Jose Mourinho: I turned down PSG twice
Speaking ahead of Chelsea’s Champions League last-16 tie against
the French club, Mourinho revealed that he was first approached in 2011
and then again two years later, with the former Porto and Inter boss
travelling to Qatar to discuss a potential move.
[Billionaires' playthings: How Chelsea beat FFP, and how PSG were too late to the party]
Preview: PSG v Chelsea - Eurosport
MOURINHO'S QUOTES
“I know the PSG project well, I know it well because when they
start this project with the owner, the president and Leonardo, I was to
be the coach,” said Mourinho.
“I met them in Qatar, so I know the project well. The project
was to start dominating in France, to dominate in Europe. The domination
in France is there, they are champions, champions, champions.
“They are in the League Cup final, they are in the
quarter-finals of the French Cup, they are two points behind the leaders
so the domination of France is there.
[FULL MATCH PREVIEW: PSG vs Chelsea preview: French champions ravaged by injury]
Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho (PA Sport) - PA Sport
“They want to dominate in Europe too and, to be fair, you look
to Paris in the last two seasons in the Champions League and they lost
in the quarter-finals, once narrowly to Barcelona and last season
against Chelsea in the last second.
“So they know and they feel they are there. They are there. Paris is a big team with big ambitions.”
The Portuguese claimed that he was tempted by the offer in the
French capital, but opted to continue in his role as coach of Real Madrid as he felt he had not achieved all that he could.
“Because I was in Real Madrid and it was a real ambition for me to be champion in Spain, England and Italy,” he added.
“It was a big challenge for me and a big challenge to compete
directly against the best, Barcelona, probably the best team in Europe
for the last decade for sure. It was not the right moment for me to go."
OUR VIEW - MORE MOURINHO MIND GAMES
We're not big fans of trumpeting the psychological genius of
Jose Mourinho every time he answers a question in a press conference.
Yet with this interestingly-timed admission, one which came completely
unbidden, he has undoubtedly pulled off a bit of a stroke.
Hailing PSG's strength and success in France will boost the
opposing players' image of themselves. But in the same breath he made it
clear that he turned them down; that, along with stating that his
professional ambitions were always focused on the Spanish, English and
Italian leagues, casts the whole of French football in a deeply
unflattering light. The fact that he praised them for reaching the last
eight of the Coupe de France actually takes it into the realms of comedy
- a more damning indictment with fainter praise would be hard to
imagine.
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