The Blues
boss pinpointed Sergio Aguero’s early one-on-one with Asmir Begovic as the
moment that he began to fear for his side after their humbling at the Etihad
Stadium
Jose Mourinho
insists he knew Chelsea were in trouble just 10 seconds into their 3-0 drub
bing
at the hands of Premier League title rivals Manchester City.
Goals
from Sergio Aguero, Vincent Kompany and Fernandinho saw off the Blues as Manuel
Pellegrini’s men made a powerful early-season statement in their bid to claim a
third league title in five years.
But
Chelsea might have been dead and buried by half-time; Aguero missed several
clear chances in the first 45 minutes including one in the opening moments when
he raced onto a David Silva pa$$ and fired a low shot against the shin of an
onrushing Asmir Begovic.
Mourinho
afterwards revealed this was the point at which he feared for his side and
voiced his frustration at their uncharacteristically slack defending.
“When the
game started and 10 seconds later you have Aguero behind the defensive line and
facing Begovic, immediately you get the notion that the start wasn’t good,” the
Chelsea boss told reporters. “After that he made two or three saves because of
that fragility.
“I was
the first one to be disappointed. All week you are speaking about movements,
directions of the game, mechanisms, Aguero’s runs and Aguero’s positions, the
wingers coming inside, and after 10 seconds Aguero is in the face of Begovic.
We were defensively poor in the first half.”
Mourinho
also elaborated on his surprising decision to substitute captain John Terry for
tactical reasons at half-time as Chelsea pushed for an equaliser.
“The
point was not to take John out it was to bring [Kurt] Zouma in – I wanted my
fastest player on the pitch, not on the bench,’ he added. “It was clear for me
that Zouma has to play. I had to bring one out and I brought out my captain. He
was on the bench and still my captain because the armband is just the armband.
“I can
tell you that he was not dancing in the dressing-room, and I can tell you also
that he was not having a bad reaction. He did what everybody does. The manager
says ‘this guy comes in and that guy goes out’, and they all do the same. They
wait for the team to go out, they shower and change and go back to the bench.
“My
decision was proven right because we controlled the depth of the game and the
counter-attack totally. But John is a player with my entire confidence for
sure. With me, he was never substituted but with other managers he was not even
selected. He was not playing or people thought his career at Chelsea was over.
“I don’t
know if you ask many questions to [Rafa] Benitez, [Andre] Villas-Boas,
[Roberto] Di Matteo, the ones who never played him. I’m the one you shouldn’t
ask because I’m the one who played him every game, made him captain and
recovered him from a difficult situation with other managers.
“I’m the
one who has the right to look at the game and to say I want Zouma on.”
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