Advertisement
Jose Mourinho, Real Madrid manager. Francesca Ceciarini/CORDON/Press Association Images
Pressure

Confirmed: Jose Mourinho to step down as Real Madrid manager

Florentio Perez met the media at the club’s Bernabeu stadium this evening.

Updated at 20.46

JOSE MOURINHO WILL leave Real Madrid at the end of the season after a turbulent three-year spell in charge of the Spanish giants, club president Florentino Perez confirmed Monday.

“After the conversations we have had with our coach Jose Mourinho we have arrived at an agreement to end our working relationship at the end of this season,” Perez told a press conference.

“The coach and the club agreed this is the right moment. I want to thank Jose Mourinho for the work he has done in the last few years.”

Mourinho, who has been strongly linked with a return to Chelsea – a team he managed between 2004 and 2007, has endured a torrid final season in charge of Los Blancos culminating in Friday’s defeat by Atletico Madrid in the Copa del Rey final that ensured Real end the season without a major trophy.

However, Perez denied that Mourinho had been sacked by the club and said they will not have to pay the Portuguese coach compensation despite the fact his current contract runs until 2016.

“No one has sacked anyone, it has been a mutual agreement,” Perez said.

“It is not nice for anyone to have to leave but it is also true that after three years we both decided it was the right moment to break this relationship.”

And despite rumours linking Paris Sant-Germain boss Carlo Ancelotti with the manager’s job at the Bernabeu, Perez also claimed he has not reached an agreement with any coach to succeed Mourinho.

“I want to clarify that we have not established any agreement or pre-contract with any coach. This is a job we have ahead of us in the coming days,” he said.

“I want to show my maximum respect to PSG, their president and all the clubs.”

The 50-year-old Mourinho’s time in charge of the nine-time European champions has been littered with high profile bust-ups with the local media and many of his stellar squad of world class players, but Perez hailed his demanding standards throughout his time in charge.

“He is a very demanding coach, with himself and with the rest and this wears you down,” he said.

“The important thing is that we have recovered the level that we didn’t have before.”

Mourinho’s time in charge did have its successes as he guided Real to the Spanish title last season and won the club’s first Copa del Rey for 20 years back in 2011.

Los Blancos also reached three Champions League semi-finals under Mourinho, but ultimately it was his failure to lead Real to their treasured 10th European title that will mark his legacy in the Spanish capital.

The Portuguese was heavily criticised for his overly defensive approach in a number of meetings with eternal rivals Barcelona during his first year in charge as Madrid were humbled 5-0 at the hands of the Catalans and also dumped out of the Champions League by Barca in a bad tempered semi-final.

The following season was to prove Mourinho’s best in Spain as Real finally overcame Pep Guardiola’s all-conquering Barcelona side on the domestic front to claim their first title in four years.

It was also a title won in style as Real racked up 121 goals and a record 100 points.

Mourinho’s generally successful first two years in charge has now been blotted by a disruptive final season when he seemed to be in constant conflict with senior members of his squad.

Sergio Ramos and Mesut Ozil were singled out early in the campaign as Real started slowly on the domestic front to hand Barcelona an early advantage in the league which they have never relinquished.

Thereafter, club icon Iker Casillas became the subject of the former Chelsea boss’ ire as he was dropped in favour of Diego Lopez and hasn’t played at all since January.

Madrid’s season did briefly come together in seven days as February turned into March with victories over Barca in the Copa del Rey and Manchester United in the Champions League.

However, after also getting beyond Galatasaray, Mourinho’s Madrid were once again eliminated in the semi-finals of the Champions League as this time a 4-1 hammering at the hands of Borussia Dortmund in the first-leg gave them too much of a mountain to climb in the return despite a late rally to win 2-0 on the night.

And Madrid’s miserable campaign was completed by a first defeat at the Santiago Bernabeu in 17 months in the cup final as Atleti won a derby for the first time in 14 years to force Mourinho to accept it had been the “worst season of his career”.

Additional reporting by Paul Fennessy

- © AFP, 2013

Player ratings: How Trap’s Ireland squad got on for their clubs this season>

Gareth Bale set to sign new £130,000-a-week contract with Spurs – reports>

Your Voice
Readers Comments
38
    Submit a report
    Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
    Thank you for the feedback
    Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.