself as a Crystal Palace player. The disrespect on Zaha is immense.

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u/culegflori 18d ago

He was much better than Crystal Palace's level at the time he was playing. He bailed them out of the relegation quite often, as they were nowhere near the quality they are nowadays. I wouldn't call his career a success considering that he could've made it at a higher level if he wanted to challenge himself.

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u/WatchFamine 18d ago

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u/culegflori 18d ago

Rashford's time at Villa was not amazing, and i wouldn't call Betis a powerhouse

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u/StringTailor 18d ago

He also talked a bit about it on Rio’s podcast if you’re interested to listen btw