Saturday, September 18, 2010

The 'Jose Mourinho' Factor

What is it? Its what Mourinho has a tendency to do at every club he's at. He creates a 'siege-mentality' around the club which fuels his teams. 'Decisions constantly go against us', 'no one wants us to succeed', these are the kind of things that are said to the media. It's exactly what he did at Chelsea and his teams thrived in the mission to prove their apparent doubters wrong, winning two league titles.

At his next club, Inter Milan, he simply made himself the most hated man in Italian football. His players again responded on the pitch. They won the league in Mourinho's first season and then, in the following one, won an unprecedented treble. It was another masterstroke by the intelligent yet extremely narcissistic manager.

I think that this season, Arsene Wenger has used this technique more than ever. In the past few weeks, Wenger has been attacked from all angles and by all manner of people. Managers, former referees and washed-up pundits have all stepped up to have their own digs at Le Boss for his opinions on tackles and (a lack of) protection from referees. The reaction by gunners fans everywhere has been fantastic. Everyone has rallied behind Wenger in his defense. Blogs everywhere have went about dismantling the attacks of Allardyce and Coyle in impressive fashion. But you'd have to wonder what the players make of it all?

Surely some of them listen to the news and read the papers so they all must have found out how their manager has been criticized in the weeks gone by. So, could you call the results against Blackburn, Bolton and Braga a showing of allegiance to Wenger and his beliefs? I'd like to think so and I hope it continues.

Another man has also been in the media limelight: Cesc Fabregas. He's has had his commitment to the cause doubted and he and the players have responded in the right manner. The way he played against Braga showed how much he still loves the club and how much he wants to succeed here. The statement from Clichy mid-week showed that the squad also believes this.

While the latter isn't an example of the Mourinho Factor, it could still have the same effect on the team. A mental resilience that was lacking last season in the big games could be instilled through the adversary we've faced so far. Perhaps the cirumstances weren't right for this young team to succeed last season. There wasn't a major issue for the boys to respond to early enough in the season. The response when Ramsey was scythed down was admirable but we had already lost twice to Man United and Chelsea by then.

We won't really know where the team is mentally until the final whistle blows in the match against Chelsea. But there are small signs starting to show that this team is ready to lift trophies.

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