Football Daily - That Season When . . . Jose Mourinho & Chelsea became “The Special” Club
Episode Date: April 26, 2025In June 2004, Jose Mourinho made headlines around the world by claiming ‘I think I’m a special one’ at his unveiling as Chelsea manager. Just under a year later, he lifted the Premier League tro...phy for the first time, delivering Chelsea their first league title in 50 years. Robert Huth was part of the Chelsea defence that conceded only 15 goals in the league that season – and he joins Mark Chapman, Chris Sutton and Rory Smith 20 years later to reflect on an incredible achievement. They look back on Jose Mourinho’s management style – what was it like to be coached by him? Can he be credited with bringing the 4-3-3 to English football? Hear from midfielder Claude Makelele on his role within the team and from Sir Alex Ferguson on his rivalry with Jose Mourinho. They also discuss what nearly became a domestic treble for Mourinho in his first year in English football, and remember one of the Premier League’s most memorable seasons.
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Welcome to the Inside Track with me Rick Edwards. This is the podcast that takes you inside Formula
One and Red Bull Racing like never before. And I'm Matt Magindian. Thanks to my exclusive
access I'll be getting up close and personal with the Red Bull Racing team this season.
This week we're focusing on that five second penalty for Max Verstappen.
I don't see any world in which you could say
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Twenty years ago this month Chelsea won their first top flight title in half a century.
Over the next hour we'll remember that achievement and the man who made it possible in his first
season in English football.
I'm not of the bottle, I think I'm a special one.
I think he represents the very best and will take us on from where we are today.
Anidah Johnson has scored for Chelsea, the first goal under new management, Jose Mourinho
can celebrate.
Drogba!
First goal for Chelsea for the £24m man. Shot low and this time it has got in from
Didier Rudberg. Johnson heads it back. Here's Jokel with a shot. Brilliantly hit by Cole
Mayer taking the deflection but it's into the net. Frank Lampard runs up and Frank
Lampard scores his 19th of the season straight down the middle.
Personally as a club, 19 goals is great.
I'm pleased personally that the main thing
is I've been part of a fantastic group of players,
fantastic manager, management team,
and it's been a bit like to play for Chelsea this year.
I'm not the only one.
Lovely pass from Lampard, up to Dove,
squares it, drop-off, one-nil Chelsea,
and they made it look so, so simple.
Chelsea are worthy champions because they have been remarkably consistent.
That is the most important thing in top sport.
Lampard goes in the area, holds off the defenders.
How can he get his shot in for the championship?
And he does!
Frank Lampard!
That could be the moment, which makes Chelsea officially the champions
for the first time in 50 years.
So another Premier League record for Chelsea,
conceding the lowest amount of goals, 15.
He hands the trophy now into the arms of John Terry,
who lifts it high, the Chelsea captain.
And Jose Mourinho, the man who masterminded it all.
I'm a special guy, you know.
The special one.
I'm not 100% happy with the season.
I'm a bit disappointed.
The man who's had a special and sometimes controversial impact on the season joins his Chelsea players on the podium.
I think I'm a special one.
So with us to talk about Chelsea winning that title in 2005, Rory Smith, Chris Sutton and Robert who who was part of that Premier League winning side
Can you believe it's 20 years ago? No, absolutely not and one of the producers remind me so
What we booked you it was 20 years ago Robert alright
Yeah, you know you just get on with your life don't you don't think about you don't think back about stuff
And I just get going with it, but yeah 20 years ago that hard to believe that time flow so quick
to bring a smile to your face yeah especially listening to yeah do it into
there and the special one and and all they are brings back good memories car
and I tell you what and some and some of that mix some of that commentary in
Dennis sounded an awful lot younger so Rory and Chris now throughout this hour
this isn't going to be I promise this hour this isn't going to be,
I promise you Chris, this isn't going to be laughing at your Chelsea career. So we'll
put that to one side. Right? No, we're not going to. But what's interesting is to put
this into some historical context before we even get to 2005. Because genuinely, I'm not
being sarcastic, when you signed for Chelsea in the summer of 99, it
was already about selling the idea of, right, we are going to be challenging for league
titles.
Yeah, that was the idea until they signed me in 99.
We can't do a whole hour.
Much as it would amuse me, we can't do a whole hour.
But no, you think of the players who I played with at Chelsea at that particular time, you know,
Zola, Decaille, Le Beurf, you know, George Weir, Di Matteo, Gus Poir, you know, really, really
talented group of players and they were spending money, you know, at the end of the 90s early early 2000s and and building you know to to try and
and win a title and uh yeah so that was that was that was the aim at that particular time
and then Ranieri took i think they were second under Ranieri and then uh and then the you know
the Abramovich money came in as well didn't it and then they they went to that next level.
That would have been the same thing that you were experiencing at the club as well in that it
probably started around 93 94 when they wanted to start changing things huddle and hull it and so on
and so forth into them when you were there at the club. Yeah I mean I was only 16 when I first
joined so I saw it from them from the behind the scenes really. And Viadi was there as well for a short period of time before Claudi took over.
And then obviously the famous Jesper Gronkhier goal took us into the Champions League.
I think that was a big kind of turning point.
I think Roman put his money in then.
The season after we finished second.
And then everyone was surprised how Chelsea sacked Ranieri after a good season, finishing
second to to Arsenal.
A bit of a strong move, I'd say, considering we finished second,
but hindsight obviously proved us wrong.
And Joseph came in, the special one,
and turned the club in the right direction even more.
They needed to be ruthless, didn't they, Rory?
Well, that moment that Abramovich arrives
is always presented as this great watershed for English football, which is definitely true, and for Chelsea, which I think isn't
quite right because, and Robert will have seen this on the inside and Chris to an extent
for the time he was there as well, that it did feel as though the decade building up
to Abramovich's arrival, that was the really transformational, or Chelsea's transformation
had already started, because prior to that
Chelsea were you know a kind of middle ranking
Team really in England and then they were the ones and I think you could make the case that Chelsea with a team
That made the most of that sudden influx of players from abroad in the mid 90s that they were the ones who?
Who really sold London to people like Luca Viale to Z to Zola, to, yeah, to Poiolo's players that Chris mentioned.
Being in London, being Chelsea,
having that slight historic kind of reputation
for being the kings of the Kings Road and all that stuff.
You kind of understood when Abramovich,
obviously who is a, you know, not an easy character
to present now, knowing what we know, when Abramovich was obviously who is a, you know, not an easy character to present now, knowing what we know,
when Abramovich was looking for a club, and obviously he didn't have any loyalty to Chelsea,
he wasn't a Chelsea fan or anything, he watched the Man United Real Madrid game at Old Trafford
in the Champions League and thought, I want a piece of this sport, and looking around at clubs,
he obviously wanted one in London, I think he considered Spurs, but it kind of made sense it fitted that he he went for Chelsea and
you knew as much as Ranieri was respected and
Admired and quite well liked I think generally in football and as he still is
You kind of knew that someone like Abramovich it became very clear even that first summer when they signed
Was that the year that kind of the Kesmans arrived
and Adrian Mutu and plays like that?
You knew he wasn't messing around
and he wasn't likely to stick with this manager
he'd inherited when there was someone younger and sexier
and more kind of his guy out there
and Mourinho fitted the bill perfectly
from that point of view.
Let's go back to that day, the press conference day, and then we'll get the thoughts of Robert
and Chris on his appointment. Sir Alex Ferguson will write in his autobiography that the first
time he recognised Jose Mourinho as a potential threat was at that opening press conference
as Chelsea manager, so here's a clip of that. We have top players and we have a top manager.
So we want top things for us.
But again, please don't call me arrogant because what I'm saying is true.
I'm European champion, so I'm not one of the bottle.
I think I'm a special one. I'm reading a lot of things about it. How
do you cope with the pressure? How do you cope with big players? How do you cope with
the urgent ambition to start winning titles? And that's what I love. You don't have to ask me again how do you
cope because that's what I love in football. So I think it's a big challenge for me because
of the country, because of the power that football has in this country because of the quality of every club in the Premiership
and because of the desire that Chelsea and Chelsea people has to win.
He was the European champion at the time because Porto in the Champions League final had beat a Monaco 3-0. Monaco had knocked Chelsea out in those
semi-finals. Peter Kenyon was Chelsea chief exec at the time so this is why he felt a
point in Mourinho could take them to the next level. I'm delighted I think he represents as
I said the very best and will take us on from where we are today. He was very honest there about
what's expected of him here he knows what the pressure on him is. Does he have to win trophies in
his first season? To be honest it's not about that, this is about us being
successful. The ambitions of Chelsea are quite clear, we want to build
from where we are today, we want to be more successful than we've been in our
history and we want to become a major European club. Quite ironically he was interviewing us about our ambitions and what we wanted.
I think that's a key criteria of Jose joining us. He's got a wonderful line
which is second is first of the rest and and that's his philosophy.
What was the first meeting with him like as a squad then Robert?
Pretty much the same as the press conference just full of confidence on the arrogant side I'd say but I've been in meetings before where
manager has been really confident and stuff but the most important thing is
when you step onto the pitch you know we always see a talk is cheap and listening
obviously to press conference I was looking forward to actually meeting him
whether it's fake. So did you watch that press conference before you met him as a group?
It was a big thing back in the day.
You know, he pretty much won the Champions League.
A couple of days later, he signed for us.
So, yeah, naturally, I watched it.
It was a summer break, of course I would.
And I was just watching.
I've not seen anything like it before.
Someone with so much confidence, arrogance, self-belief.
But that all transferred into the first meeting.
And then I remember I'd sit down, like things are gonna change, obviously,
new style, new coaching style.
We're not gonna do any kind of running,
which we did with Cloudy before,
was very physical, just running.
He said, we're just gonna get the balls out straight away.
And from that first session,
everyone just bought into it straight away.
Because the training was so different to what we knew.
Everyone was engaged, their brains, their legs,
their fitness, everything into one.
From the first session, we just walked in
and this is going to be fun this year.
We obviously didn't expect to win the league straight away,
but you could see the confidence even after the first session
and it just got better and better.
And once the big players joined us
from the European Championship, from the Euros,
with the Terries and all them,
it just went from really, really good group to the standard, just got higher and higher.
Do you think it made a difference?
Well, Mark, can I ask Robert one?
Yeah, of course you can.
Just, you know, after watching that, you know, his first interview when he calls himself
the special one, did, you know, the players talk about that interview?
What did, can you, I mean, it was a long time ago now, but can you remember the sort of
conversations the players had about that before that first meeting?
Yeah, of course, because you know, of course the players would talk,
they would just say, well, has he got the talent to back it up?
You know, it's all good hearing it, but you've got to back it up.
Yeah, the players, of course, they talked about it.
It was a big thing in 2004, it was all over the news outlet.
So yeah, of course the players talk about it, but you know
It's just a the way this yeah, I mean you had very different experiences with him Chris didn't you?
Well, yeah the
2003 UEFA Cup final where Porto cheated the way to victory, but I'm not bitter all these years later
But well, yeah
Well, I didn't really mean mean it in that way Rory, but they
threw themselves to the floor. Ask Martin O'Neill if you don't have to just take my
word for it. So that was a bit of a sore one, but no, he was a, you know, he clearly...
Did you shake his hand after that?
I think so, I'm not a sore loser Mark, you know, be better than that. But his Porto team were an outstanding team.
You spoke about the next season, they went on to win the
went on to win the Champions League.
They were they were really well balanced, well drilled.
You know, he signed Ferreira and Cavalio who were, you know, Cavalio.
He was he was an outstanding centre half.
We all saw it at Chelsea.
He was quick and Robert will tell you,
he was so tough. He played alongside a guy called George Costa who was sort of at
Porto who was rough and ready and Cavalier was the sort of pace at the back. He was a tremendous
signing for Chelsea. But Porto were a 4-3-3.
When he went into Chelsea, he played that sort of same style and had great success.
But the grounding he'd had at Porto and the confidence and the belief which he had in
his style and his way of management, you can see why Chelsea took him on. He also, and he talked about this afterwards, had the freedom to change his squad, to move
people out and bring people in. And when you look at how clubs have to operate now with
PSR and so on and so forth, Chelsea could basically do what, because of the Abramovich
investment they could basically do what they want. It still has to all gel of course. But he spoke about, there were
good players that he didn't want to keep, but he also wanted different players with
a different profile that could complete the puzzle in a very good way. So how would the
players he signed allow Terry to emerge as a captain? How would they allow Lampard to emerge as the maestro
in midfield? That first summer, Drogba, Carvalho, Ferreira, Robben, Thiago Mendes, Petr Cech
amongst the ones that came in, the players that went out, and some of these may not seem
that significant now, but at the time were huge really really Gronkja, Babi Yarrow, Jimmy Floyd, Zenden, Melchiot, Crespo,
Veron, I mean Veron that wasn't particularly successful in the Premier League
but that that's a lot of moving around there's some big names on their way out
with some unproven talent coming in Rory. Yeah but at the same time I think it was
recognised certainly from the outside,
what he did largely was bring in players
he knew really well.
So Carvalho and Ferreira are the two obvious ones.
That was the core of that Porto team.
So it created this impression that Chelsea had not only
gone out and signed the hottest young manager in Europe,
the guy who seemed to be cut out to be the next big thing in management,
they'd also taken the best players from the team
that was the best in Europe.
And that kind of image, that status almost,
I think it was really important to Abramovich
to have that sense that he could go and get
exactly what he wanted, as well as cherry picking
the best of the Premier League and players from Italy
and players from Spain and whatever. He could go out and say, well, that team is the best of the Premier League and players from Italy and players from Spain and whatever,
he could go out and say, right, well, that team is the best in Europe.
We'll take their centre-half, they're right back in the central midfield
at their playmaker, we'll take their manager, we'll take Drogba,
who's just basically single-handedly taken Marseille to the UEFA Cup final.
We can get this best-in-class squad together straight away.
That's exactly what success does to you, doesn't it?
It gives you that power to walk into a room with Romanov Ramovic and go,
him him in the mouth, I mean Crespo. What a striker he was,
Jimmy, you know, the 100-odd Premier League goals, just to say,
well they're not required anymore, I mean only he can do it because he's got the
charisma, obviously two big European Cups prior to joining,
only he could get away with going in and being so demanding, I don't think anyone Only he can do it because he's got the charisma, obviously two big European Cups prior to joining.
Only he could get away with going in and being so demanding.
I don't think anyone else could go to the gym and go, I want to spend 150 million.
I think that was that summer just to go, I want six, seven players and this is how we're
going to do it.
But he could.
But as you say, Jimmy Floyd was a Chelsea legend.
Hernan Craspo is Hernán Crespo.
Mourinho, when speaking about that first window, went on to say,
Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaut was a good player, but he was not Didier.
And going into the smallest detail, I would like to know how many defensive corners Didier cleared in the space on the front post.
If you go to accumulate how many times he did that and what that means
for conceding less goals, that was the details I went to of these players. So not only are
you moving on Jimmy Floyd and Heron Crespo, you're going to the people who are buying
these players for you, you're going, one of the reasons I want him at our new centre forward
is because of his defensive work. That takes some selling as well though, Robert.
Indeed, you turn into like a third centre-back in the game.
Obviously we're stoked, we're very physical.
We struggled to score against them for exactly that reason.
We couldn't move Drogba, he had like a magnet which every corner throw we put in he just had it declared, it was impossible.
But like you said, it takes a special one to sort of pick that, not just the goal scoring,
but also what he can bring on the other side of the pitch.
But he also wanted 11 players that work.
He didn't want anyone just to drag along in a game.
And the skillful kind of player,
he needed 11 workhorses and that's exactly what he signed.
And they came, go on.
Sorry, just to pick up on that.
When Mourinho goes in,
obviously he had those three players from Porto
who will have known his methods.
I would guess they would have operated as like his lieutenants almost,
kind of spreading the word to the rest of the squad.
What's his trick for getting that loyalty from the players,
for getting that kind of galaxy of stars, those big egos really, to do what he wants?
How does he pull that off?
I don't think the boys from Porto had, you know, first of all, their English wasn't that good when they first came over.
So I didn't think they had too much influence on the squad.
But just like I said earlier, I think when someone good comes in, you notice that straight away.
It didn't take any convincing of the players to sort of buy into the system.
It was a kind of natural kind of thing.
And he almost had that kind of dad figure.
You know, he treated you harshly if you made a mistake but if you did
well he kind of you know hugged you and so make sure you do it again. But
just to come back to that, he had that sort of aura about him where you knew it
was good, you knew you sort of have to follow him and it's always very easy. We had
a really good preseason in the States where we played unbelievable.
That's a good start for the season. Then the first season, I think it was Man U we beat, 3-0.
And then within six, seven weeks you've got the buy-in of the whole squad.
That in the back of the mind, you have 25 players all competing for the 11 spots.
So the competition in
the whole squad was just unbelievable because every training session was like
a fight because I wanted someone else's position they wanted to keep it and so
it just started that kind of whirlwind of competition healthy ones of we all
want to play but he was very fortunate that all the players at times he needed
players to be injured just so someone else could play and he would say to the physio
Make sure it's four weeks, not two weeks. Yeah, of course, because you know you have Robin Duff
Joe Cole all these players wanting minutes
So if someone had a bit of a hamstring tree would go and go can we make it three weeks?
Just so the other players would get
You know, so they're happy when I get dropped again
so all these kind of psychology things that he worked on worked because, you know,
you can't just play 11, 13 players when you've got 25 unbelievable players in the squad.
Chris is now thinking when he was at Chelsea, when the physio said he was out for three months,
whether there was in fact anything wrong with him.
That's very good.
Robert, what type of coach was he?
What was the type of training you did in the early days?
Was it all shape work?
Was it a mixture?
I think to start with, it was just getting used to having the ball at your feet.
You probably know the first sort of week, 10 days, you just run, don't you?
But the first week was just ball drills, passing, getting the people in the right position.
But he was very, very hands-on.
Like everything was planned from minute to minute.
We had ball boys in training that collected the balls when we did the shooting drills.
The water station in between the sessions was all set up so it was nothing wasted.
Everything was perfect.
The training session finished after 90 minutes.
It was nothing wasted.
But he was hands-on.
He was hands-on with the players players it was hands-on with his staff
so if they weren't performing to the level that he was expecting it to be he
would have a go he would send them in he'd be shouting at them if they're not
doing anything right so he would set the standard he was always I remember he
was always first in the training round first on the pitch last off the pitch
last one to leave and I mean if you've got a manager
like that you just, you know, you just buy into it, you love it.
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With Mark Chapman.
Let's hear from Quentin McAlely then next. He joined
Chelsea a year before Jose's arrival and says Mourinho came in ready to drive
the club forward. I think at this time the club want progress. They want the
best, all time the best but they choose one, convince them he can do it. I think
Jose knew strong ambition. When I come to Chelsea he knew he can do it. I think Jose knew strong ambition when I
come to Chelsea he knew he can do something but he pushed us for do his
ambition and he knew his own ambition he will be good also for the player and for
the club. Do you think it's his ambition that made him so successful throughout
his career? Yes yes I think the way the players have their own ambition, the managers also have their own ambition.
But they need to be compatible with the players, with the club.
Because some managers have their own ambitions from them, from their own career.
But José, I think he makes this for, makes successful for brings the club in different level.
And for Mourinho, obviously we see the success that he has.
How would you describe his style and especially his management style towards his players?
He's like a father with a strong character and dictator.
I think in this time he need do this because he have a young talent, not so disciplined, not so competitive.
He never won a strong trophy.
He didn't need to be like this.
And he realized he can get a lot of things from this group, this player.
He knew he would make success because he saw the character. He saw we come in the dressing room, in the training room with happiness.
Every single day.
When you have a player like this, anyway, maybe you would not win it,
but you will have success, you will win trophies.
I think he knew this.
And the discipline that you talked about, is this one of the reasons why I say to this
day you still have the best defensive record in Premier League history, conceding 15 goals
in a season? Was this a big thing for Jose?
Yeah, it's discipline for winning because we knew the beginning when we started the
game, first time we score is finished we
closed all the door what was your best moment you think in a Chelsea shirt the
first Premier League the first trophy we win Claude McAlely with Nader Manouar for
BBC Sport you can hear more of that interview on the Football Daily podcast feed. So Robert
Huth, 25 clean sheets, 15 goals conceded, only six at Stamford Bridge. What did he
do with you to make you so defensively complete? Well it's a mixture of players
wanting to defend and obviously just drilling it in. I mean I think it's fair
to say rather than one nil at home than. I mean, I think it's fair to say he'd rather win one nil
at home than five nil.
I think that's fair to say,
but we used to work incredibly hard defensively in the week
at times two, three times a week of just defending,
blocking shots, clearing crosses.
So with the ball rather than,
because we often hear players,
former players, managers talk about shape work where you're literally moved around the pitch without
a ball depending on where the opposition no no he wanted you to feel the pain of
getting getting hit by the ball right yeah yeah I think it was important to
him like sometimes you see players going in this you know yeah but we used to do
defensive drills with obviously attackers moving in ball blocking shots
physically throwing it in front of the ball, that kind of thing, just to get used to
it because if you never do it in training you're never going to do it in
a game and that was his method so I think everyone believed in it and don't
forget we had Callas who's really centre-back he played left-back so that
automatically gives you a bit more security he doesn't push on as much and
by the numbers you just read on, I mean, 15 goals,
that's just insane.
I mean, I don't think that's going to get broken any time soon.
But presumably, I mean, you talk about Galas there as well,
but McAleely would have been key to that
and how that midfield was set up as well.
Yeah, I mean, Claude used to just read the game so unbelievably well,
he could fit in, he would play left back, right back.
If Ricardo Cavalli would push on,
he was unbelievable on the ball,
like stepping into midfield.
So he would make up his position,
drop back in as a centre back.
Yeah, it just, it worked really well.
But every player on a pitch loved defending.
Sounds ridiculous because we had some really good
attacking players on the pitch.
But when we didn't have the ball,
when the teams got into the middle pitch of the part of the field we would go to work we'd get
after the ball it was set so everyone knew what to do if the ball goes to their left back we went on
it so it wasn't it wasn't just an accident it was like planned or whatever the tactic for that game
was it was all the 11 players worked defensively to get the ball back and then when we had the ball,
they all went attack.
Do you think Chris, that he was one of the early
exponents of 4-3-3?
If you think about it, you know, with the big centre-forward,
two wingers, but then there tended to be that three
in midfield, it wasn't like there was someone in the hole,
was there as much, or a second striker?
It tended to be 4-3-3.
Yeah I mean Rory may have a better, a better memory of when that all changed the 4-4-2
but I mean the 4-4-2 was never a 4-4-2 rigid I mean that was just you know there was always
a centre forward who would drop in so's never it's never really like that. So the porto team were 433
you know, what they
and
You know had a look at that Chelsea team just to refresh from Embry today and and he signed he signed
He signed Robin didn't he ball carrier. He had Damian Duff who was a young lad at black man
He was he was a young lad at Blackburn, he was another ball carrier. So he had the
perfect players for that 4-3-3, those wide players, ball carriers who could come inside,
get shots off, could link up, you know, they were, you know, and then Drogba spoke about his signing.
I tell you the one which, and I didn't know he signed that season, I should have remembered
Peter Cech and what a goalkeeper he was. And he barely cost anything from Wren.
And then, you know, you look at all the great defensive players that Chelsea had.
You've got McAleely protecting him, protecting that back line,
screening the back line.
And then, you know, when sides do get shots off, they've got Peter Cech to beat.
I mean, that's that's something as you just mentioned, they, because Jose was on the side, they didn't get any
breathing space. They had to work back. So it wasn't just, it was like a five in midfield
at times with the drop back. I remember when he dropped Joel Cole, because he didn't drop
back, run back a couple of times, we just hooked him. We went, well, if you're not going
to run back, you're not going to play. And it was such a statement back in the day where, you know, if you get hooked and if you, if you then come on, you get that fear if you're not gonna run back, you're not gonna play and it was such a statement back in the day where you know if you get hooked and if you if you then come on you
Get that fear that you're gonna have to go up and up and down because like I said before you can't just rely on talent
I think the other thing that really helped was the the fact that
Drogba was kind of a one-man strike force that yeah, Marini wasn't the first person to play 433
I think the Dutch played 433 in the in the the 70s. Like, 4-3-3 had been around for a while.
But in the Premier League, it hadn't.
In this era of football domestic, yes, I take the point on the Dutch, but the Premier League teams weren't playing 4-3-3, really, were they?
No, because there weren't...
This sounds really stupid, but I think you had world-class players, but you had world-class players who were used to playing
as a striker with a partner and often that like Chris says 4-4-2 wasn't rigid
But you would often have the set that the nine and then what used to be called the second striker
Someone like Teddy Sheringham who was the slightly more creative
presence you you wouldn't or you'd have the like little and large combo, which is how
football was played and should be played, to be honest. The difference with Chelsea
when Drodber came in was that Drodber was everything. Drodber was a nine, he was a ten,
like Robert says at times he was a number four, you know, he kind of, he was creative,
he was fast. Drodber was fast. The drug was so quick
But so strong so good in the air such a good finisher a bizarrely late bloomer Because I think he was 24 when he arrived from Marseille. He wasn't young
but he was this complete package as a forward and
Marino didn't need to play in on anyone the whole because dropper could do that for him or Robin could drift inside off the right
Win, but to be honest, I think the thing that's most lasting about Mourinho probably isn't tactical,
that I don't think he did anything in the way that Guardiola did. I don't think Mourinho's kind of
legacy in England is because of his tactical kind of innovations. So what is it then? I think it's
his character. I think Mourinho recognised really early on, possibly even before he arrived in
England. So it's either something that's, it's either something he learned when he arrived or
something that he always had in him.
But he understood that English football doesn't respond well to tactics. Chris will now get upset and scowl
the kind of assumed insult that I'm saying there aren't any tactics in English football.
I'm not. There are obviously English football has always been tactical. All football is tactical.
But what English football thrives on is character and personality it's a character-led soap opera
effectively and Mourinho understood that if you go to Italy and do press conferences they will ask
you about why your left back is playing five yards further back or they will ask you about the
positional rotations in your midfield because the journalists believe that not only do they have the right to ask the coaches that question, but they know as
much about football tactics as the coaches. English journalists won't ask you that. English
journalists want to know, you know, have John Terry and Frank Lampard fallen out because
that has always been the stuff that's driven our football. And Mourinho worked that out
really early on and within six weeks, two two months max he was the lead character in that drama
and i think that what robert says is really interesting that that big winner dates man united
maybe galvanizes everybody all of a sudden chelsea are flying at the top of the lead everyone sees
really on early on inside the club that this is working that this guy is good the squad is high
quality outside chelsea within three months i think the whole country was kind of obsessed with Jose Mourinho
He was given the ultimate honor that he was known only by his first name. He was just Jose that doesn't happen to my
He was a huge personality. Are you doing him a disservice there really by by
You know saying he wasn't tactical because he he clearly was his porto teams were you know
We're tactical his portal teams falling over didn't have
But they didn't you know, they didn't they they didn't have the best best European team
they were there were teams who are more talented than his porto team, but
The way that he got them playing and the trust they had in each other and then what he did at Chelsea and
Marks Marks mentioned and I still I still I'm still wrecking my brain to think about when the 442 changed to a 433
Maybe Mourinho was the pioneer
He you know and that and that and that is tactical. So, you know
Is it not an equal is it not an equal measure that then I'm not saying he's not tactical in any way.
I don't think Jose Mourinho will,
in a hundred years time when people are writing,
when AI is writing strips about
kind of when football tactics changed,
I don't think Mourinho will be given the same
sort of importance as Wadi Older say.
I don't think he's had that sort of impact
on how football is played.
I wonder, Robert will know more than about this thing.
But that's a different style
Isn't it pep and and Jose all together is like literally chocolate cheese, isn't it?
But I don't think I don't think Jose was I don't think Jose did anything that was new. That's what I mean
I think he he did things to a really high level and he obviously was he is he was and is tactically very astute
I don't think he came up with any system that no one had seen before it was 433 and it worked really well
He may have done it to a higher level
I wonder whether one of the big things that he changed is something we didn't see from the outside at all
Which was how he trained because he's he's of that school that Portuguese school where everything is kind of
Unified in training so you don't do anything that's not directly related to your game model
That has been that is one of the things that maybe Mourinho was the first to do in England, I'm not sure.
Well, he was probably tactically more clever in terms of defensive shape, I would say,
because when we sat in meetings, the level of detail he went into analysing the opposition,
which people might not agree with it, being a bit more defensive, but it worked.
In terms of training methods, 100%.
There was no energy wasted. It was always just the next game. If we played a different team,
we just prepare for that team. Whether we have to do slight changes to the set-up,
of course we did. But I think he was tactically really, really intelligent,
probably more so defensively. If you like more attacking football and Jose probably wouldn't be a guy but if you another manager you you'd
love him but me as a defender obviously I'd love playing with him only because
he's set up of soul well defensively. Arsene Wenger said in 2005 you could say
that our football was more attractive to watch but they are very efficient they
are like a matador they wait until the bull gets weak to kill him.
They have the patience to wait as they have an experienced squad.
When the bull has lost enough blood and becomes a bit dizzy, they kill it off.
He shifted your mentality as a group, I'm guessing. Did he make you more ruthless?
Yeah, yeah, of course. I think Claude said that he was a dictator in a nice as possible way as you probably could say it
But you know winning at all costs is probably the best way I could describe it
You know Chris said earlier, you know
If you have to fall over get a free kick stay down
So be it and he just generally didn't care how you'd win like he would make no excuses at all
He made that message clear to the players that if you if you're winning one year with five minutes to go and you get fouled and you get up, he'd have a goal with you.
He said, I want you to stay down. So that message of winning at all costs at every training session, at every meeting we had, those words from Arsene, were they actually his words?
Yeah, yeah. thing had in him but I think it was right yeah I think there was a certainly as the season went on there was a unbelievable belief that if we can soak up the pressure for 15-20
minutes that we can go for the kill because Josey prepared us for that moment where the
left back opposition left back would switch off and then we realised it and then we'd go
and then we'd go one and up and then... But Robert the other thing he'd prepare you for which again
comes back to this self-belief that he would have instilled in you.
John Terry said he would pick out blocks of games
and say you'll get three points here, three points there.
And he touched on the Bolton game in April
and the home game before it against Fulham.
And he said it was that or that where we would win the league.
It was, we will win the league there.
And that was early on in the season.
It wasn't like we were 14 points clear at the time.
He just gave you certain messages at certain points
and you just felt it was done.
And John Terry then said,
honestly, I've never seen anything like it.
Yeah, I mean, that just gives you belief, doesn't it?
It gives me goosebumps now when you hear it back again.
Yeah, I mean, it just gives you that confidence, you know.
But say that happened in October,
you are then all thinking, here's the squad, right, we will win the league. Well that only works
if you're winning. Like all these messages, they sound great on screen and you're reading
it out, but in reality all of these things only work if you win. So we at that point,
would you say it was in October? I don't know, but I know that it was earlier on in the season.
So if you say it was like 10, 10 15 games in we would have won 13 games
So any message you relay to them is to the squad would have been well
Yeah, of course we won 13 out of 15 games
So all these messages are great and I'm sure people listen to it are what a what a guy
But if you lose 10
Then that message gets lost so it's it's kind of you in that situation where everything is going well
Directories gone that way, you know, you top top of the league with you know six seven points ahead.
I think that message sometimes can be can be easier done when you're winning obviously.
Yeah I should have had those messages at Lincoln really.
Yeah you should yeah.
I might have gone a bit longer yeah.
Yeah well it's just you know everything which Robert's talked about, you know, from
his first press conference, he backed himself, he believed in himself, you know, he gets
the players which he wants, he gets his team set up and then all of a sudden there's this
good start and that siege mentality and the belief grows and then, you know, you look
through the team and they've got everything,
they've got a great balance, you look at the spine of the team, physically they're strong and then
if they're organised in the right way it's amazing where it can take you and they just went on from
strength to strength. One of the other great things about that time was the manager dynamics
and rivalries and them falling out
with each other because for years the top end of the Premier League had been about Wenger
against Ferguson.
Mourinho now part of that dynamic of course and Ferguson says Mourinho enjoyed the mind
games that came with that.
I think Jose probably enjoys the beer and I do.
He seems like he does.
He does honestly but I's brilliant at it.
I think he plays the games too, I think he enjoys that part.
You know, he's got that mischievous part about him, you know, that you're never quite sure
of what he's up to, you know.
I don't go down that road and try to contest that because he's a clever bugger, you know.
And so I let him go on with it and as long as he keeps bringing a decent bottle of wine
I let him off it a lot. He can do what he wants.
Exactly.
He did manage to wind up a lot of people did Mourinho, Rory. I mean Wenger,
Benitez in particular, I mean Ferguson was probably involved at times.
Yeah, I don't know whether Ferdy in in kind of hindsight has become a little bit more like oh
we were all great pals and and wasn't it fun. I think at the time it might's become a little bit more like oh we were we were all great pals and and wasn't it fun
I think at the time it might have been a little bit more
Assyrbic than that and to be honest, I think I think Mourinho needs that
I think Mourinho if you look over the course of his career
Even when he's not had a natural enemy. He's drawn out and found one
There was a point in Italy I think in his second season at, where he started a feud with the manager of Lecce. And there is no reason for
Jose Mourinho to be feuding with the manager of Lecce. I think he was sort of lacking people
to argue with. So he went out and just, there was some fella standing there and he's like,
right, I'll have an argument with you. I think that is something that drives Jose. And as
I say, I think he recognised early on.
Does that sound familiar, Chris? He pulled a manager's nose, didn't he, the other week?
Yeah.
What was that, Turkey?
But I think a lot of it was deliberately deployed, and I'm sure that is what Mourinho is like.
And I remember interviewing him in his second spell at Chelsea and going
into his office, just me and him, I was doing it for 442 the magazine and his desk, he had
this coffee table, I don't know if this would have been true Robert in his first spell,
but his coffee table was like a glass insect coffee table and under the glass were just
loads of pictures of Jose Mourinho winning things and all the magazines, he got them artfully fanned out as I do downstairs but
obviously mine it's the Atlantic and to be honest a lot of it's the weak junior for my
son with Jose it was literally just all these interviews that he'd given and it was magazines
that he was on the cover of.
Everything is for the greater glorification of Jose but he recognized early on the
power of personality in English football that if you are central to the mind
games if you're central to the drama it gives you a kudos and it gives you a
status yeah and the funny thing was he laughed about it how people had a nibble
on what he said so he never really got involved into the mind games he just
thought it was funny when when I said something he got annoyed by something
He did he would walk in the change room just laughing. Oh this guy had a right go
So it wasn't like he needed that kind of
Aggressiveness, but it wasn't bothering him at all. In fact quite the opposite
He laughed did it work for you as a squad then because he then becomes the lightning rod doesn't he not you guys?
Yeah, he definitely put himself in front of the team or before the team, yeah.
But as a team when you see him laughing about someone else taking it way too serious,
I think as a group he just takes the edge of it and just makes him even more likeable
that he's got that talent for Wenger to think about him rather than the game,
which Mota Jordi never did. It was just like, about him rather than the game which motor jose never did it was just like well
This is the game and you never took time out of to talk about any either, you know rubbish about any other
What what Ferdy said is interesting in that clip as well because that perception also took hold that marina was smart
The the he always had a plan up his sleeve
And that must influence the way that managers and players approached playing Chelsea.
That must have given Chelsea a bit of a kind of sense of,
well, they've always got an answer to everything.
It creates this aura around him and around the team.
And obviously that comes when you're winning loads of games.
But it's not a bad thing for your opposition to think
that you're kind of in control of everything.
That strikes me as being quite a useful trait to have.
When Chelsea secured the league
Title on April the 30th. They'd already won the League Cup in
February and they were into the Champions League semi-finals and the second leg they were taking on Liverpool
When and I put this in inverted commas a ghost goal at Anfield denied them a potential treble. But the cup goes absolutely bad. Luis Garcia, the man tonight for Liverpool,
the man in European football,
has somehow nudged that ball forward
and it's been given us a goal.
Three minutes played,
Liverpool 1 Chelsea 0.
Post that semi-final Chris Jose Mourinho said,
you could say the linesmen scored.
It was a goal coming from the moon or from the Anfield Road.
The best team lost,
didn't deserve to lose. After they scored, only one team played, the other one just defended
for the whole game.
Oh, I mean that would have been a sore one, wouldn't it? But that would have been, yeah,
Mourinho blaming that on everything else.
Well he could have done a treble in his first, a treble in his first season.
Or the goal could have been ruled down, his goalie would have been sent off, it's up to
him.
You're on particularly one side of the fence here, Rory, by the chance. I may have a personal view on the legitimacy of that goal, yes.
OK. Which is?
Well, that was the alternative, either the goalie, he probably didn't trust the line, but...
Probably.
...Czech would have been sent off for barreling into Baros, so...
And Liverpool would have had a penalty.
So I think it's slightly...
Two wrongs don't make it right, come on.
I can see why he was annoyed,
because they were a lot better than that Liverpool team.
What was he like in the dressing room after that?
Half-human, of course he would be.
When the goal went in, no-one really knew what was going on,
because it wasn't obvious for anyone
Didn't even look that close particularly
But yeah, I mean the lads obviously deflated he was fuming but what can you do the games done?
It contributed didn't it to a heck of a Chelsea Liverpool. Yeah, Mourinho Benitez. Yeah rivalry
I mean for all the talk of Mourinho V Wenger as well, the animosity it felt like
really came between Chelsea and Liverpool, Mourinho and Benitez?
Yeah, they both gave it as good as they got, hadn't they? They both got a lot to say for
each other. But that game definitely sort of sparked that rivalry between the two clubs.
This time Liverpool got the better of us, I think the year after that or two years after
that, I think we beat them in the next quarterfinal.
Do you know what? You played each other 15 times in the first three seasons in England for Mourinho and he won seven, drew three and lost five. So it was fairly even.
Yeah, I think we got through more times than not though. I think that was the only time he got knocked out by Liverpool but listen, it's all down on the bridge now.
But yeah, it's just frustrating by the, I think the cop shouted the ball in rather than
the ball actually crossing the line.
That probably was the biggest.
I mean I know Mourinho and Wenger and Chelsea, but that felt, Chelsea and Liverpool, Mourinho
and Benitez felt more animosity, Rory, no?
It felt more personal maybe, but I wonder if we're maybe underplaying how much animosity
there was with Wender as well.
It was Wender really, like Mourinho very clearly did not like Benitez and Benitez didn't like
Mourinho, but it was with Wender that he probably said the stuff that crossed the line the most. The stuff about the voyeur was, was, was waste. Jose, Jose
initially in listening back to those early press conferences is really interesting.
Jose initially was quite a playful character. The, the role, like the Jose Mourinho character
that he was kind of playing, the like, what I assume was an exaggerated version of himself that he was playing in public was quite funny. I think over the last ten years it's become less funny and he now
seems a little bit more kind of... the charm has gone. There was a charm to Mourinho that's
now disappeared a little bit I think. With Wender, it was with Wender that he seemed to really get worked up. But
yeah, certainly in the, and I don't want to do this to Robert, but Liverpool also knocked
them out in the 2007 semi-final.
But a member don't I have, yep.
You've got reason to not want to remember those games. I'm the opposite. But no, I think
it was between Benitez and Wenger. He seemed to have something...
He didn't like Benitez, I think he maybe didn't like what Wenger stood for.
And Liverpool were good.
I think they finished second.
They had a good team then, Torres came and so on.
So Liverpool were a real threat at that point.
They were maybe more of a threat than Arsenal, so that's a good point.
Do you think that Chelsea team Robert is
recognized as one of the great Premier League teams that you finished with 95
points, lost once and that 95 points remain the most in Premier League history
until Gladiola's team reached 128-19. But do you think that team is in the
debate and the conversation about the greatest Premier League teams enough?
I think it has to, but also naturally Arsenal have to be in there only because they haven't or they didn't lose a single game.
But on any other metric, Chelsea were superior apart from not losing.
But I think with Pep's Men's City and George's Chelsea, I think those two teams were probably the best in Pemelica.
Do you think, Chris, they get enough credit, that Chelsea team?
I think from within the game that they do.
I mean, the 15 goals conceded, that's ridiculous.
That's absolutely absurd. You absurd. How well organised, how
well drilled they were. I think that people would look at that Chelsea team within the game with a
great deal of respect. But there's been so many great title winning teams, hasn't there? Manchester
United, you can look at numerous of their teams and put them up there, Manchester City,
but that Chelsea team was special, very special.
And do you know what they did change Robert, that Chelsea team, was up until that year,
the general consensus was always
get to Christmas and still be in the running and
then put your foot down in the new year and Ferguson has
spoke about this since, that the way that Chelsea team operated and Mourinho's fast
start changed the way people viewed the first few months of the season. You couldn't ease
your way into a season anymore. He changed that.
Yeah, yeah. You can't afford to have a slow start now, especially with the talent that is in the Premier League.
Most teams have got a decent squad, they can challenge you, they can get a few points of view.
So, Joze understood the importance of starting well, having a great middle part of the season,
but equally being strong at the end.
I mean, the squad we had was just phenomenal.
Every player that came in performed.
But just on a different point,
I think Chelsea is probably the biggest signing
Chelsea ever made in terms of, you know,
the dropers, the Crestpaws.
Because at that point, Chelsea were a good club,
you know, winning the FA Cup,
but he sort of set the stood out for the 15, 20 years
after that for winning Premier League, Champions League. Or he was fundamental to changing thela for the 15, 20 years after that for winning Premier League Champions League.
Or that he was fundamental to changing the attitude
of the club to sort of push forward,
expect Premier League titles,
along with our Bromwich support.
And so I think with all the players Chelsea have signed,
I think he's probably the most important.
And he remains the youngest manager
to have won the Premier League title,
42 years and 94 days.
And at the time, he was only the second non-British
manager to win the English top flight in its entire history, Arsene Wenger being the first.
So when you look at those that have followed, Ancelotti, Mancini, Pellegrini, Ranieri, Conte,
Guardiola and Klopp, you could say that he paved the way along with Wenger for all of those.
Robert, thank you very much for being with us. Robert Hoofe has been with us. Rory, Chris,
thank you as well.
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