José Mourinho sacked for the Second time by Chelsea
José Mourinho, 52-year-old has been dismissed with Chelsea 16th in the
division and one point above the relegation zone following a dismal run of nine
defeats in 16 games. He has been sacked by Chelsea for a second time, just
seven months after winning the Premier League.
Sources suggests that José was called to the training ground at Cobham
to a meeting with chairman Bruce Buck and director Eugene Tenenbaum earlier on
Thursday afternoon, which lasted no longer than 10 minutes.
And at 2pm his second spell as Chelsea manager was brought to an end
after 30 months and 136 games, despite delivering his third and the club's
fourth Premier League title by an eight-point margin in May.
Chelsea may have a replacement lined
up but Carlo Ancelotti, who led Chelsea to a Premier League and FA Cup
double in 2010 before being sacked the following season, is not being
considered with Guus Hiddink, another former Blues boss, the favourite to take
over on a temporary basis.
Hiddink won the FA Cup with Chelsea in 2009 when he combined the role
with the Russia national team job after replacing Luiz Felipe Scolari. He is
available after being sacked as Netherlands coach towards the end of their Euro
2016 qualifying campaign.
The recent Chelsea statement states: "Chelsea Football Club and José Mourinho have today parted company by mutual consent. All at Chelsea thank José for his immense contribution since he returned as manager in the summer of
2013
"His three league titles, FA Cup, Community Shield and three League
Cup wins over two spells make him the most successful manager in our 110-year
history.
"But both José and the board agreed results have not been good
enough this season and believe it is in the best interests of both parties to
go our separate ways.
"The club wishes to make clear José leaves us on good terms and
will always remain a much-loved, respected and significant figure at Chelsea.
His legacy at Stamford Bridge and in England has long been guaranteed and he
will always be warmly welcomed back to Stamford Bridge.
"The club's focus is now on ensuring our talented squad reaches its
potential. There will be no further comment until a new appointment is
made."
It is understood that Chelsea's board met to discuss Mourinho's future following the Monday Night Football defeat at Leicester - a result
proven to have tested owner Roman Abramovich's patience beyond his limit.
Mourinho had been under increasing pressure as their worst start to a
season since 1978 began to form, with defeats to Manchester City and Crystal
Palace in August, Everton in September, Southampton, West Ham and Liverpool in
October, Stoke in November, and Bournemouth and Leicester over the last two
weeks.
Chelsea have qualified for the Champions League last 16, however, in
which they play Paris Saint-Germain, and it is understood to have eased some of
the pressure on the Portuguese for a time.
But the 2-1 defeat by league-leaders Leicester at the King Power Stadium
saw Mourinho accuse his players of a "betrayal" and there have been
widespread newspaper reports of a toxic atmosphere in the dressing room.
Mourinho has consistently defended his position throughout their
implosion, claiming back in October over the course of a seven-minute monologue
live on Sky Sports that the club
would have to sack "the best manager they have ever had" to get him
to leave Stamford Bridge again.
The majority of the club's supporters have continued to back him
vehemently at home and away matches, despite a string of issues off the field
including run-ins with the media, fines and a stadium ban from the Football
Association, and legal action from one of his
now departed staff - Eva Carneiro.
The opening-day draw at home to Swansea ended with Mourinho lambasting
first-team doctor Carneiro in-front of the stadium and the Sky Sports camera after she temporarily brought
the team down to nine men to treat the injured Eden Hazard.
The incident led to her
demotion from first-team duties and an
employer-imposed ban from the touchline, before she eventually left Chelsea
several weeks later and began legal action against both the club and the
manager.
Further public scathing from Mourinho, this time of referees in which he
branded them "weak", brought about an FA fine and a
warning as to his future conduct, but a fierce half-time
confrontation with official Jon Moss at Upton Park in October resulted
with a stadium ban for the trip to
Stoke.
Mourinho subsequently vowed not to speak his mind in public, believing
it to be to the detriment of the media, but results did not improve with his
silence, and he leaves the club after just four league wins against West Brom,
Arsenal, Norwich and Aston Villa, and three draws, this season.
BY ~ Shayan Sachin Basu & Ritesh Kanodia
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