Jose Mourinho: Little bit of wind knocks over City players
The 175th Manchester derby is comfortably the biggest match of the Premier League season so far as second-place United attempt to claw back Pep Guardiolaâs runaway leaders.
Eight points is the gap ahead of tomorrowâs mouth-watering Old Trafford encounter and Mourinho has looked to disrupt rivals City before a ball is kicked.
While full of praise for Guardiolaâs side, the Portuguese used the opportunity to underline the unbeaten league leadersâ apparent tendency to go to the deck.
âThey are a good team,â Mourinho said. âThey defend well, they react well to the moment they lose the ball. They have a good dynamic in attack, they have creative movement.
âThey have amazing players, they have a fantastic coach, they have lots of good things.
âIf you ask me one thing that I donât like a lot itâs that they lose their balance very easily. You know, a little bit of wind and they fall.â
Mourinhoâs comments are unlikely to go down well at the Etihad Stadium, especially after Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger accused in-form Raheem Sterling of diving last month.
Fernandinho was booked for simulation at Huddersfield and Burnley boss Sean Dyche fumed with the way Bernardo Silva went down to win a penalty earlier in the campaign.
Mourinho has only added fuel to that particular fire, while the United boss has suggested he would find himself in hot water if he expressed political views in the way Guardiola does.
The City boss wears a yellow ribbon in support of imprisoned Catalan politicians. âIf the rules allow us to do that, he is a free citizen to do it,â Mourinho said.
âBut I am not sure if the rules allows to have any political message on the pitch. Thatâs just my doubt.
âBut I know Pep and I know his feelings like everybody else knows because it is public about his country.â
Asked if he would never do a similar thing, he added: âI think I wouldnât be allowed to do. Thatâs just what I think.â
Uefa allow political messages without offensive content, while the Football Association is understood to have a similar criteria. The subject kicked off a pre-match press conference in which Mourinho pledged to stop taking aim at his own fans.
The United boss was put out by an apparent lack of support for Romelu Lukaku against Tottenham in October when he held a finger to his lips and told the doubters to calm down.
Mourinho then made a chatting gesture at the following home game against Benfica having dug out some of his own fans in his programme notes, leading the Manchester United Supporters Trust to invite him to âdiscuss his concernsâ around the Old Trafford atmosphere.
âI stop with that,â he said. âI am not going to write any more words about it, I am not going to say any more words about it.
âI am not paid to come here and to make any comments or to ask for something from the fans. I am paid to try and give them happiness, which is what I try to do every day.â




