Jose Mourinho under pressure for dropping Casillas

December 24, 2012 08:03 pm | Updated 08:03 pm IST

Real Madrid President Florentino Perez’s confounded expression upon hearing that veteran goalkeeper Iker Casillas had been dropped for Saturday’s game against Malaga showed just how far coach Jose Mourinho has gone in his quest to exert control over the club. And it may be that Mourinho has finally gone too far.

After waves of criticism from fans and players alike as Madrid slumped to a 3-2 loss in the game, the question arises whether Perez has reached the limits of his support for the often successful, yet equally abrasive, Mourinho.

“Mourinho has his particular way of dealing with his squad,” said former Madrid player and coach Jorge Valdano. “But this was him doubling down. It was an exhibition of power. It was him imposing his decision on a club legend.”

Mourinho did not announce his decision to drop Casillas, highly respected both in Spain and abroad for his decade of quality service in Madrid’s net, for the little-used Adan Garrido until minutes before the game. The move backfired in the second half when Malaga scored on the inexperienced Adan three times to give Madrid another loss that left it flagging 16 points adrift of leader Barcelona and its hopes of defending the league title shattered.

Mourinho said that he had picked Adan because he was “in better form” than Casillas. That argument was far from convincing to fans and players past and present. A fan poll published on Monday by Spanish sports daily Marca indicates that most of Madrid’s fans want Mourinho out. Eighty-two per cent of the almost one-lakh participants in the online poll voted yes to the question “Should Real Madrid fire Mourinho?”

“Iker doesn’t need to be punished to play better,” said former Madrid goalkeeper Cesar Sanchez, an old teammate of Casillas. “This only brings to a boil the atmosphere of conflict that Madrid already has.”

Madrid defender Sergio Ramos said after the match that he was ‘surprised’ by the decision.

Casillas told La Sexta television on Sunday that he felt fine and that Mourinho hadn’t told him why he had been benched. “I’m not used to being a backup,” Casillas said. “But the team is above any player. I have to keep training and try to win back my place in the starting line-up.”

Since arriving at Madrid three seasons ago, Mourinho has won a Spanish league title in 2012 and a Copa del Rey a year earlier. But he has also ruffled the feathers of more than one of Madrid’s purist fans, as well as dispatching several perceived enemies within the club.

Casillas, the captain of Madrid and Spain’s world cup and two-time European championship national team, was always seen as untouchable. The 31-year-old goalkeeper is the most revered member of Madrid’s current squad. Many fans see him as the last link to the winning days of the “Galaticos” of David Beckham, Ronaldo and Zinedine Zidane and to the golden era of forward Raul Gonzalez and Vicente del Bosque, the club’s ultimate “gentleman” coach.

Two weeks ago, Perez called Casillas “a legendary captain of Real Madrid.” “He is one of the great captains in the history of this club,” Perez said. “He shows that above and beyond winning titles, he knows how to interpret this institution.”

And therein lies the potential problem for Mourinho.

Perez had not been informed of Casillas’ exclusion when a journalist for Canal Plus television showed him the line-up minutes before the game. The 65-year-old club president, who in his 10 years have made Madrid one of the world’s richest teams, raised his glasses as if to get a better look at the player list and then, apparently stunned, just turned away. Perez has been Mourinho’s biggest backer.

Last week, with Mourinho under increasing pressure to turn things around in the league, Perez told a meeting of club members that Mourinho had his “confidence” and “affection.”

Mourinho is known for wanting to control how much information from his dressing room reaches the media, and he has had no problem taking on other personalities within the club. In 2011, Valdano, then the club’s spokesman, left after his conflict with Mourinho went public with the coach openly discrediting him.

Mourinho belittled player Pedro Leon before he was shipped back to Getafe. He has even ostracized former Ballon d’Or winner Kaka, for whom Madrid paid 65 million (then $92 million) in 2009, to an almost permanent role on the substitutes’ bench.

This season, he benched defender Ramos after a supposed dispute, and he has used various press conferences to criticize the running of Madrid’s B-team by coach Alberto Toril. And through all of this Perez has been there to grant him his wishes, including a contract extension last summer that ties Mourinho to Madrid until the end of the 2016 season.

0 / 0
Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.

We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.