Cruyff happy to teach Mourinho respect 

Dutch legend Johan Cruyff claims he would be happy to teach Chelsea 
boss Jose Mourinho how to play very well - just like at Ajax in the 
70s or Barcelona in the 90s. 

Earlier this season Cruyff maintained that Chelsea's style of play 
was, at times, based on sacrificing entertainment for points. 

Cruyff, the pivotal exponent of the art of total football in 
Holland's team of the 1970s, originally accused Mourinho of being 'a 
pragmatic coach who fails in his duty to entertain.' 

His comments were cemented by his success when in charge of Barcelona 
between 1988 and 1996. He built a side that played free-flowing 
football and won four successive titles and the European Cup in 1992. 

Mourinho, in his column in Portuguese sports magazine Dez Record, 
responded by inviting the Dutchman to teach him how to become a 
better manager. 

Now the Holland World Cup star has told Barcelona's La Vanguardia 
newspaper: 'I am happy to hear that Mourinho would like me to teach 
him a few of the things I stand for. 

'I could teach him how to play very well, just like at Ajax in the 
70s or Barcelona in the 90s. 

'I would happily teach him not just about winning and playing well, 
but also about winning respect from people, and that is more 
important than the titles you win. 

'But it's better that I don't teach him how to lose a final by 4-0. 
This happens when you have a very long career, a career that began at 
the age of 17 and that continued until the age of 40 as a player and 
then other years as a coach. 

'At his age, he has sufficient time to learn how to win and how to 
lose. To earn the respect of the whole world is a different story.' 

In his reply to Cruyff's original comments, Mourinho told Dez Record 
that the football world had waited for the Dutchman to step back into 
coaching since 1996 and that, in his opinion, there was little left 
that he could actually teach the Chelsea boss. 

'Since 1996, he refuses to step into the new football reality,' said 
Mourinho. 'Football is waiting for him to be a teacher. I want him to 
come forward and teach me. I humbly ask for it. I want him to help me 
to be a better coach because I don't want to stop learning. 

'But he cannot teach me to be national champion because I already am 
three times. He cannot teach me how to win cups and Super Cups 
because I already did. He cannot teach me to conquer the UEFA Cup 
because I also have it. He cannot teach me to become a European 
champion either.' 

Mourinho, who led FC Porto to the UEFA Cup and Champions League 
success in successive seasons, also reminded Cruyff of Barcelona's 
humiliating 4-0 defeat by AC Milan in the 1994 European Cup final. 

'I don't want him to teach me how to lose 4-0 in a Champions League 
final because I don't want to learn that,' said Mourinho. 

'After leaving Barca, he manages to be remembered as a European 
champion and at the same time everybody forgets that, in every year 
he won the Spanish league, he only succeeded in the last round thanks 
to others mishaps and everyone has also forgot the sensational final 
against Milan who smashed him 4-0.' 

Mourinho has been careful not to become embroiled in rows this season 
and the Blues have shaken off the boring tag bestowed on them by 
their critics with 14 goals in the last four matches - including four 
against Spanish side Real Betis in the Champions League, four against 
Liverpool and five at home against Bolton in the Barclays 
Premiership. 

Cruyff is adamant there is a difference between spectacular and 
results-based football and believes great teams should offer more. 

'Between spectacular, controlled football, which I defend and will 
always defend, and results-based football there is a world of 
difference,' he said. 

'An inadequate team has to try to defend as it can, but a great team, 
with great players, always has to give something more. What's more, 
it has to for the good of football.' 

It will be interesting to see if Mourinho responds ahead of Chelsea's 
Carling Cup clash against Charlton on Wednesday at Stamford Bridge. 

However, unlike last season when Mourinho opted to rest some of his 
top stars in the same competition, he insists they are respecting the 
tournament as holders. 

'We respect matches, we respect competitions and if you think we are 
going to play against Charlton in the Carling Cup with a reserve 
team - no way. 

'We respect every competition and every opponent.' 


www.soccernet.com 25 Oct 2005






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