A lot of people don’t still know that all it took was a phone call and the relationship between Former
Madrid and current Chelsea boss Jose Mourinho and then Madrid Keeper and captain Iker Casillas was
destroyed once and for all.
The Real Madrid legendary
goalkeeper was on one end of the line and his Spanish compatriot and Barcelona
captain Xavi on the other.
Casillas had called
after yet another Clasico had descended into yet another ugly brawl. He was really
angry when the conversation started but his tone seemed to change as the
conversation went on with Xavi, who is one of his oldest friends in the football
realm, told him that both sides needed to think about the way they were
behaving.
The conversation however
ended in reconciliation like normal Gentle man stuff. Mourinho being “who he is”
was absolutely furious.
However Casillas and
Mourinho meet again on Tuesday night in Portugal the Chelsea bosses home
country and at the Estadio de Dragao where Mourinho was equally successful and
even won the Champions League with in the 2003/2004 final and neither has
changed his view of their three seasons together.
‘Iker deserves a lot
of credit’ said Xavi in a recent Marca interview. ‘He called me and [Carles]
Puyol. I told him that both sides had to look at themselves. He was looking out
for the interests of Spanish football.’
For Mourinho it was
treachery and I would not blame him as the Portuguese boss has a knack of
stirring up issues where there is none and blaming everyone when he loses such
a cry baby. He had decided that the only way to beat Barcelona was to make war
with them; Casillas had effectively raised the white flag.
Casillas and
Mourinho’s antagonistic relationship early in the reign of the Portuguese when arrived
at Madrid in 2010.
Casillas had just
lifted the World Cup and didn’t like Mourinho’s imposition that Madrid could
not match Barcelona by just playing football and but Rugby mixed with
kick-boxing.
For Mourinho’s
tastes Casillas while a brilliant shot-stopper lacked the physique and
personality to dominate his area and his defence. May I recall at this point
that this same Casillas prior to Mourinho moving there had been No.1 for the
Los Blancos for more than a decade and shattered a lot of records for both Club
and Country. But as time went by their differences would go much deeper.
In November
of their first season together Real Madrid lost 5-0 away to Barcelona in
what Mourinho described as ‘the worst defeat of his career’. When the
two teams met again the following April he was more determined than ever
to do things his way.
Before
the game Marca leaked Mourinho’s team line-up breaking the news that he
had pushed defender Pepe into midfield to form a formidable dogs of war
trio with Sami Khedira and Xabi Alonso.
The
game ended 1-1 but many of the Madrid players hated the tactics, and
Mourinho hated what he saw as a breach of trust with someone having
leaked the team to the press.
So
began the soap opera of the ‘Madrid mole’ with Casillas, off-message
tactically, and with a journalist girlfriend, Sara Carbonero, the chief
suspect.
Casillas and Carbonero walk through Madrid together, but their relationship led to Mourinho's mistrust |
Madrid beat Barca in
the Spanish Cup final and so when they faced each other in the Champions League
semi-finals Casillas Captained a group of players who believed that their
chance to really win Barca had appeared and he Blaugrana were now there for the
taking .
Mourinho had other
ideas though. Happy to take a goal-less draw to the Nou Camp in the second leg,
he wanted his team to sit-back and “pack the bus”. The plan however broke down
when Pepe was sent off and Lionel Messi scored twice. At this point also it is
important to note that Madrid has never been a club of that tradition,heritage
or culture to defend till death or just sit evident from most of the kind of
players they bought so somehow the plan was always doomed to fail.
Casillas was not the
only player also to disagree with Mourinho’s tactics Cristiano Ronaldo said
after the game: ‘I don’t like to play that way, but I have to adapt to what the
team asks from me.’ He was dropped for the next league game but Casillas was
still seen as chief subordinate.
In the second leg of
a bitterly-contested Spanish Super Cup at the start of the 2011-12 season
tensions came to a head with a touchline brawl following a Marcelo foul on Cesc
Fabregas and included the moment when tyrant Mourinho poked then Barcelona
assistant coach Tito Vilanova in the eye.
Casillas had been as
vexed as anyone in the farce seeking out both Fabregas and Xavi but when he saw
footage of himself after the game he made the famous phone call to his
Barcelona friend Xavi the one that so infuriated Mourinho and probably was the
last straw for the Portuguese.
The stormy Super
Cups had polarised the supporters. There were those who believed Mourinho was
damaging Madrid as a club but others were glad they were now making Barcelona
sweat for their supremacy.
Casillas sought out
Mourinho in the pair’s second season together to say that for all their
differences he would give everything for the team.
Madrid won the
league but were again beaten by Barcelona in the cup with another controversy a
Pepe stamp on Messi the enduring image of another unsavoury clash, and they
lost to Bayern Munich in the Champions League semi-final.
Tensions were
brewing in the dressing room and Mourinho was loosing it as then Captain Casillas
continued to be part of a group within the squad who blamed Mourinho’s cautious
tactics for these big-match failures.
He also disliked
being told to push a certain line in post-match interviews and resented the
access and influence he felt Mourinho’s agent the all powerful Jorge Mendes who
equally is Ronaldo’s agent now enjoyed at the club.
The dislike was
mutual. In his book ‘The Special One’ prominent Spanish football journalist
Diego Torres wrote that: ‘There was a feeling that Mourinho saw him [Casillas]
as a grass, a mole, a traitor and an egoist.’
Madrid is a club
where senior players have direct access to the president and there were meetings
between Casillas and Sergio Ramos and Florentino Perez that Mourinho saw as
further demonstrations of disloyalty.
Casillas also
further made his boss so angry by saying in one interview that he possessed the
values taught him by of all people ‘Pep Guardiola’.
Ahead of their third
and final season together Mourinho felt he had really had it with the Captain
who also wielded immense influence on the team and urged the club sternly to buy
another goalkeeper. When in December Madrid were 11 points behind Barcelona he
dropped Casillas for 26-year-old reserve team keeper Antonio Adan…This was all
like normal day-day behind the scences politics.
He was left out
again in the next game against Real Sociedad but came off the bench after eight
minutes because Adan was sent off as Mourinho continued to cut down his
influential status at the Club while also trying to force the boards hand in
selling the Madrid Legend.
Half the Bernabeu
cheered him, the other half siding with Mourinho jeered that was the situation and knowing also
the influence that fans at the Bernabeu have especially when it comes to who go’s
and stay’s it seemed the boards hands where tied. So it would be for the rest
of his career in Spain even beyond Mourinho’s departure.
He lamented in a
recent El Mundo interview: ‘The important thing was to get behind the team not
make me the centre of attention, but it was the hangover from the previous
era.’
When Casillas broke
a bone in his hand in that third season Mourinho finally got to sign another
keeper with Diego Lopez arriving from Sevilla.
In one press
conference he said: ‘Just as Casillas can say he would prefer another coach
such as [Vicente] Del Bosque or [Manuel] Pellegrini, I can say that I prefer
Diego Lopez. And while I’m the coach of Madrid, Diego Lopez will play.’
Casillas will meanwhile
have another chance to prove Mourinho wrong on Tuesday night who somehow for
whatever reason seems to be a thorn in players, coaches even doctors flesh
wherever he goes.
Speaking after the
two were drawn together in the Champions League draw he showed how he was still the almost always calm, collected and decisive leader he had been for Madrid for many years saying: ‘I never spoke
publicly about him at the time and I don’t think I ever will.
'People know how it
was. In the end we just did not have a good relationship.’
1 comment:
Hahahahahaha Jose Mourinho 4 u! Agbero
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