Mourinho unbowed as Chelsea crisis worsens

Chelsea's Portuguese manager Jose Mourinho (3rd R) stands with his coaching staff (L-R) Carlos Lalin, Silvino Louro, Jose Morais, Rui Faria and Steve Holland, on the pitch after during the English Premier League football match between Chelsea and Liverpool at Stamford Bridge in London on October 31, 2015. Liverpool won the game 3-1. PHOTO|AFP

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Liverpool’s win, inspired by a brace from Philippe Coutinho, condemned Chelsea to their sixth defeat in 11 league games and left the reigning champions just four points above the Premier League relegation zone in 15th place.

London. Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho vowed to plough on attempting to resurrect his team’s desperate season despite a 3-1 home defeat by Liverpool creating yet more scrutiny of his position.

Liverpool’s win, inspired by a brace from Philippe Coutinho, condemned Chelsea to their sixth defeat in 11 league games and left the reigning champions just four points above the Premier League relegation zone in 15th place.

But despite reports suggesting that he is at risk of the sack, Mourinho does not think that he has presided over his last Chelsea match and said that he would soon be turning his thoughts to Wednesday’s Champions League home game against Dynamo Kiev.

“I go home, I go to find a sad family,” he told journalists at Stamford Bridge on Saturday after being asked what the immediate future held for him.

“I will try to watch some of the rugby (World Cup final) and disconnect a little bit from this.

“Then I will start preparing the training session for tomorrow (Sunday) morning and the game for Wednesday.”

Chelsea looked to have put their recent woes behind them when Ramires celebrated his new four-year contract by heading in Cesar Azpilicueta’s cross in the fourth minute on a sunny Halloween afternoon in west London.

But Coutinho curled home a fine equaliser with his left foot in first-half stoppage time and then put Liverpool ahead in the 74th minute before substitute Christian Benteke sealed the champions’ fate.

Chelsea’s defenders stood off Coutinho and Benteke for the two late goals that decided the game, but Mourinho, who substituted Eden Hazard in the 58th minute after another off-colour display, said he was in “no doubt” that the players were still behind him.

Characteristically, he reserved his sharpest criticism for referee Mark Clattenburg, who elected not to show Liverpool midfielder Lucas Leiva a second yellow card for a clear trip on Ramires in the second half.

Mourinho said that he could not fully articulate his complaints for fear of being “punished by the FA”, which has already fined him for criticising referees this season, but he challenged the reporters present to shed light on the perceived injustices.

- ‘Are you crazy?’ -

“You are all intelligent guys,” said the Portuguese, whose side were also knocked out of the League Cup by Stoke City last week. “If you want to write, you write.

“Next press conference I will bring you nice glasses, maybe you see the game in a better way. Or I give you some five percent of personality so you can say what you see, you are not afraid of it.”

The focus on Mourinho took some of the attention away from Jurgen Klopp, who registered his first league victory as Liverpool manager.

The German conceded that Lucas may have been fortunate to avoid a red card, but he refused to be drawn on suggestions that Chelsea striker Diego Costa might have been sent off for kicking out at long-time nemesis Martin Skrtel.

Asked if he felt sympathy for Mourinho, the former Borussia Dortmund coach replied: “Of course I feel for him. He’s a great coach.

“I don’t think anyone in this room is in doubt that he is one of the best managers in the world. But things like this happen.

“I had a similar situation in Dortmund last year. The good thing was nobody in the club was in doubt about my position, so I never felt pressure from I don’t know where. So we could change the situation.

“The quality of the players of Chelsea, we don’t have to talk about this. Of course they change it. I feel for him, of course, but it’s work and he will change it.”

Liverpool are unbeaten in Klopp’s five games at the helm and have climbed to seventh place in the league table, but he reacted with incredulity when it was put to him that his side could challenge for the title.

Mourinho’s position has come under intense scrutiny on account of his team’s desperate form, with some reports suggesting he is close to being sacked, and Liverpool’s supporters goaded him with chants of: “You’re getting sacked in the morning!”

But when asked if he thought he had presided over the last game of his second stint at Chelsea, he replied: “No, I don’t.”

He also replied in the affirmative when asked if he thought he would be given time to turn the situation around by owner Roman Abramovich. Returning to a well-worn theme, Mourinho suggested that his team had been the victims of poor refereeing decisions, but said that he would be “punished by the FA” for speaking his mind.

Mourinho was fined £50,000 ($76,560, 69,370 euros) and given a suspended one-game stadium ban by the FA earlier this month for criticising the referee following his side’s 3-1 home defeat by Southampton.

He is also facing a misconduct charge after being sent to the stands during last weekend’s 2-1 loss at West Ham United.

The 52-year-old was aggrieved that Coutinho’s first goal, which cancelled out Ramires’s fourth-minute opener, had been scored after the scheduled two minutes of first-half stoppage time had elapsed and that Lucas Leiva had avoided a second yellow card for a trip on Ramires.

“There are things that are out of our hands,” he said.

“Two minutes extra time, we concede the goal on two minutes 35 seconds and then what happened in the second half.

“Everything is a consequence of some crucial moments, moments that the stadium saw. The players more than see, the players feel it. From now what happens is just a consequence.”

He added: “We see it match after match that as professionals, they’re not getting the respect that they deserve.”

Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp conceded that Lucas may have been fortunate to avoid a second yellow card for felling Ramires.

I’m not sure it was a foul,” said the German, who recorded his first league win as Liverpool manager.

“If you want to win at Chelsea, you need a little bit of luck. Maybe in this situation we had a little bit of luck.

“I’m not sure, but if you tell me that it was a clear foul and 100 percent yellow card, yeah. That’s football.” (AFP)