José Mourinho Q&A: Hoping to make things special again

New manager of Manchester United has laid down ground rules of his tenure

José Mourinho takes Manchester United training ahead of the International Champions Cup game against Borussia Dortmund in Shanghai. Photograph: Getty.
José Mourinho takes Manchester United training ahead of the International Champions Cup game against Borussia Dortmund in Shanghai. Photograph: Getty.

José Mourinho was in relaxed mood as he gave his first in-depth interview as the Manchester United manager at the team hotel in Shanghai. The club is on its pre-season tour of China but he is already targeting United's 21st top-division title.

JJ: When you became Chelsea manager for the second time in summer 2013 you talked about building a dynasty. Do you wish to do the same at United?

JM: "I'm not at Chelsea because the owner didn't want me. I have the contract I have at United and for that the owners are happy. To give me a new [extended] contract I will be happy to do that because that is what I want at this moment in my career but I think it depends on many things. And I will try to do my work to make the owners realise I am the right guy for this job. But in this moment I've only played Wigan."

JJ: Having been considered as Alex Ferguson’s replacement when he retired in May 2013 do you feel it was your destiny to manage United?

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JM: I never thought about it really. The only thing I thought is that every club I was at I was always playing against Man United – with Porto, Inter, Real Madrid, always, Champions League matches, big matches, then with Chelsea to decide the title, FA Cup finals.

I’ve played so many times against United and what I felt was – and you know this is not easy with me – so many matches and no problems. It’s very difficult to play against a club so many times and I have no problems. Not a yellow card, not a red card, not a strange quote, not an offensive word. I won a lot of times but I also lost and there were not any negative comments.

JJ: How about when you first played United as Porto coach in 2004 in the Champions League? Ferguson was unhappy at Roy Keane’s sending off.

JM: That was him [Ferguson] , not me! So I always had that good feeling and I think the fans feel the same. I remember playing at Old Trafford and the way to the dugout was always nice. It was never like in other stadiums. There was always a connection. Then can you end up being their manager one day or not? I always felt what has to happen happens and it happened so.

JJ: United have not won the title since 2013. What would it mean to you to return the club to the top?

JM: It is more important for the club and the fans than me – that is the way I have to look at it. The club is much more important than me, the fans are much more important than me so it's not for me. I'm not working for me, I'm working for the club, for the fans. That's the way I look at things.

Can it be nice for my career to win trophies in every club? That would be amazing, to be champion in every club would be amazing, but that’s an individual selfish perspective that I don’t want. I work for the club, the club brought me here because they trust me. I have the feeling – of course not everyone, I guess – that the majority of the supporters they trust me, they believe that I can help the club.

I have the feeling that the players want me. I’m not saying they didn’t want Mr Van Gaal, I’m saying that since I arrived I feel that they are very fine with me and my way of leading and my way of work. But I want just to see my things in this way of perspective and let’s enjoy the season because a big season is waiting for us.

JJ: Zlatan Ibrahimovic is 35 in October. Can he perform in the Premier League?

JM: Yes, because first of all I know him very well [from coaching him at Internazionale in 2009/'10]. I always think there's our age in ID terms but then there's our real age because for me the real age is not the age on your ID. That's just a date when you were born. The real age, the real ID is your body, your brain, your attitude and this guy is young, his body is amazing.

The way he grew up playing the sports he did before football, especially martial arts, he was prepared in terms of his muscles and the mental point of view in a different way to the traditional football player, his DNA, his motivation. Let’s be honest, he’s very rich. He’s made money all his career, he’s won a lot of things, you only come to the most difficult championship in the world if you feel you can do it. If you don’t feel you can do it you go to America, China, stay in the French league one more season. So the guy wanted this one more challenge.

When I told him that I had won in England, Spain and Italy and he hadn’t, that he’d done Spain, Italy and France, he thought: “Ahh, I want to go. I want to win every one.” So his motivation is high. His body is amazing. On Sunday he is going to start a specific programme we have prepared before he joins our group on the Thursday so he has five days just for him. So I expect he is going to be very good for us.

JJ: Can the rest of your squad feed off Ibrahimovic’s attitude?

JM: Sometimes people say the team has no leaders, it's this, it's that, but what we need is everybody with the same kind of mentality. I like communication and push them to communicate. I give a lot of instruction in training. It's difficult for me to do the same in matches so I need guys on the pitch to read the game, to understand what we want. Zlatan is going to be one of them and I feel already we have guys to do the same.

I don’t think we’re going to have a problem at that level. We have lots of quality. When I see our group in the attacking areas: Zlatan, Rashford, Rooney, Mkhitaryan, Mata, all the wingers we have. I think we have lots of quality in attack to produce good football and score goals.

JJ: What are your first impressions of the squad?

JM: As we know not every player is here working yet but I was impressed. I'm not surprised because I think at this level players are professional, they want to work, but I was impressed with the way they were working. Even here in Shanghai we have had two training sessions where it's very easy not to work well, it's very easy to be affected by the weather, by the pitch which is dry and slow, it's very easy to say: "I've got jet lag, I didn't sleep very well." And Wednesday we'd arrived, had lunch, had commercial duties but the training in the first session was fantastic.

So the attitude is very good, the appetite is very good, they want to work, they want to improve and they need to work a lot really because the most difficult thing in football that I’ve found during my career is when I go to a new club and I need to change the dynamic, the way of thinking, things that the players do automatically.

Maybe some managers after me at clubs find the same thing if they’re not happy with the dynamic of the team. This is quite hard for the players because they become quite automatic in their way of thinking so to change some dynamics is not easy. They must be very focused.

The last couple of days Rooney, Smalling and Rashford have brought a different plus in quality because they replaced some players who stayed back at home. On Sunday even before we arrive back in Manchester I will send two of my coaches to start working with the other players. Step by step we are going to do the puzzle but it’s easy to feel that they want it and that’s very important.

JJ: You sold Mata from Chelsea to United for £37.5m in January 2014. Does he have a future under you?

JM: I sold because he asked for that. Nobody in my previous club wanted to sell or push him. He wanted to leave and my philosophy is I don't want players that want to leave. I want players that want to come and want to stay. But I think since the first day everything is clear between us. There is space for him.

He’s a talented player and I don’t promise places to anyone. I promise respect and I like him so if he wants to stay and I think he wants – until this moment I don’t have one little sign that he wanted to leave – so he wants to stay and yes, there is space for him and, yes, I think he can be useful to the club.”

JJ: If you obtain your fourth and final player – if it’s not Paul Pogba or another one – are you confident that by May United will be challenging for the title?

JM: I don't know but I want. I'm not going to hide behind three bad seasons, three bad championships, behind two seasons not even with the fourth-place finish. I'm not going to hide behind that, I'm not going to hide also in that fourth is the target and everything better than that is amazing for us. No, I want to win the title and I want my players to feel.

JJ: Is Rooney going to remain your captain?

JM: Of course.