Spanish media shed no tears as Mourinho departs
SPAIN'S press bid a caustic farewell yesterday to self-anointed Special One Jose Mourinho, jeering his divisive three-tear reign at Real Madrid and his failure to win more silverware.
"The Special End" ran the front-page headline of top-selling sports paper Marca, superimposed on a photograph of a football shirt being held up by Mourinho and club president Florentino Perez.
"Much ado about nothing," concluded the headline of rival sports daily AS, which recalled the price tag of Mourinho's term. "50 million euros (US$64.34 million) in contracts and another 162 million in player signings," it said. "Mourinho left us with few titles and a lot of hassles."
Mourinho is leaving at the end of the season, the club said on Monday, and he has been strongly linked with a return to Chelsea, a team he managed between 2004 and 2007.
The Portuguese coach endured a torrid final season culminating in last Friday's defeat by Atletico Madrid in the Copa del Rey final that ensured Real will end the season without a major trophy.
"Thanks, Mou, for making us worse," said Orfeo Suarez, sports commentator of conservative daily El Mundo.
He listed an array of Mourinho sins such as leaving captain Iker Casillas on the bench for half of the season; devaluing the prestige of the club; questioning the votes that chose Spain manager Vicente del Bosque as FIFA 2012 coach of the year; and dividing the club's fans.
"Thanks to Mou, Mou is worse too, aged and crushed, defeated and heading back to a capricious, wealthy man's club but far from the dream of Old Trafford," he said, alluding to speculation that Mourinho had dreamt of taking over as Manchester United coach after the retirement of Alex Ferguson.
Barcelona-based daily Sport ran a front-page photograph showing Mourinho from the back as he departed through a door marked "Exit". The paper quoted Carles Vallarubi, vice president of Barcelona, as saying: "Mou was a scar on Spanish football."
Despite rumors linking Paris Sant-Germain's Carlo Ancelotti with the Real job, Perez says he has not reached a deal with any coach to succeed Mourinho.
"The Special End" ran the front-page headline of top-selling sports paper Marca, superimposed on a photograph of a football shirt being held up by Mourinho and club president Florentino Perez.
"Much ado about nothing," concluded the headline of rival sports daily AS, which recalled the price tag of Mourinho's term. "50 million euros (US$64.34 million) in contracts and another 162 million in player signings," it said. "Mourinho left us with few titles and a lot of hassles."
Mourinho is leaving at the end of the season, the club said on Monday, and he has been strongly linked with a return to Chelsea, a team he managed between 2004 and 2007.
The Portuguese coach endured a torrid final season culminating in last Friday's defeat by Atletico Madrid in the Copa del Rey final that ensured Real will end the season without a major trophy.
"Thanks, Mou, for making us worse," said Orfeo Suarez, sports commentator of conservative daily El Mundo.
He listed an array of Mourinho sins such as leaving captain Iker Casillas on the bench for half of the season; devaluing the prestige of the club; questioning the votes that chose Spain manager Vicente del Bosque as FIFA 2012 coach of the year; and dividing the club's fans.
"Thanks to Mou, Mou is worse too, aged and crushed, defeated and heading back to a capricious, wealthy man's club but far from the dream of Old Trafford," he said, alluding to speculation that Mourinho had dreamt of taking over as Manchester United coach after the retirement of Alex Ferguson.
Barcelona-based daily Sport ran a front-page photograph showing Mourinho from the back as he departed through a door marked "Exit". The paper quoted Carles Vallarubi, vice president of Barcelona, as saying: "Mou was a scar on Spanish football."
Despite rumors linking Paris Sant-Germain's Carlo Ancelotti with the Real job, Perez says he has not reached a deal with any coach to succeed Mourinho.
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