Pep, Jose resume hostilitiesOne of football’s most enthralling rivalries will not take place on the pitch but rather in the dugouts of the two Manchester clubs. Duo to feature strongly in derby duel Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho and his Manchester City adversary Pep Guardiola rekindle a rivalry 20 years in the making in this weekend’s hotly anticipated Manchester derby.
Friends who became foes, Mourinho and Guardiola represent opposite ends of football’s ideological spectrum and their on-going grudge match has shaped the game’s recent history.
It is three years since they last shared a touchline and tomorrow’s clash at Old Trafford marks the resumption of a duel that could determine the outcome of the Premier League title race.
“He (Guardiola) left Barcelona for a number of reasons,” former Liverpool defender Jamie Carragher wrote in the Daily Mail when Mourinho was appointed by United in May.
“But one of them, I’m sure, is the continual baiting to which he was subjected by Mourinho in the media.
“It is inevitable, at some point, that theme will return. Guardiola must be thinking: ‘Oh no, not him again.’” Though renowned for their different demeanours, the pragmatic Mourinho, 53, and the idealistic Guardiola, 45, have both shown a capacity for ruthlessness in their early days in Manchester.
Mourinho has side lined experienced German midfielder Bastian Schweinsteiger, while Guardiola’s benching of Joe Hart forced the popular goalkeeper to leave City for Torino.
Both men have also delivered impressive initial results, leaving their clubs neck-and-neck on nine points - along with Chelsea - after the first three games of the season.
Ahead of the current campaign, both managers were at pains to play down the significance of their rivalry.
“In the Premier League, if I focus on him and Manchester City, and he on me and Manchester United, someone else is going to win the league,” Mourinho said.
Guardiola said managers like Mourinho pushed him to “reach another level”.
But the gloves will come off when the referee’s whistle sounds at Old Trafford.
The presence of the swaggering Zlatan Ibrahimovic in United’s forward line only adds spice to the blend.
Ibrahimovic, who has scored four goals in four games for United since joining from Paris Saint-Germain, has played for both men and has very different opinions about each of them.
Ibrahimovic played under Mourinho for only one season at Inter, winning the 2008-09 Italian title, but described him as someone “I was basically willing to die for”.
He branded Guardiola, who side lined him at Barcelona the following season, a “spineless coward”.
Manchester is about to find out whether the city is big enough for both of them.
NAMPA/AFP
Friends who became foes, Mourinho and Guardiola represent opposite ends of football’s ideological spectrum and their on-going grudge match has shaped the game’s recent history.
It is three years since they last shared a touchline and tomorrow’s clash at Old Trafford marks the resumption of a duel that could determine the outcome of the Premier League title race.
“He (Guardiola) left Barcelona for a number of reasons,” former Liverpool defender Jamie Carragher wrote in the Daily Mail when Mourinho was appointed by United in May.
“But one of them, I’m sure, is the continual baiting to which he was subjected by Mourinho in the media.
“It is inevitable, at some point, that theme will return. Guardiola must be thinking: ‘Oh no, not him again.’” Though renowned for their different demeanours, the pragmatic Mourinho, 53, and the idealistic Guardiola, 45, have both shown a capacity for ruthlessness in their early days in Manchester.
Mourinho has side lined experienced German midfielder Bastian Schweinsteiger, while Guardiola’s benching of Joe Hart forced the popular goalkeeper to leave City for Torino.
Both men have also delivered impressive initial results, leaving their clubs neck-and-neck on nine points - along with Chelsea - after the first three games of the season.
Ahead of the current campaign, both managers were at pains to play down the significance of their rivalry.
“In the Premier League, if I focus on him and Manchester City, and he on me and Manchester United, someone else is going to win the league,” Mourinho said.
Guardiola said managers like Mourinho pushed him to “reach another level”.
But the gloves will come off when the referee’s whistle sounds at Old Trafford.
The presence of the swaggering Zlatan Ibrahimovic in United’s forward line only adds spice to the blend.
Ibrahimovic, who has scored four goals in four games for United since joining from Paris Saint-Germain, has played for both men and has very different opinions about each of them.
Ibrahimovic played under Mourinho for only one season at Inter, winning the 2008-09 Italian title, but described him as someone “I was basically willing to die for”.
He branded Guardiola, who side lined him at Barcelona the following season, a “spineless coward”.
Manchester is about to find out whether the city is big enough for both of them.
NAMPA/AFP