Jose Mourinho asks which managers pressure players into not playing for England

Jose Mourinho asks which managers pressure players into not playing for England

Jose Mourinho has called on England boss Gareth Southgate to name the managers pressurising their players to pull out of international duty – as he fully expects Raheem Sterling to start against Tottenham on Saturday.

Southgate hinted several times during the recent international break that some of his players faced pressure from their clubs to withdraw from his squad.

The truncated season caused by the coronavirus pandemic means the workload for footballers will increase, especially with the European Championship finals at the end of the campaign.

Tottenham travel to Manchester City on Saturday and, while Sterling withdrew from the squad with an injury niggle which Southgate would not go into detail on, Spurs striker Harry Kane played all but 14 minutes of the two Nations League fixtures.

“I am OK with that,” Tottenham head coach Mourinho replied when asked about England skipper Kane playing 76 minutes in the game against Iceland.

“A national team match should never be a dead rubber. The only thing for me, the only problem for me, is should be the same for everybody, not just for some.

“I don’t want to spend much time on the national team stuff – Gareth Southgate, I read, supposedly told that some football club managers put pressure on their players not to play for the national team.

“I would like him to say who. I would like him to say which are the coaches who put pressure on the players not to go? And I would like him to say which are the coaches that he calls and speaks on the phone with them.”

While Mourinho concedes Southgate is in his right to call up any player, he hinted that Sterling missing the games was no coincidence as City boss Pep Guardiola confirmed the forward returned to training on the eve of the Spurs clash.

“He has the right, he has the power to call the players he wants,” added Mourinho.

Harry Kane played 76 minutes of England's Nations League win over Iceland on Wednesday.
Harry Kane played 76 minutes of England’s Nations League win over Iceland on Wednesday. (Ian Walton/PA)

“When Eric Dier left the national team injured in the previous month, he didn’t play two matches for Tottenham. He didn’t play a Premier League match and a Europa League match.

“He needed a couple of weeks to recover and Raheem is going to play tomorrow. These are the little details I think Gareth should explain to us all.

“Apart from that, I totally support him in the fact that in the national team, in a country like England, the Three Lions on the shirt is always to be respected and he plays with the players he wants to play.”

Mourinho and Guardiola (left) have enjoyed a fierce rivalry over the years.
Mourinho and Guardiola (left) have enjoyed a fierce rivalry over the years. (Martin Rickett/PA)

Guardiola signed a new contract with City on Thursday and – despite their differences – Mourinho insists he is pleased for the former Barcelona boss.

“Nobody put a gun on Pep’s head to sign the contract, so if he does that it is because he is happy to do it,” he said.

“He is happy to be there and for sure has conversations with the club’s powerful people and he knows what he will have ahead of him for the future.

“He has motivation, he loves it there so if he does that it is because he is happy to do it, so I am happy for him.”

“Us coaches, we are always in the search of the impossible, we are always in the search for perfection and in my case, we are far from perfection,” he added.

“For example, our opponents tomorrow they are winning the Premier League or almost winning the Premier League or fighting for the Premier League for more than 10 years and probably they didn’t reach the perfection and want more.

“We are just in the beginning so we are far from perfection, we are far from me being happy, we are not a perfect team.

“We are a better team than we were, we have the mentality of going into every match always positive and saying we can win that match – we have a long way to go.”

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